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France to extend curfew due to virus

By AFP
October 22, 2020

Paris: France will place more regions on the highest health alert level as coronavirus infections continue to spread fast, the government’s spokesman said on Wednesday.

A nightly curfew from 9:00 pm to 6:00 am went into force at the weekend in Paris and several other French cities in response to daily new infections reaching record levels. The number of Covid patients in intensive care went over 2,000 on Monday for the first time since May, and 278 new such cases were admitted on Tuesday.

Prime Minister Jean Castex is to hold a news conference on Thursday "which will see an announcement that a certain number of departments are being moved to the maximum alert level", government spokesman Gabriel Attal said after Wednesday’s cabinet meeting. A curfew would be ordered for "some of them", he said.

Some 20 million French people have already been ordered to stay home every night under a curfew adopted after an alarming surge in new coronavirus cases. The government has said it did not expect the curfew to have a real impact on virus numbers before two or three weeks.

Meanwhile, Brazil’s health minister said on Wednesday the country would add the Chinese-made CoronaVac vaccine against Covid-19 to its national immunisation programme, despite a political and diplomatic row over whether to use it.

Health Minister Eduardo Pazuello said the federal government had reached a deal with Sao Paulo state, which is helping test and produce the vaccine, to buy 46 million doses to be administered starting in January. In a related development, five percent of people in Britain predicted by a new tool to be at highest risk from Covid-19 accounted for three-quarters of deaths during the first wave of the pandemic, researchers reported Wednesday.

As countries worldwide grapple with a second wave of disease, the risk-assessment method -- which also predicts the chances of hospitalisation -- could help identify the small percentage of the population most in need of being shielded from the virus, they reported in BMJ, a medical journal.

"The tool provides nuanced information on people’s risk of serious illness due to Covid-19 and is designed for use by clinicians with patients to reach a shared understanding of risk," the authors said in a statement. To develop the new application, called QCovid, researchers from across Britain compiled data from six million patients, including age, height-weight ratio, ethnicity, and pre-existing conditions -- such as high-blood pressure and diabetes -- known to increase the risk of serious outcomes after infection.

They then tested the approach on 2.2 million patients -- most of whom did not have Covid-19 -- to see how well it predicted hospitalisation and deaths during two periods, late January to the end of April, and May 1 to June 30.

More than three-quarters of those who died from the virus were in the top five percent of those predicted to be at maximum risk.

While the tool effectively profiled those facing the worst odds, it did not identify which factors caused fatal outcomes, the researchers cautioned. It also only identified risk relative to other members of society but not the absolute risk of severe illness or death, which can change depending on infection rates and precautionary measures such as social distancing, mask-wearing and hand washing.

Experts not involved in the research said it held real potential.

"This provides support for the concept of targeted shielding," said Mark Woolhouse, a professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the University of Edinburgh, describing the study as "a very striking result."

"If ways could be found to protect this five percent -- such as regular testing of their closest contacts -- it could make a substantial difference to the public health burden of Covid-19." But the model is only as good as the follow-up policies put in place, cautioned David Strain, a senior clinical lecturer at the University of Exeter.

"Without a clear implementation plan this tool does not yet have a purpose," he told the Science Media Centre in London. Strain also pointed out that the conditions in which the virus spreads continue to evolve.

"These data are derived from hospitalisations and deaths during the first wave," he noted. "Behaviour -- and thus risk of transmission -- has changed significantly during this time, some for the better (such as the widespread acceptance of masks) and some for the worse."

The model, for example, does not input information about self-isolation, whether someone is working in a high-risk job, or is in a neighbourhood with a high rate in infection. Aware of this problem, the authors said they designed the tool so that it can be updated as new data arrives.

Since January, there have been about 750,000 cases of Covid-19 in Britain, and nearly 44,000 deaths. Worldwide, the virus has infected more than 40 million people, and killed more than 1.1 million.