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Coronavirus cases surpass 500,000 worldwide

Number of infections globally rises by almost 40,000 in 24 hours

Kate Ng,Jane Dalton
Thursday 26 March 2020 14:48 EDT
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Medical staff move a patient from a train from Strasbourg to an ambulance
Medical staff move a patient from a train from Strasbourg to an ambulance (EPA)

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The coronavirus has now infected more than 510,000 people worldwide, up almost 40,000 from the 472,000 confirmed cases at the start of Thursday.

The number of positive cases is steadily increasing in countries such as the UK, Spain, and parts of southeast Asia as they approach the peak of infection.

Thousands of new cases have been confirmed in Europe and the US in recent days, as governments impose tighter restrictions to try to curb the spread of Covid-19.

China, where the virus originated, remains the country with the highest number of infections, at 81,782 cases, but has reported close to zero new domestic cases in recent days.

Italy and the US have the second and third highest figures of coronavirus cases in the world, with 80,539 and 75,233 respectively, according to Johns Hopkins University.

With 7,503 coronavirus deaths, Italy has a higher toll than China’s (3,169), as has Spain, with 4,145.

However, the pace of increase in coronavirus deaths in Spain has slowed for the first time in a week, with health chiefs recording 655 in 24 hours.

Iran, where there have been 2,234 confirmed coronavirus deaths, is fourth, followed by France, where 1,331 people have died.

The UK, with a death toll of 477, is fifth in the list.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) says it has seen “encouraging signs” in Italy, but warned it was too soon to say whether the country had seen the worst of the outbreak.

To date, at least 220,000 cases have been reported in Europe, along with 11,987 deaths, the WHO says. About six out of every 10 cases and seven out of 10 deaths have been reported on the continent.

According to Johns Hopkins University, 22,993 people have died worldwide so far, and 120,983 have recovered.

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