Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have passed 457.9 million globally, according to Johns Hopkins University. The number of confirmed deaths has now passed 6.04 million. More than 10.86 billion vaccination doses have been administered globally, according to Our World in Data.
France is to start offering a fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose to those aged over 80, who had their previous shot more than three months ago.
It comes as new COVID-19 infections in France rose 25% on Friday week-on-week, as a downward trend that had started in late January began to reverse.
South Korea reported a new record daily number of confirmed COVID-19 cases on Saturday – 383,665.
Kenya lifted its remaining COVID-19 restrictions on Friday, including a ban on large indoor gatherings.
Australian authorities have urged people to get COVID-19 vaccine booster shots amid concern about the BA.2 Omicron sub-variant.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the nation’s political leaders want to move to a new phase of living with COVID-19 as though it were flu, but would consult with health experts.
Mainland China reported 1,807 new local symptomatic COVID-19 cases on Sunday, the highest daily figure in two years. Shanghai announced on Friday it would close all schools until further notice as part of measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
The Czech Republic will drop most mask requirements, except on public transport or in health or social care facilities, from today as it eases COVID-19 restrictions.
The Pan American Health Organization said on Wednesday that COVID-19 cases fell by 26% across the Americas last week, with deaths dropping by nearly 19%.
The COVID Response Alliance to Social Entrepreneurs – soon to continue its work as the Global Alliance for Social Entrepreneurship – was launched in April 2020 in response to the devastating effects of the pandemic. Co-founded by the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship together with Ashoka, Echoing Green, GHR Foundation, Skoll Foundation, and Yunus Social Business.
The Alliance provides a trusted community for the world’s leading corporations, investors, governments, intermediaries, academics, and media who share a commitment to social entrepreneurship and innovation.
Since its inception, it has since grown to become the largest multi-stakeholder coalition in the social enterprise sector: its 90+ members collectively support over 100,000 social entrepreneurs across the world. These entrepreneurs, in turn, have a direct or indirect impact on the lives of an estimated 2 billion people.
Together, they work to (i) mobilize support for social entrepreneurs and their agendas; (ii) take action on urgent global agendas using the power of social entrepreneurship, and (iii) share insights from the sector so that social entrepreneurs can flourish and lead the way in shaping an inclusive, just and sustainable world.
The Alliance works closely together with member organizations Echoing Green and GHR Foundation, as well as the Centre for the New Economy and Society on the roll out of its 2022 roadmap (soon to be announced).
Asia passed 1 million confirmed COVID-19-related deaths on Friday, according to a Reuters tally.
The death toll in Asia, home to more than half the world’s population, reached 1,000,045, contributing 16% of global deaths related to COVID-19, the tally showed.
New cases remain at record or near-record levels in Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand and Viet Nam, but have fallen sharply from their peaks in India, Indonesia and the Philippines.
Deaths have soared to record levels in Japan and South Korea, as well as Hong Kong, SAR. In contrast, the world’s second-most populous nation of India, which accounts for almost 52% of Asia’s total COVID-19 deaths, reported a sharp fall in both infections and deaths over the past month.
An Oxford University study has found that COVID-19 can cause the brain to shrink, reduce grey matter in the regions that control emotion and memory, and damage areas that control the sense of smell.
The scientists said that the effects were even seen in people who had not been hospitalized with COVID, and whether the impact could be partially reversed or if they would persist in the long term needed further investigation.
“There is strong evidence for brain-related abnormalities in COVID-19,” the researchers said in their study, which was released on 7 March.
Even in mild cases, participants in the research showed “a worsening of executive function” responsible for focus and organizing, and on an average brain sizes shrank between 0.2% and 2%.
The peer-reviewed study appeared in the journal Nature.
Joe Myers, Writer, Formative Content
The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.
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