The World Health Organization (WHO) says the number of Covid infections worldwide has risen by 12 percent in the past week.
They further point out that the vast majority of reported cases are of the Delta Covid genus.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says the high-transmission Delta Covid strain will become the world’s leading group of Covid viruses in the coming months.
Last week alone, the virus, which was first identified in India, spread to 13 countries around the world.
Accordingly, the total number of countries and regions where the Delta variety is found is 124.
Today, 75 percent of all cases in Australia, India, Britain, Bangladesh, China, Denmark, Indonesia, Russia, Israel, and South Africa are reported to be Delta-infected.
In the week ended July 18, there were 3.4 million cases of Covid infection worldwide, up 12 percent from the previous week.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that the number of cases of global colic will exceed 200 million in the next three weeks.
Most of the cases have been reported from West Pacific and European countries.
Indonesia, the epicenter of the Covid epidemic, reported more than 350,000 cases last week, compared to 296,000 in Britain and 287,000 in Brazil.
The rapidly spreading new breed of cowboys, the loosening of cowboy controls, the mixing of people with each other, and the still high number of people who have not been vaccinated have all contributed to that risk, the report said.
The number of Covid deaths worldwide exceeded 57,000 in the week under review, but this is a decrease in the number of Covid deaths compared to the past two months.