Virus outbreak: January 11 news and analysis

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China said a team of experts from the World Health Organization will pay a visit on January 14 to investigate the origins of the coronavirus, after a rare scolding from the global health group last week for delayed travel permits. Beijing’s action to prevent the spread of infections to neighboring Hebei’s capital is causing a rising food prices.

Germany has asked its citizens to dramatically reduce social contact after the death toll in the country has exceeded 40,000. France said it is not planning a new blockade yet, but is monitoring the situation “very closely”.

The Philippines aims to vaccinate its entire population of more than 100 million people by 2023 by finalizing agreements with vaccine suppliers. Malaysia He said he would buy an additional 12.2 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, bringing his supply to 25 million. This is enough to inoculate 39% of the population.

Main developments:

  • Global Tracker: Cases reach 90 million; deaths exceed 1.93 million
  • Vaccine Tracker: More than 25 million injections given worldwide
  • Globe-Trotters promises to fly less behind Covid to help weather
  • Automakers are losing production as virus disrupts chip supply
  • UK increases vaccine launch with hospitals under pressure
  • Sign up for a daily update on the virus from Bloomberg Prognosis Team on here. Click on CVID in the terminal for global data on coronavirus cases and deaths.

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LA turns Dodgers Stadium into a vaccination center (15:45 HK)

Los Angeles, the epicenter of the last wave, will transform Dodgers Stadium from the country’s largest Covid-19 test site into a mass vaccination center to inoculate up to 12,000 people a day.

The stadium will no longer be a testing ground on Monday, with the transition taking place later in the week.

The Greater LA area, where one in 11 was infected, tested 5 million people, or about half of its population. With an increase in cases, Southern California and other parts of the state were left without ICU capacity.

“Vaccines are the safest way to defeat this virus and chart a path to recovery,” said Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.

Bulgaria has had fewer cases since October (15:43 HK)

Bulgaria reported 105 new cases of the virus on Monday, the lowest since October 11.

The Balkan country imposed a partial block in late November to contain the virus, after reaching the highest death rate in the European Union. Last week, he reopened elementary schools, and officials are considering options to further reduce restrictions.

France does not plan a new blockade yet (15:41 HK)

France continues to monitor the daily situation of Covid-19 “very closely” and is taking the necessary measures to protect the health of its citizens, government spokesman Gabriel Attal said in a radio interview in Europe 1.

French “made a lot of efforts” and took steps at the beginning, and although there are no plans for a new blockade, it is not “time to let your guard down,” said Attal.

Attal said France will meet its goal of vaccinating 1 million people by the end of January.

German minister calls for less social contact (15:30 HK)

German Health Minister Jens Spahn said that citizens need to drastically reduce social contact after the number of virus deaths in the country rose to over 40,000 over the weekend.

“It doesn’t make much sense to close stores, schools and public life if at the same time there are a lot of private contacts going on,” Spahn said in an interview with ZDF television. “I know it is difficult, but especially in the private sphere it is very, very important to reduce contact in the coming weeks,” he said.

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