Japan’s COVID-19 Death Toll Tops 10,000 As Third State Of Emergency In Effect

Japan’s COVID-19 Death Toll Tops 10,000 As Third State Of Emergency In Effect

TOKYO, Apr 27 (NNN-NHK) – Japan’s COVID-19 death toll topped 10,000-mark yesterday, a day after a third state of emergency was declared in Tokyo and the western prefectures of Osaka, Kyoto and Hyogo.

Infectious disease experts warned that, Japan is now battling a “fourth wave” of infections, including highly-contagious variants of the virus.

The complete lifting of the second state of emergency in Apr, saw the mortality rate begin to rise, after being on a downtrend, health ministry data showed.

Meanwhile, according to data cited by Kyodo News, the COVID-19 mortality rate increases with age, with 13.9 percent of those in their 80s and above dying, followed by 5.2 percent of those in their 70s, and 1.5 percent in their 60s.

With more than 3,300 new infections reported nationwide yesterday, 900 of which, in the hard-hit western prefecture of Osaka, the government is trying to curb the spread by encouraging people to work from home.

But mobile phone data showed, around 40 percent more people were around Tokyo station during rush hours yesterday, compared with the average during the first state of emergency declared around a year ago.

In the capital city of Tokyo, 425 new cases were confirmed yesterday, down from the 635 cases reported on Sunday.

However, on Saturday, the country’s new cases over the past 24 hours, surged to 876, marking the highest number of daily infections, since the second state of emergency was lifted in late Mar.

Japan has been criticised for its slow vaccination rollout, with the first inoculations of 4.8 million health care workers beginning in Feb. Only 18 percent of them had received their second Pfizer jab, as of last Friday.

Those aged above 65 were eligible for their vaccinations beginning from Apr, although recent data showed that less than one percent of the 36 million senior citizens had received their first shot as of Sunday.

To speed up the process, the government plans to allow dentists to administer jabs, in places where there are a lack of healthcare workers.

In another bid to administer inoculations more quickly, the government yesterday decided to open a virus vaccination centre in the capital, with a capacity to administer 10,000 vaccination shots per day.

The opening of the large-scale, Tokyo-based vaccination centre is aimed at inoculating senior citizens, hoping to cover 900,000 people in its three-month operational period.

A similar facility is being planned for Osaka Prefecture, the new epicentre of the virus in Japan, and also among Tokyo, Kyoto and Hyogo prefectures under the new, third state of emergency, effective on Sunday till May 11.

Under the new COVID-19 restrictions, large commercial facilities, theme parks and movie theaters have been ordered temporarily closed.

In addition, restaurants, bars serving alcohol, karaoke parlours, movie theaters and stadiums have been asked to suspend their operations, and department stores have been asked to only keep departments selling essential items open.

The 17-day emergency period covers the Golden Week, a string of national holidays.

The government is discouraging travel during one of the most popular time for Japanese people to take vacations, and has urged people to refrain from crossing prefecture borders in a bid to curb the spread of the virus.– NNN-NHK

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