APRIL 7,
20211:58 AMUPDATED 9 HOURS AGO
'A biological Fukushima': Brazil COVID-19 deaths on track to pass worst of
U.S. wave
4 MIN READ
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Brazil’s
brutal surge in COVID-19 deaths will soon surpass the worst of a record January
wave in the United States, scientists forecast, with fatalities climbing for
the first time above 4,000 in a day on Tuesday as the outbreak overwhelms
hospitals.
Brazil’s overall death toll trails only
the U.S. outbreak, with nearly 337,000 killed, according to Health Ministry
data, compared with more than 555,000 dead in the United States.
But with Brazil’s healthcare system at
the breaking point, the country could exceed total U.S. deaths, despite having
a population two-thirds that of the United States, two experts told Reuters.
“It’s a nuclear reactor that has set off
a chain reaction and is out of control. It’s a biological Fukushima,” said
Miguel Nicolelis, a Brazilian doctor and professor at Duke University, who is
closely tracking the virus.
On Tuesday, the Health Ministry reported
another 4,195 COVID-19 deaths in the past 24 hours, well above the country’s
prior single-day record. Brazil has set daily death records every week since
late February, as a more contagious local variant and meager social distancing
efforts fuel an uncontrolled outbreak.
With mass vaccinations curtailing the
U.S. outbreak, Brazil has become the epicenter of the pandemic, contributing
about one in four deaths per day globally, according to a Reuters analysis.
President Jair Bolsonaro has pushed back
against mask-wearing and lockdowns that public health experts consider the best
way to lessen virus transmission.
The country dragged its feet last year
as the world raced to secure vaccines, slowing the launch of a national
immunization program.
Despite the recent surge, Brazilian
officials are insistent that the country can soon return to something
resembling business as usual.
Slideshow ( 5 images )
“We think that probably two, three
months from now Brazil could be back to business,” Economy Minister Paulo
Guedes said during an online event on Tuesday. “Of course, probably economic
activity will take a drop but it will be much, much less than the drop we
suffered last year ... and much, much shorter.”
Bolsonaro has responded to growing
political pressure with a dramatic shakeup of a half dozen ministries, putting
loyalists in key roles ahead of what may be a tough re-election campaign next
year against his political nemesis.
While the president has shifted his tone
on immunizations, touting vaccines he had recently disdained, the far-right
former army captain continues to battle in the courts against state and
municipal restrictions on economic activity.
With weak measures failing to combat
contagion, Brazil’s COVID-19 cases and deaths are accumulating faster than
ever.
Nicolelis and Christovam Barcellos, a
researcher at Brazilian medical institute Fiocruz, are separately forecasting
that Brazil could surpass the United States in both overall deaths and the
record for average deaths per day.
As soon as next week, Brazil may break
the record U.S. seven-day average for COVID-19 deaths, according to a model by
the influential Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the
University of Washington. The U.S. average for daily deaths peaked at 3,285 in
January.
The IHME forecast does not currently
extend beyond July 1, when it projects Brazil could reach 563,000 deaths,
compared with 609,000 total U.S. fatalities expected by then.
Reporting by Pedro Fonseca; Additional reporting by Jamie McGeever; Writing
by Jake Spring; Editing by Brad Haynes, Jonathan Oatis and Bill Berkrot
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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