City
Epaper

COVID-19 deaths in France rise by 369 to 22,614

By IANS | Updated: April 26, 2020 05:30 IST

The coronavirus epidemic has killed 22,614 people in France as of Saturday, with 369 new deaths recorded in the last 24 hours, but the number of patients in intensive care continues to decline, the Health Ministry said in a press release.

Open in App

Paris, April 26 The coronavirus epidemic has killed 22,614 people in France as of Saturday, with 369 new deaths recorded in the last 24 hours, but the number of patients in intensive care continues to decline, the Health Ministry said in a press release.

COVID-19 has claimed 14,050 lives in hospitals, with 198 new deaths in the last 24 hours the lowest daily toll in a month, and 8,564 in Ehpad and other medico-social establishments, an increase of 171 in the 24-hour period, according to the ministry, reported Xinhua news agency reported.

A total of 4,725 COVID-19 patients are now in intensive care, noted the press release.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: franceparisXinhuaHealth MinistryParigi si
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalParis: 3 Injured, One Critical After Car Drives Into Crowd at Champs-Elysees During PSG Champions League Win Celebration; Video Surfaces

Social Viral“Thappad Maar Dungi”: Apoorva Mukhija Screams at Security at Sabrina Carpenter’s Paris Concert (Watch Video)

MaharashtraMaharashtra to Offer Free Cancer Vaccination for Girls, Implements Bird Flu Precautions

HealthTurn Down Volume Of Your Earphones! Prolonged Use Likely To Cause Permanent Hearing Damage Warns Health Ministry

InternationalPM Modi France Visit: Indian Prime Minister's Aircraft Flies Over Pakistani Airspace for 46 Minutes on Way to Paris

Health Realted Stories

HealthIndia and Maldives strengthen healthcare partnership

HealthHeart rhythm disorder traces to bacterium lurking in gums: Study

HealthStudy shows weight-loss drugs can cut alcohol intake by almost two-thirds

HealthThis cholesterol pill may fight high risk of heart attack, stroke: Study

HealthIndia continues to witness significant improvement in key maternal, child health indicators: Report