City
Epaper

Millions of Australians could catch COVID-19 over coming weeks: health minister

By IANS | Updated: July 14, 2022 10:00 IST

Canberra, July 14 Australia's Health Minister Mark Butler has warned that "millions" of people could get infected with ...

Open in App

Canberra, July 14 Australia's Health Minister Mark Butler has warned that "millions" of people could get infected with coronavirus in the coming weeks amid a winter surge.

Butler recently asked the Austral to wear masks and work from home when needed to mitigate the impact of a wave of BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron subvariant infections.

There were 316,574 active COVID-19 cases in Australia by Wednesday a figure Butler said could increase within weeks.

"I think this is a very concerning wave. This is the third wave just this year that Omicron has thrown at Australia," he said on the TV programme Sunrise on Wednesday.

"It's likely over coming weeks that some millions of Austral will catch COVID-19, some of them catching it again after perhaps having caught it earlier this year."

Butler said employers had been asked by chief health officers to think about whether their business can deal with a short period of working from home arrangements.

"People are strongly encouraged in indoor crowded spaces to wear a mask because we know it will cut transmission and cut the number of cases," Xinhua news agency reported quoting Butler.

On Thursday, Australia reported more than 35,000 new COVID-19 infections and more than 70 deaths.

According to government data published by the Guardian Australia on Thursday, 91 deaths were reported by aged care providers in the week ending July 8, up from 58 the week prior, and well above the weekly average of 69 since the beginning of March, when the last Omicron wave ended.

More than 2,000 aged care residents have died with COVID-19 in 2022 more than twice as many as the 917 in 2020 and 2021 combined.

As of Wednesday afternoon, a total of 8,596,145 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Australia, including 10,437 deaths, according to the latest figures from the Department of Health.

There were 4,477 coronavirus patients being treated in Australian hospitals on Wednesday, up from 3,781 a week earlier.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: australiaXinhuaCanberraMark ButlerDepartment of healthPhilippine department of healthIrish department of healthDepartment of public healthUae department of healthSouth african department of health
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalSolar Eclipse 2025: Know Date, Time, Visibility, and Key Dos & Don’ts

CricketSouth Africa Wins WTC Final 2025; Beats Australia to Claim Historic First World Test Championship Title at Lord’s (VIDEO)

CricketKeshav Maharaj Breaks Down in Tears After South Africa’s Historic WTC Final Win (Watch Video)

CricketAUS vs SA WTC Final 2025: How Much Prize Money Will Winner, Runner-Up and Other Teams Get?

CricketWTC 2025 Final: What Happens If South Africa vs Australia World Test Championship Final Match Ends in a Draw?

Health Realted Stories

HealthYour morning cup of coffee key to slow down ageing, boost longevity: Study

HealthDeadly blood cancer can now be detected early with blood test: Study

HealthCentre assures SC on providing physiotherapy facility to PFI founding member in Tihar jail

HealthAndhra CM invites Baba Ramdev to promote wellness tourism

HealthIndia's manufacturing sector poised for leap with infrastructure and policy push: Report