City
Epaper

Vietnam reports nearly 15,000 new cases of COVID-19 infection

By ANI | Published: December 20, 2021 8:35 PM

There are 1,555,455 infected with COVID-19 in Vietnam.

Open in App

There are 1,555,455 infected with COVID-19 in Vietnam.

According to the Ministry of Health of Vietnam, from 16:00 on December 19 to 16:00 on December 20, 14,977 new cases of COVID-19 infection were registered in the country, including 11 imported. Over the past day, 1,937 patients have recovered, 225 people have died.

Thus, in total, there are 1,555,455 infected people in the country - according to this indicator, Vietnam ranks 32nd among 223 countries and territories of the world, and in terms of the proportion of cases per 1 million people - 148th. The number of deaths is 29 791, which is 2 per cent of the total number of cases.

Almost 140 million doses of coronavirus vaccines have been used in the country; secondarily vaccinated 62 million people; the third vaccination was given to almost 1 million 300 thousand people. (ANI/VOVWORLD)

( With inputs from ANI )

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: Ministry of health of vietnam
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalVietnam reports 5,227 new cases of coronavirus in past 24 hours

International4,892 cases of coronavirus infection were registered in Vietnam over the past 24 hours

International4,892 cases of coronavirus infection were registered in Vietnam over the past 24 hours

International Realted Stories

InternationalSlovak PM Fico in 'life-threatening' condition after assassination bid, fighting for life

InternationalDubai Civil Aviation Authority spotlights air transport enablement at Airport Show 2024

InternationalPeople of PoJK being treated as aliens, says defence expert

InternationalZayed bin Hamdan bin Zayed attends final day of Abu Dhabi Global Healthcare Week

InternationalUAE Cabinet approves National Youth Agenda 2031; introduces 'Blue Residency' for sustainability experts