
Official COVID-19 case counts are rising only in the Western Pacific region globally—mainly due to transmission in South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore—according to the latest update today from the World Health Organization (WHO).
The numbers come with the usual WHO caveat: "Currently, reported cases do not accurately represent infection rates due to the reduction in testing and reporting globally." The agency underscored that reality by noting that only 46% of 234 countries have reported any COVID cases. The WHO said that proportion has been declining since mid-2022.
Globally, more than 1 million new confirmed COVID-19 cases and more than 3,100 deaths were reported in the past 28 days (through July 30). In total, the world has seen 768 million confirmed cases and more than 6.9 million COVID-19 deaths.
Deaths down across globe
Deaths are down across all global regions. The nations with the most new cases in the past 4 weeks are South Korea (751,484 new cases), Brazil (45,642), Australia (30,144), New Zealand (23,443), and Singapore (23,216). Of those countries, only South Korea reported a case increase. The most new deaths were in Brazil (695 deaths in the past 4 weeks), Peru (321), Australia (260), Russia (251), and South Korea (199).
Of 16 countries that report hospitalizations and intensive care unit (ICU) admissions, none noted rises of 20% or more. The only variants that are rising in proportion are XBB.1.9.2, EG.5, and XBB.2.3.
In its weekly COVID update, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control notes that low COVID-19 levels continue in Europe, though 5 of 20 reporting nations confirm increased case rates, while 2 of 7 report increased hospital cases, ICU visits, or both. The XBB.1.5 subvariant continues to dominate on the continent.