Another 88 people die from novel coronavirus, bringing death toll to 2,551 PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

Pakistan sees another spike with over 6000 Covid-19 cases

Data show that most deaths occurred in patients between the age of 60 and 69


Anadolu Agency June 13, 2020
KARACHI: Amid a record-breaking surge in the coronavirus pandemic, Pakistan on Saturday reported 6,472 new virus cases in the last 24 hours, the highest single-day tally ever, the Health Ministry said.

With another single-day tally of over 6,000 – the second in the last two days – the country's total coronavirus cases have reached 132,399, of which nearly 50,000 were reported this month alone.

Another 88 patients lost their lives due to Covid-19 across the country, bringing the death toll from the deadly virus to 2,551, while 40,247 patients have successfully recovered and been discharged from hospitals, according to the Health Ministry.

Some 839,019 people have so far been tested in the country of over 200 million people, with nearly 30,000 tests conducted over the past 24 hours.

The report showed that death ratio in confirmed cases also rose to 2%, from 1.7% earlier, while recoveries also climbed from 20% to 32%.

The data show that most deaths occurred in patients between the age of 60 and 69, at a rate of nearly 30%.

3,858 health contracted coronavirus, 36 lost their lives: NEOC

Health experts see the ever-rising caseload as a result of the lifting of a prolonged lockdown late last month, warning that the country's already weak healthcare system could crash soon if the tally continues to surge at the current pace.

On May 9, the country’s total confirmed cases were 29,465, when Prime Minister Imran Khan announced an easing of the lockdown in phases, but just one month later it had reached nearly 126,000.

The World Health Organisation has declared Pakistan the second-riskiest country after Afghanistan in terms of vulnerability to the pandemic.

In a letter to the government on Tuesday, the UN health agency suggested a two-week strict lockdown to contain the surging outbreak.

Responding to the suggestion, Zafar Mirza, the prime minister’s health advisor, said the country took the decisions in the best interests of the people.

Even Khan has ruled out a strict shutdown, saying a "smart lockdown" is the only solution for developing economies.

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