COVID-19: Kurdistan Region registers over 670 new cases in 24 hours

The Kurdistan Region’s Ministry of Health announced more than 670 new COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, raising the total infections count to over 47,000 since the virus penetrated the region’s borders in early March.

ERBIL (Kurdistan 24) – The Kurdistan Region’s Ministry of Health announced more than 670 new COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, raising the total infections count to over 47,000 since the virus penetrated the region’s borders in early March.

In its daily statement on the global health crisis in the autonomous region, the ministry said it had completed 4,979 tests across the four provinces within its jurisdiction in the past day, 673 of which were positive.

The official statement also noted that there had been 24 deaths during the same period: 11 in Sulaimani province, eight in Duhok, and five in Erbil.

There have now been over 47,000 coronavirus infections in the Kurdistan Region, 1,749 of them fatal, since the first case was confirmed there in early March.

So far, around 30,175 patients are reported to have recovered from the highly contagious disease. It is important to note that a patient classified as a “recovery” means they are no longer being actively treated by health professionals, not that they have fully recovered.

Increasingly, medical experts recognize that some COVID-19 symptoms, such as chronic fatigue, often continue long after an individual’s formal recovery and that various other complications, including significant lung damage, could be permanent.

Erbil’s blood bank urges plasma donation

The Erbil province’s blood bank on Wednesday urged the COVID-19 recoveries to donate plasma, particularly the blood type A.

The bank urges the coronavirus recoveries to donate their plasma that could be a last attempt to “restore hope” to a severe COVID-19 patient.

Convalescent plasma is a new therapeutic method being used to treat sever cases of coronavirus where the antigen is extracted from a recoveree’s blood and transfused into the blood of the patient.

The Kurdistan Region and Iraq have been recording an increasingly higher number of cases in recent months amid relaxed lockdown measures and tough economic conditions.

Editing by Karzan Sulaivany