LIMA (Reuters) – Peru reported an all-time high 70,000 COVID-19 infections in the first week of January, a health official told reporters on Monday, as a third wave of the pandemic spreads through the Andean nation driven by the Omicron variant of the coronavirus.
Dante Cersso, a government health official, told reporters that the new weekly case count had exceeded the previous record of 67,107 cases during the second week of April of last year.
At the time, Peru was going through a brutal second wave that left the country with the world’s worst per-capita death rate, according to Johns Hopkins University. About 0.5% of Peru’s population has died of COVID-19.
Death counts have not spiked with the recent surge in cases, according to data from Peru’s Ministry of Health. Other nations also have reported fewer deaths linked to skyrocketing Omicron infections.
Over 65% of Peru’s population has received two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, according to Our World in Data. Peru is also offering booster shots to all adults three months after receiving their second shot.
While South America was battered by previous waves of the pandemic, it has emerged as the most vaccinated region in the world.
Nearby countries like Bolivia and Argentina also have reported record COVID-19 case counts in recent weeks due to the highly-contagious Omicrown variant.
Peru tightened some pandemic-related restrictions last week in a bid to soften the blow of the new spike in infections.
(Reporting by Marco Aquino and Marcelo Rochabrun; Editing by Bill Berkrot)