WHO: COVID-19 Still Here, Deadly

FILE - Syringes with vaccines are prepared at the L.A. Care and Blue Shield of California Promise Health Plans' Community Resource Center where they were offering members and the public free flu and COVID-19 vaccines Oct. 28, 2022, in Lynwood, Calif.

COPENHAGEN — The World Health Organization's European office on Tuesday warned the risk of COVID-19 has not gone away, saying it was still responsible for nearly 1,000 deaths a week in the European region.

"Whilst it may not be a global public health emergency, however, COVID-19 has not gone away," World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge told reporters.

The global health body on May 5 announced that the COVID-19 pandemic was no longer deemed a "global health emergency."

The WHO's European region comprises 53 countries, including several in central Asia.

"Close to 1,000 new COVID-19 deaths continue to occur across the region every week, and this is an underestimate due to a drop in countries regularly reporting COVID-19 deaths to WHO," Kluge added, and urged authorities to ensure vaccination coverage of at least 70 percent for vulnerable groups.

Kluge also said estimates showed that one in 30, or some 36 million people, in the region had experienced so called "long COVID" in the last three years, which "remains a complex condition we still know very little about."

"Unless we develop comprehensive diagnostics and treatment for long Covid, we will never truly recover from the pandemic," Kluge said, encouraging more research in the area which he called an under-recognised condition.