PARIS (Reuters) – Coronavirus infection rates in France have slowed further and the number of COVID-19 patients in hospital and intensive care continued to fall, health ministry figures showed, a sign that social distancing is keeping contagion in check for now.
FILE PHOTO: A woman, wearing a protective face mask, sits on the beach of the Promenade des Anglais, after France reopened its beaches to the public as it softens its strict lockdown rules following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Nice, France, May 21, 2020. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
Nearly two weeks after lockdown ended, health ministry data on Saturday showed the number of confirmed cases rose by 250 to 144,806 over 24 hours, an increase of 0.2%, below the average 0.3% increase of the past seven days and well below the average 0.8% increase seen in the last week of lockdown.
Italy and Spain have also reported confirmed cases going up by 0.3% on average in the past seven days.
The number of people in hospital with coronavirus in France fell by 205 to 17,178 on Saturday, continuing a gradual decline that has continued for more than five weeks since a high of 32,292 on April 14. The number of people in intensive care fell by 36 or 2.1% to 1,665, a slide that has been uninterrupted for six weeks since the April 8 peak at 7,148.
Both numbers are key measures of a national health system’s ability to cope with the epidemic.
The French government is watching the infection rate and the hospital numbers closely in order to decide whether to loosen lockdown measures further in the weeks ahead.
The ministry said France’s cumulative coronavirus death toll stood at 28,332, an increase of 117 or 0.4% compared to Thursday. Friday’s death toll data were not available.
The ministry said it will update the death toll again on Monday.
After showing a higher death toll than Spain for 10 days, France again fell below Spain, which reported an increase of several hundred deaths on Friday.
On Saturday, Spain’s cumulative death toll stood at 28,678, or 346 more than France, making Spain again the country with the world’s fourth-highest death toll after the United States, Britain and Italy.
Reporting by Geert De Clercq; editing by David Evans