Forgotten but not gone: COVID keeps killing, five years on

(FILES) A nurse wearing protective mask and gear comforts another as they change shifts on March 13, 2020 at the Cremona hospital, southeast of Milan, Lombardy, during the country's lockdown aimed at stopping the spread of the COVID-19 (new coronavirus) pandemic.

Five years since COVID-19 started upending the world, the virus is still infecting and killing people across the globe, though at far lower levels than at the height of the pandemic.

Around 777 million COVID cases and more than 7 million deaths have been officially recorded since the first infections emerged in December 2019, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

However, the true toll is believed to be far higher.

The pandemic also crippled health systems, crashed economies and sent the populations of many countries into lockdown.

In the second half of 2022, infection and death rates tumbled due to growing immunity from vaccinations or prior infection. The virus also mutated to become less severe.

In May 2023, the WHO declared the emergency phase of the pandemic was over.

Since then, the virus seems to have gradually become endemic, according to experts, with occasional resurgences similar to the flu, although less seasonal.

It has also largely receded from the public eye.

"The world wants to forget this pathogen that is still with us, and I think people want to put COVID in the past as if it's over, and in many respects pretend it didn't happen, because it has been so traumatic," WHO pandemic preparedness director Maria Van Kerkhove said last month.

From October to November last year, there were more than 3,000 deaths from COVID across 27 countries, according to the WHO.

More than 95 percent of official COVID deaths...

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