The World Bank warns: COVID-19 will make the situation worse

The World Bank has warned that COVID-19 will become the main global cause for worsening the health situation. The pressure of pandemic on the health system and the accumulation of delays to deal with other diseases will exacerbate the major global health indicators, increasing child mortality rates and mothers, levels of immunization, indensity and [...]
The pressure of pandemic on the health system and the accumulation of delays to deal with other diseases will exacerbate the major global health indicators, increasing child mortality rates and mothers, communication rates, tuberculosis indensity and HIV privacy.
Negative effects will be on countries with low numbers of doctors and nurses for residents and those with a lack of medical logistics. According to the Bank, Albania (seed the related graph) ranks in the group of high-income countries in the African side for low medical staffs for residents. Albania has 4.9 doctors and nurses for residents. This figure is very low in relation to other countries in the continent we belong to.
According to the Bank, the number of medical staffs and the cost of services are essential to minimize health risks. Pandemia indicated that even high-income countries and developed health were found in collapses to cope with the flow of patients.
Over the past three decades, the global mortality rate under five years of age has dropped by about 60 percent. But pandemic can make that indicator worse.
The rapid spread of a new virus has exerted severe pressure on health systems in many countries, highlighting both strengths and weaknesses in health care, including high - income countries.
Recent estimates for 2015 show that 90 million people have been pushed into extreme poverty (that is, below the international poverty border of $1.90 a day) due to health spending. While a recent O study BSH has verified that 8 percent of households in Albania have fallen into poverty due to high health payments.
In 2019 a new virus began spreading throughout the world, with major consequences to human health and the global economy. By the end of October 2020, more than 46 million cases of COVID-19 were recorded globally with 1.2 million lives lost. epidemiological studies suggest this could be an estimate. Pandemia has brought increased attention to zoonotic events (transmitting diseases from animals to humans), the risk of emerging the new disease, and the need to prepare adequate for global health emergencies.
Pathogens originating from wild or domestic animals include anthrax, brucllosis, rage, fever Q, Type A flu, and Rift Valley fever cause more than 60 percent of human infectious diseases. About 75 percent of new developing infectious diseases, such as acute respiratory syndrome, Ebola bleeding fever, and the original HIV display, are of animal origin.
Researchers expect that the transmission of disease from animals to humans will continue and that no geographic area is free of danger. While countries around the tropics appear particularly vulnerable to the exposure of infectious diseases, densely populated countries are also at high risk.











