Deaths from the coronavirus disease across the world passed a grim milestone of 4 million on Thursday, according to a Reuters tally, as many countries struggle to procure enough vaccines to inoculate their populations.
While the number of new infections and deaths have abated in countries like the United States and Britain, several nations have vaccine shortages as the Delta variant becomes the dominant strain around the world.
It took over a year for the coronavirus deaths to reach 2 million, while the next 2 million were recorded in just 166 days, according to a Reuters analysis.
The top five countries by total number of deaths the United States, Brazil, India, Russia and Mexico represent about 50 percent of all deaths in the world, while Peru, Hungary, Bosnia, the Czech Republic and Gibraltar have the highest death rates when adjusted for population. (Graphic on global cases and deaths) https://tmsnrt.rs/34pvUyi
Countries in Latin America are facing their worst outbreak since March, with 43 of every 100 infections in the world being reported in the region, according to a Reuters analysis.
The top nine countries reporting the most deaths per capita over the last week were all in Latin America.
Hospitals in Bolivia, Chile and Uruguay are largely seeing coronavirus patients between the ages of 25 and 40 as the trend toward younger patients continued. In Brazil's Sao Paulo, 80 percent of intensive care units (ICU) occupants are coronavirus disease patients.
Soaring deaths are straining the operating capacity of crematoriums in developing nations and gravediggers in several countries have been forced to expand cemeteries with row after row of new tombs.
India and Brazil are the countries reporting the most deaths each day on a seven-day average and are still troubled with cremation woes and lack of burial space. India accounts for one in every three deaths reported worldwide each day, according to a Reuters analysis.
Gravediggers lead the coffin of Jose Roberto Inacio, 63, who passed away due to the coronavirus, in Piratininga, Sao Paulo state, Brazil March 24, 2021.