An uptick in infections in Europe, a drop in Brazil and the United States: here is a weekly roundup of developments in the coronavirus crisis:
Most new cases
India, the United States and Brazil again register the biggest number of new infections over the past seven days, with 87,493, 35,582, and 28,115 per day on average respectively, according to an AFP toll on Friday.
Argentina (10,428), Spain (9,375), and France (7,680) follow with the most new daily cases on average.
The number of confirmed cases only reflects a fraction of the actual number of infections, as different countries have different counting practices and levels of testing.
Biggest drops
Even if they are among the countries where the number of new cases is highest, Brazil, at minus 30%, and the United States (-13%) are also those reporting the biggest slowdown compared with the previous week.
Other countries with big drops are South Africa (-22%, 1,631) and Peru (-17%, 5,703).
Biggest increases
Britain is the country where the number of infections is increasing most quickly, at 77%, or 2,532 new cases per day.
It is followed by Ecuador (59% more, or 1,322) and France (33% more, or 7,680,) among the countries which have an average of more than 1,000 daily cases over the past week.
Israel follows with 31% or 2,888 cases, Italy (15%, 1,466), Germany (12%, 1,314), and Spain (11%, 9,375).
By region
The number of cases is on the rise in Europe in general, with 19% more compared with the previous week, and also in the Middle East (17%), and Asia (11%).
Other regions report a decrease, with a drop of 43% in Oceania, 17% in Latin America, and 13% in North America.
At the global level there was an average of 264,957 new daily cases, the same as the previous week.
Deaths
India remains the country that mourned the most deaths over the past seven days (7,686), followed by the United States (5,029) and Brazil (4,908). Just behind are Ecuador (4,101), Mexico (3,320) and Argentina (1,546).
France has recorded 145 deaths or an increase of 19% compared with the previous week.
Global toll
The pandemic has killed at least 915,300 people around the world since late December out of more than 28.4 million confirmed infections.
The United States has the most deaths with 196,376, followed by Brazil with 129,575, India with 76,744, Mexico with 69,649 and Britain 41,608.