Mexico becomes fourth country to hit 100,000 Covid-19 deaths

20 November 2020, 03:14

Virus Outbreak Mexico
Virus Outbreak Mexico. Picture: PA

Only the US, Brazil and India have recorded more deaths from the virus.

Mexico has passed the 100,000 mark in Covid-19 deaths, becoming only the fourth country to do so.

Jose Luis Alomia Zegarra, Mexico’s director of epidemiology, said there were 100,104 confirmed Covid-19 deaths as of Thursday, leaving the country trailing just the United States, Brazil and India in terms of overall death toll.

The milestone comes less than a week after Mexico said it had topped 1 million registered coronavirus cases, though officials agree the number is probably much higher because of low levels of testing.

Mexico’s living are bearing the scars of the pandemic along with their lost friends and loved ones. Many surviving coronavirus victims say the psychosis caused by the pandemic is one of the most lasting effects.

Virus Outbreak Mexico
Dr Victor Garrido collects a nasal swab sample to test for Covid-19 at the Ajusco Medio General Hospital in Mexico City (Marco Ugarte/AP)

Mexico resembles a divided country, where some people are so unconcerned they will not wear masks, while others are so scared they descend into abject terror at the first sign of shortness of breath.

The lack of testing — Mexico tests only people with severe symptoms and has performed only around 2.5 million tests in a country of 130 million — combined with the lack of hospitals in many areas and the fear of the ones that do exist, has created a fertile breeding ground for ignorance, suspicion and fear.

Daniel Alfredo Lopez Gonzalez described getting the disease himself. Even though he recovered, the fear was crushing.

“It is a tremendous psychosis. In the end, sometimes the disease itself may not be so serious, but it is for a person’s psyche,” Mr Lopez Gonzalez said.

“That is, knowing that you have a disease like this can kill you as bad as the disease itself.”

Virus Outbreak Mexico
Doctors Delia Caudillo, left, and Monserrat Castaneda, put on protective gear as they prepare to conduct a Covid-19 test at a home in the Venustiano Carranza borough of Mexico City (Rebecca Blackwell/AP)

But his sister, public health outreach worker Dulce Maria Lopez Gonzalez, whose job involves handing out free surgical masks to residents, has also seen the other side of the psychological maelstrom: those who do not care.

“I saw this person who I had given a mask to, and I told her she shouldn’t be outside without it,” she recalled. “She told me that no, nothing was going to happen to her. Two weeks later we found out she had died of Covid.”

Mexico’s assistant health secretary Hugo Lopez-Gatell bristled when asked about Mexico reaching the 100,000 deaths point.

He criticised the media for “being alarmist” in focusing on the figure, in the same way he has criticised those who suggest the government is undercounting the deaths, those who have questioned the country’s low testing rate or the government’s contradictory and weak advice on using face masks.

“The epidemic is terrible in itself, you don’t have to add drama to it,” he said, suggesting some media outlets were focusing on the number of deaths to sell newspapers or spark “political confrontation”.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Police behind police tape in a snowy street in Slovkia

Student held in Slovakia after two people fatally stabbed at high school

Conan O’Brien

Conan O’Brien to receive Mark Twain Prize for lifetime achievement in comedy

US astronaut Suni Williams works outside the International Space Station during a spacewalk

Nasa’s stuck astronaut steps out on spacewalk after seven months in orbit

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol outside the Corruption Investigation Office for High-Ranking Officials in Gwacheon, South Korea

Court upholds detention of impeached South Korean president

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Netanyahu: No Cabinet meeting until Hamas backs down on ‘last-minute crisis’

Signage at TSMC headquarters in Hsinchu, Taiwan

Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC posts 57% surge in profits thanks to AI boom

Student protesters in Belgrade holding banners

Woman hurt as car ploughs into crowd of anti-government protesters in Serbia

Marine Le Pen

Crowds attend Paris memorial for far-right French leader Jean-Marie Le Pen

Pages from the United Healthcare website are displayed on a computer screen

UnitedHealth books better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit

Vatican Pope Falls

Pope hurts his arm in second fall in a month

A miner is transported on a stretcher by rescue workers

Death toll rises to 87 as stand-off between South African police and miners ends

Russia struck Kyiv with a drone during Sir Keir Starmer's visit

Putin’s forces launch drone attack on Kyiv during Sir Keir Starmer’s visit

BP sign outside a petrol station.

BP to cut 4,700 jobs in fresh wave of cost-cutting measures

Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket lifting off from Launch Complex 36 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station

Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin launches new rocket on first test flight

Man's hands on a laptop keyboard

Biden executive order aims to shore up US cyber defences

South Korea Martial Law

Lawyers say detained South Korean president will refuse further questioning