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UAE tests over one-third of population for COVID-19: Health minister

UAE tests over one-third of population for COVID-19: Health minister
A nurse uses a swab to test the passenger of a car for coronavirus COVID-19, at a drive thru verification centre in the Emirati capital Abu Dhabi on April 2, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 23 June 2020

UAE tests over one-third of population for COVID-19: Health minister

UAE tests over one-third of population for COVID-19: Health minister
  • The country started tracking cases in early January before the World Health Organization (WHO) had even announced a serious outbreak
  • The UAE has been reporting a decreasing number of daily cases, with the latest figures showing 392 new patients on Sunday

DUBAI:Ā The UAE has carried out more than 3 million tests for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), representing nearly a third of its 9.89 million population, Health Minister Abdul Rahman Mohammed Al-Owais said.

The country started tracking cases in early January before the World Health Organization (WHO) had even announced a serious outbreak, the minister told a webinar summit of world governments on COVID-19 response.

ā€œResidents and citizens came together during the coronavirus pandemic,ā€ which was one of the reasons behind the UAEā€™s effective response, Al-Owais added, along with the governmentā€™s cooperation with the private sector.

In April, UK-based Deep Knowledge Group ranked the UAE among the worldā€™s top 10 countries for treating COVID-19 cases. Also on the list were Germany, China, South Korea, Austria, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, Israel, and Japan.

The UAE has been reporting a decreasing number of daily cases, with the latest figures showing 392 new patients on Sunday. The country has so far recorded a total of 44,925 COVID-19 cases, with 302 deaths and 32,415 recoveries.

Meanwhile, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, told the webinar gathering that ā€œthe coronavirus pandemic is still accelerating globally,ā€ and he called for global preparedness which was ā€œnot a one-time investmentā€ but a continuous effort.

The Swedish, Norwegian and Emirati ministers of health stressed the necessity of learning to live with COVID-19 and developing a new normal.

The sentiment was echoed by WHOā€™s envoy on COVID-19, David Nabarro, who said: ā€œThe coronavirus is not going away, it is up to all of us to change our behavior to live with this virus.ā€