Covid-19 recoveries in SA climb to 165,591 as deaths surge past 4,500

16 July 2020 - 20:24
By TimesLIVE
There have been 13,172 new Covid-19 infections in SA in the past 24-hour cycle, the health ministry announced on Thursday.
Image: FREDLIN ADRIAAN There have been 13,172 new Covid-19 infections in SA in the past 24-hour cycle, the health ministry announced on Thursday.

Health minister Dr Zweli Mkhize said in an update on the pandemic on Thursday evening that the cumulative number of infections in the country was 324,221.

Nationally, there have been 13,172 new infections reported in the last 24-hour cycle.

There have been 165,591 Covid-19 recoveries in South Africa.

The countrywide death toll has risen to 4,669. A record number of deaths were recorded over the last 24 hours: 216.

Seven of them were from Mpumalanga, 10 from the Free State, 25 from the Eastern Cape,  41 from KwaZulu-Natal, 47 from the Western Cape and 86 from Gauteng. 

The breakdown of infections and recoveries by province is as follows:

Covid-19 deaths and recoveries by province as of Thursday.
Image: Ministry of health Covid-19 deaths and recoveries by province as of Thursday.

The total number of tests conducted to date is 2,324,923 with 46,796 new tests conducted since the last report.

While SA overtook Spain on Wednesday to register the eighth highest number of Covid-19 cases in the world on the Worldometer, it has the second lowest number of fatalities per one million of the population out of the top 10 countries by caseload.

While the death and infection statistics provide a daily snapshot of the health impact of the pandemic, its broader impact on jobs and the economy have been laid bare by a national consortium of 30 social science researchers from five universities.

SowetanLIVE's sister publication Times Select reported on Thursday that a study, the National Income Dynamics Study - Coronavirus Rapid Mobile Survey (Nids-Cram), conducted by the consortium from May, painted a grim picture.

Three million South Africans lost their jobs between February and April and almost half the population ran out of money to buy food.

TimesLIVE this week published a guide, compiled by GroundUp, on how to access mental health services during the lockdown.