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Europe, North America should learn from Asia on COVID-19 - WHO expert

A logo is pictured on the headquarters of the WHO in Geneva

By Stephanie Nebehay and Michael Shields

GENEVA (Reuters) - Europe and North America should follow the example of Asian states by persevering with anti-COVID measures and quarantining anyone who comes into contact with infected people, a World Health Organization (WHO) expert said on Monday.

The WHO's Europe region, which includes Russia, has recorded up to 8,500 deaths in the past week - and half the countries have seen a 50 percent rise in cases, Mike Ryan, the body's top emergency expert, told a news conference.

Over recent months, authorities in Australia, China, Japan and South Korea had reduced the spread by detecting cases, isolating them and quarantining contacts, he said.

Their populations had shown "higher levels of trust" in their governments who had kept up measures longer.

"In other words, they ran through the finish line and beyond and they kept running, because they knew the race wasn't over, that finish line was false. Too many countries have put an imaginary finishing line and when they cross this may have decelerated some of their activities," Ryan said.

"The countries in Asia, south Asia, the Western Pacific that have been successful to my mind have really continued to follow-through on those key activities," he added.

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus urged authorities to persevere in the fight against the virus that has infected 40 million and killed more than 1 million, according to the latest Reuters tally.

"I know there’s fatigue but the virus has shown that when we let our guard down, it can surge back at breakneck speed and threaten hospitals and health systems," Tedros said.

Kim Sledge of the band Sister Sledge will donate proceeds from a special version of the hit song "We Are Family" to the WHO, the agency said.

Sledge said that the song's message held personal meaning during the pandemic: "Because I have two members of my family, my husband and my daughter, who are physicians, who are on the front line."

(Reporting by Michael Shields and Stephanie Nebehay and Josephine Mason; Editing by Alex Richardson and Andrew Heavens)