Health Minister Zweli Mkhize said in his daily update that South Africa has recorded 9 010 new cases and a further 344 Covid-19 related deaths over the past 24 hours.
Of the deaths recorded on Monday, 91 were from KwaZulu-Natal, 88 from the Western Cape, 66 from the Eastern Cape, 63 from Gauteng 13 from the Northern Cape, 12 from Mpumalanga and 11 from the Free State.
The cumulative number of cases in the country now stands at 1 346 936 and the death toll at 37 449,said Mkhize.
Over the past 24 hours, 39 901 new tests were conducted, bringing the total number of tests carried out since the start of the coronavirus outbreak to 7 653 371, according to Mkhize.
The minister added that the recoveries now stand at 1 117 452 , representing a recovery rate of 83%.
Meanwhile Epidemiologist and infectious diseases specialist Professor Salim Abdool Karim says scientists have new evidence that the new Covid variant, 501.V2 found in South Africa is stronger and spreads faster.
Karim was speaking during a scientific panel discussion, led by Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize on the new variant of the coronavirus.
“This new variant’s ability to bind onto the human cells is more effective than the first and makes it more deadly. Mutations in the virus allow the virus to bind to cells more deeply and effectively, driving South Africa’s second wave,” explained Karim.
The new Covid variant is thought to be responsible for driving South Africa’s burgeoning second wave of infections. The variant, known as 501.V2, was first detected in samples from the Nelson Mandela Bay area around August 2020.
“We are now seeing more cases and deaths than we saw in the first wave. Earlier research shows that the new Covid-19 variant has 23 mutations and has since spread throughout our entire coastal region.”
“In the Western Cape, the second wave took half as long to reach 100K cases. In KZN, the second wave took 33 days to reach 100K infections compared to 54 days in the first wave,” he said.
On whether the current vaccines will be effective in dealing with the second variant, Karim said scientists don’t yet have an answer but are working on this.
“There is no way to tell if the current vaccines are effective in dealing with the second variant scientists still waiting on the data regarding this.”
While scientists don’t have answers on whether these vaccines are free of long-term side effects, whether they prevent asymptomatic infection or viral spread, Karim advised that it should not be a reason to hesitate when it comes to using vaccines as they have the potential to save lives.
Compiled by Lehlohonolo Lehana.