Update – 27/07/2021
July 27, 2021
As of the latest update by the Greek authorities, the total number of confirmed Covid-19 diagnosed cases in Greece 477,975. 5 new deaths were reported raising the total number to 12,903. The number of patients treated in intensive care units is currently 147. 2,070 new cases were announced yesterday in Greece. 671 of the new cases were found in the Attica region and 262 new cases in the Thessaloniki region.
Despite some ominous estimates a couple of week ago that daily coronavirus cases may even reach 10,000, some scientists are now predicting that the current wave of the pandemic will peak in the first half of August.
Last week the rate of increase in new cases was 12% nationwide compared to the period from July 7 to 14, when the daily infection rate more than doubled. The downward trend has also prompted experts to reassess their estimates.
More specifically, according to forecast models cited by professor of Environmental Engineering at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Dimosthenis Sarigiannis, the fourth wave is expected to peak on August 10-12, with a weekly average of around 3,400 new cases reported a day.
Speaking to Skai TV, Sarigiannis said that from the middle of August on, the course of the pandemic will depend on the progress of the vaccination program.
“If we raise the rates (of vaccination) then we expect a stabilization, initially, followed by a drop. If we stay at current rates then the estimate is that there will be a stabilization at high levels, of around 3,400 per day, until the end of August and then a further increase from the fall,” he said. Sarigiannis also noted that the epidemic is showing a tendency of decline in Attica, since many residents have left for holidays. On the contrary, popular tourism destinations are seeing upward trends.
The rise in cases in recent weeks also coincided with an increase in testing due to more stringent inspections by health authorities but also because of the policy of mandatory testing of passengers before boarding ferry boats and airplanes.
Greece’s National Vaccination Committee has greenlighted the inoculation against Covid-19 of children aged between 12 and 15 years old.
“The decision was based on epidemiological evidence, the swift spread of the Delta variant and the availability of safe vaccines,” the head of the committee, Maria Theodoridou, said.
“The benefits outweigh the potential side effects,” she said.
Vaccination will be voluntary and it will require parental or guardian consent.
According to Marios Themistokleous, Health Ministry secretary general for Primary Health Care, the platform will open on Friday July 30.
In more detail, the 2,070 new cases detected per Regional Unit: