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Bangladesh reports over 10,000 COVID-19 cases; 182 dead

THE number of COVID-19 cases in Bangladesh surpassed 10,000 on Monday (4), the country's health ministry said, with infections increasing in pace over the past several days.

Bangladesh reported 688 new cases of COVID-19 over the past 24 hours, taking its tally since it reported its first case two months ago to 10,143. The death toll rose to 182 from 177.


More than 2,000 garment factories in Bangladesh, that supply to global brands, reopened last week after a month-long shutdown to curb the spread of the coronavirus, but much of the rest of the economy remains offline.

Some of the world's biggest clothing companies including Gap Inc, Zara-owner Inditex and H&M source their supplies from Bangladesh, which allowed garment manufacturers, mostly concentrated around the capital Dhaka and the port city of Chittagong, to resume work last week.

Bangladesh is home to around 4,000 garment factories employing 4.1 million workers, and industry groups for the sector had warned that the shutdown that began on March 26 and cancellation of orders could cause the country to lose $6 billion in export revenue this financial year.

Competitors such as Vietnam, China and Cambodia have already resumed operations.

Prime minister Sheikh Hasina has told government officials that schools and colleges may have to remain closed until September if the situation does not improve.

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AI does better than doctors at diagnosing emergencies, finds new study

The AI also did much better when making treatment plans, scoring 89 per cent compared to just 34 per cent for doctors

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AI does better than doctors at diagnosing emergencies, finds new study

Highlights

  • AI got the right diagnosis 67 per cent of the time.
  • Researchers say AI won't replace doctors, but will work alongside them.
  • Experts warn AI still isn't ready to be used on its own in hospitals.
A new study from Harvard found that an AI system was better than human doctors at figuring out what was wrong with emergency room patients.

Study found that AI systems outperformed human doctors in high-pressure emergency triage, making more accurate diagnoses when patients were first rushed to hospital.

Independent experts called the results a “genuine step forward” in AI clinical reasoning.

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