RIO DE JANEIRO — Cases of COVID-19 are rising again in the country with the world's second-highest confirmed death toll, prompting Brazilian experts to express concern and politicians to downplay its severity in the midst of an election season.
Data from Johns Hopkins University show new cases reached a seven-day rolling average of 28,600 a day on Thursday, up from about 13,700 two weeks earlier.
With infections increasing from Brazil's biggest cities to the Amazon, there has been rampant speculation the nation could be on track to follow the path of U.S. and Europe, where new cases are spiraling.
Yet key authorities remain outwardly sanguine, claiming the increase to be either temporary or a statistical blip.
Many are brushing off calls for stricter measures aimed at containing the virus' spread at a moment when Brazilians are heading into a second round of municipal elections nationwide.
Manaus, the capital of Amazonas state, was slammed so hard early in the pandemic that hospitals turned away patients and the city cemetery dug mass graves. Its hospitals recently hustled to add dozens of intensive-care beds for COVID-19 patients, and the state extended by one month its decree closing bars, river beaches and clubs. Still, Marcellus Campêlo, the state's health secretary, denied a looming wave of cases.
"We have had an increase in COVID-19 infections, which we think is due to Independence Day (Sept. 7), political party conventions and the start of the election period, which unfortunately generated a lot of crowds," Campêlo told The Associated Press. "But data from hospitalizations isn't close to what we saw in April or May."
The Health Ministry's executive secretary, Élcio Franco, told reporters Thursday that the rise may be a statistical illusion caused by a glitch in the ministry's COVID-19 information system that prevented several states from uploading figures during several day in November's first week — making the count stack up later. System instability has made it impossible to know, said Franco.