Saudi Arabia announces 30 more deaths from COVID-19

Saudi Arabia announced 30 more deaths from the coronavirus and 461 new cases of the disease on Saturday. (SPA)
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Updated 27 September 2020
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Saudi Arabia announces 30 more deaths from COVID-19

  • Recovery rate from the virus currently at 95%
  • A total of 4,655 people have succumbed to the virus in the Kingdom so far

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia continued its successful retreat in daily confirmed cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) as it surpassed the 95 percent recovery rate mark.

The Ministry of Health confirmed 461 new cases on Saturday, raising the number of infections to 332,790 cases so far, with 769 new recoveries, raising the total number of recoveries to 316,405.
The recovery rate is calculated by considering the total number of discharged patients against the total number of COVID-19 positive patients recovering.
Of Saturday’s confirmed cases, 62 percent were male. Adults made up 84 percent of cases, children 11 percent and seniors 5 percent.
The Kingdom maintained its 30-40 average daily death count with 30 new deaths on Saturday, raising the total death toll to 4,655 deaths.
Saudi Arabia is recording 133 deaths per million according to worldmeters.info, a reference website that provides global COVID-19 statistics, ranking it 55th worldwide.

FASTFACTS

• The Ministry of Health confirmed 461 new cases on Saturday.

• A total of 769 more people recovered from COVID-19.

• Saudi Arabia is recording 133 deaths per million according to worldmeters.info.

• New features added to Tawakkalna app.

There are currently 11,730 active cases in the Kingdom, 1,035 of which are critical. So far, 38,528 new polymerase chain reaction tests have been conducted in the Kingdom over the past 24-hours, raising the total number of tests to 6.31 million.
New updated features were added to Saudi Arabia’s Tawakkalna app, with five new services that aim to contribute to meeting the needs of users. The new update includes a comprehensive database with basic user information, in addition to data on driving licenses, passports, traffic violations.
The updated version also includes educational services where parents can access information about their children’s educational status, and Madrasati platform information, with users also able to check on dependents and sponsors.
Users can now book a COVID-19 test, cancel test appointments and view their test results and those of their dependents.
They can also be notified of government document expiration dates, and receive alerts and reminders about personal documents in addition to general national alerts.
Tawakkalna, an app developed by the National Information Center and launched last April, has surpassed 7 million users in the past four months since its launch in April.


Healthcare must be ‘proactive’ says Hevolution exec

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Healthcare must be ‘proactive’ says Hevolution exec

  • Princess Dr. Haya bint Khaled bin Bandar Al-Saud spoke to Arab News at a presentation of its second Global Healthspan Report

RIYADH: Healthcare needs to shift to a global model that targets preventing disease rather than treating it, a senior executive from the Saudi-funded Hevolution Foundation told Arab News.

The senior vice president of research of Hevolution, Princess Dr. Haya bint Khaled bin Bandar Al-Saud, spoke to Arab News at a presentation of its second Global Healthspan Report at the nonprofit’s headquarters in Riyadh’s KAFD on Wednesday.

“People have to be aware, healthcare has to change its way of thinking, because it’s a must,” she said. “We cannot be reactive anymore, we have to be proactive.

“And this has to start earlier in the education of health professionals, and third, someone needs to take this to the global agenda. The general public needs to know that this is a reality.” 

Launching its report, Hevolution called for urgent global action to treat healthy aging as an economic imperative, where prevention, not disease, drives prosperity.

The organization focuses on healthspan research, or extending the healthy human lifespan.

The findings of the report centered around five main areas; rising awareness and public demand, breakthrough science and new therapies, AI and data revolution, investment momentum and gaps and economic and policy imperatives.

The report detailed the momentum of a new healthspan era where science, technology and public awareness are converging, but momentum alone is not enough.

Al-Saud explained that achieving equitable and evidence-based progress would require coordinated leadership from scientists, policymakers and investors alike.

“Today, science and societal cause has to be integrated, meaning the public needs to know that everything that we are investing in is for the general population, not just on a local level but on a global level,” she said.

The report surveyed 23 countries on the awareness of healthspan, which found that two-thirds of healthcare professionals now receive patient inquiries about healthspan interventions at least once a month, with one-third reporting them weekly.

Al-Saud highlighted that the report also found that 80 per cent of citizens believed governments should fund preventive care programs, while 39 per cent expressed concern about inequality in access.

“Awareness is the most important thing. This subject touches every single one of us, every single one of us has a story that this relates to, whether a grandparent, sick parent, or us,” she said.

Under artificial intelligence the report found that 74 per cent of experts believe AI will transform healthspan R&D and healthcare delivery, yet 26–30 per cent remain opposed to AI in diagnostics, reflecting an ongoing trust and ethics gap.

The report detailed that 59 per cent of investors cite lack of awareness as the top barrier while 46 per cent point to limited experts, unclear evidence and weak regulatory frameworks.

“Between 2022 and 2024 the investments in healthspan has doubled, it’s estimated to be $7 billion invested in finding interventions in healthspan globally,” Al-Saud said.

Investment in healthspan reached $7.33 billion in 2024, up from $3.48 billion the previous year. The average deal size has grown 77 per cent since 2020, signaling maturing confidence in the sector.

“Hevolution Foundation remains the world’s largest philanthropic backer of aging biology and healthspan science, with $400 million allocated in over 230 grants, 25 partnerships, and four biotech ventures,” Al-Saud said.

According to a report from Hevolution, expanding could deliver up to $220 billion annually in productivity gains, and every $1 invested in prevention could yield $16 in returns.

“We always want to support scientists but the end-consumer is the general public,” Al-Saud said.

Hevolution has remained true to its mission since its foundation; to extend healthy human lifespan for all, mobilizing the science, innovation and investment needed to make healthier longer lives a shared global reality.

Established by royal decree in 2018 and launched in 2021, Hevolution Foundation is a non-profit organization that focuses on accelerating independent research and entrepreneurship in the emerging field of healthspan science.

Headquartered in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, with a North American hub in Boston, the foundation says it has plans for further international expansion, and has set key goals and targets to advance its vision and mission.