The World
Health Organisation (WHO) has said many African countries are at high risk of
COVID-19 resurgence due to poor adherence to public health measures, mass
gatherings, low testing and vaccination rate.
WHO
Regional Director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti, who disclosed this during a
virtual press conference, yesterday, noted that while three countries might
face very high risk of COVID-19 resurgence, 20 face high, 22 moderate risk, and
only one country faces low risk, according to the risk assessment of 46
countries.
She
explained that the risk was estimated using seven indicators with data from the
past four weeks, including COVID-19 cases per million people; the percentage of
change in new cases; the percentage of change in new deaths; the reproductive
number (the rate at which an infection spreads); the pandemic trend; the
average weekly number of tests per 10,000 people; and the percentage of the
population that has received, at least, one vaccine dose.
Moeti stated
that the continent has not experienced a surge in cases since January but the
relatively low number of cases has encouraged complacency and there are signs
of reduced observance of preventive measures.
According
to her, recent political rallies in countries such as Benin, Cote d’Ivoire,
Guinea and Kenya caused a spike in new cases and the upcoming elections in Cape
Verde, Ethiopia, The Gambia, Sao Tome and Principe and Zambia could trigger a
rise in cases due to mass gatherings.
She
said most countries in the region are experiencing community transmission, yet
31 out of the 46 countries analysed performed fewer than 10 tests per 10,000
people per week in the past four weeks and this suggests that the number of
cases reported in the past 28 days may not reflect the true situation as
countries continue to target only people with symptoms for testing.
“Most
new cases are still not being detected among known contacts. Investigation of
clusters of cases and contact-tracing are worryingly low in most countries in
the region. We must scale up testing, including through rapid diagnostic tests
to enhance response to the pandemic,” Moeti said.
He
said the continent could witness a dramatic spike in new infections and
fatalities unless mass gatherings were suspended and the wearing of masks was
strictly enforced.
The
pandemic has had widespread impact across many sectors, with key health
services in several African countries still reeling from disruptions
experienced more than a year since the first cases were confirmed on the
continent. Of the 40 countries, responding to a WHO survey conducted earlier
this year, 95 per cent reported disruptions of varying degree.
While
the survey shows there has been an improvement in service provision, with 41
per cent of services disrupted between January and March 2021 compared with 64
per cent in the last quarter of 2020, the persistent high levels of disruption
to health services even after many countries have eased restrictions is
concerning. The COVID-19 pandemic appears to be having a long-term impact on
health services.
ALSO,
the Africa Centre for Disease Control and Prevention has warned that a deadly
wave of the coronavirus pandemic, such as the one ravaging India, could hit
Africa with worse consequences,.
The
Director of the Africa Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, John
Nkengasong, told an online webinar yesterday.
“The
situation in India shows we as a continent can’t put our guard down. If what is
going on in India unfolds in Africa it will overwhelm our health systems.”
His
warning comes as Indian authorities and hospitals struggle to cope with
unprecedented levels of COVID-19 infections and deaths more than a year after
the start of the pandemic. Official data yesterday showed new cases
rose by 379,257 over the prior 24 hours, a daily record for any country, while
the nation’s official death toll rose to almost 205,000.
India’s
role as a vaccine manufacturer means the crisis could have a knock-on effect on
the global rollout effort, Nkengasong said.
“India
produces vaccines, India produces drugs, yet they have been overwhelmed,” he
said, adding: “No doubt the situation in India has severely affected the
predictability of vaccine rollout in Africa too.”
Delays
in supply have been experienced by 60 countries allocated doses under the Covax
initiative, which aims to ensure distribution to poorer nations, according to
vaccine group Gavi. Of those, 38 are in Africa.”
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