As India
continues to set a new global record for a rise in daily coronavirus cases for
a fifth straight day, while deaths from COVID-19 also jumped by an all-time
high over the last 24 hours, the Presidential Steering Committee on COVID-19
(PSC) has warned Nigerians to brace up for a third COVID-19 wave.
On
Sunday, India reported 346,786 new cases of COVID-19 for the previous 24 hours,
with 2,624 deaths – the world’s highest daily toll since the pandemic
began last year. Overall, nearly 190,000 people have died from COVID in the
country, while more than 16.6 million have been infected.
The PSC
warning came as the Rapid-Response initiative group of the Academy of Medicine
Specialties (AMS) stated that to avoid a third wave of COVID-19 in the country,
the Federal Government should close international airports to all flights for
at least two weeks.
PSC said
the cases in India and Turkey are of particular concern to the country due to
the demographic similarities with Nigeria and the fact that they currently experience
serious third waves, adding that over 2,500 Indians died on Sunday alone, more
than they suffered on any day in the first and second waves, and more than the
total Nigeria has ever lost on record.
The World
Health Organisation (WHO) director-general voiced alarm yesterday at India’s
record-breaking wave of coronavirus cases and deaths, describing the situation
as “beyond heartbreaking. WHO is doing everything we can, providing critical
equipment and supplies, including thousands of oxygen concentrators,
prefabricated mobile field hospitals and laboratory supplies,” Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus told reporters in Geneva during a media briefing.
India’s
unfolding coronavirus crisis is at its most visceral in the overwhelmed
graveyards and crematoriums, as bright, glowing funeral pyres light up the
night sky in its worst-hit cities. Outside crematoriums in cities like the
capital New Delhi, which currently has the highest number of daily cases,
ambulance after ambulance wait in line to cremate the dead. Delhi has been
cremating so many bodies that authorities are getting requests to start cutting
down trees in city parks for firewood as a record surge of COVID-19 collapses
India’s tattered healthcare system.
MEANWHILE,
the Federal Government has said that Nigeria will not accept vaccines from
private and unverified sources due to warnings by international police
organisations of the high rate of fake COVID-19 vaccines said to be in
circulation, and reports of risks of adverse effects reported after vaccination.
Consequently,
the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) is
pursuing initiatives to test and authorise more vaccines for use in Nigeria.
Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, who gave the warning at the briefing of
the committee yesterday in Abuja, said government has observed that not only
vaccine hesitancy is responsible for the rising COVID-19 cases in India, but
insufficient compliance with public health advisories, such as social
distancing and wearing of face masks.
Ehanire
stated that Nigeria is still expecting more AstraZeneca vaccines and is looking
forward to acquiring J&J vaccines, a single shot vaccine that has been
re-certified as fit for use by United States regulatory organs.
The
minister explained that the Covax facility is to provide vaccines for at least
20 per cent of the population, “while the African Union vaccine purchase
pooling facility AVATT, backed by Afrexim Bank, are our designated sources of
vaccine acquisition.”
The
minister observed that many more COVID-19 positive persons now present
themselves voluntarily for treatment, adding that in the past two weeks only
one patient in isolation centres had needed oxygen treatment.
He said: “This development has reduced pressure on oxygen need, making it more available for other conditions such as pneumonia and asthma. Plans by the Federal Government to build new oxygen plants in all states are well on track, as well as plans by Global Fund to repair or update existing, faulty plants.”
Also
speaking, Chairman of PSC and Secretary to the Government of the Federation,
Mr. Boss Mustapha, noted that “experience in other countries warns us of the
unpredictable pattern of COVID-19 resurgence as study of developments in places
like Turkey, India, Thailand and Brazil with severe disease and high fatality
ratios, helps us to recalibrate our response.”
The SGF
observed that the vaccination programme was still progressing but the country
still had reasons to intensify campaign against hesitancy. He disclosed that as
of date, Nigeria has vaccinated 1,173,869 representing 58.3 per cent of the
eligible persons targeted in the current phase, who have received the first
dose of AstraZeneca vaccine. Boss Mustapha observed that this number is low in
PSC estimation.
THE Federal
Government also said it anticipates delay in vaccine supply to Nigeria, which
may also affect and impact the remaining phases of the vaccination campaign.
Executive Director of the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency
(NPHCDA), Dr Faisal Shuaib, who disclosed this during the briefing by the
Presidential Steering Committee on COVID-19 yesterday in Abuja, explained that
all states of the federation, including FCT, are currently administering only
50 per cent of their allocated doses of vaccines while the remaining 50 percent
will be administered to clients who had earlier received the first dose, adding
that this would be scheduled between 8 and 12 weeks from the date of their
first dose.
Shuaib
noted that notwithstanding vaccinating 1,173,869, the government was aware of
the global scarcity of COVID-19 vaccines due to high demand, especially in
countries where the vaccines are being produced. According to him, the Federal
Government has signed up to receive about 29.8 million doses of the Johnson &
Johnson vaccine through the African Union (AU) and is also expecting deliveries
of vaccines through the Covax facility by the end of May or early June 2021.
IN its
call for the closure of airports, the Academy of Medicine Specialties argue
that as India was already grappling with the third wave, France, Germany, Italy
and the Federal Government should be proactive. President, AMS, Prof. Oladapo
Ashiru, told The Guardian yesterday Nigeria could not afford to have a third
wave.
Ashiru,
who is also the President, African Fertility Society (AFS) and Joint Pioneer of
In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) in Nigeria, said the Rapid-Response initiative
group of the Academy of Medicine Specialties has issued urgent advisory to the
Academy for the information and action of government and the public.
He said:
“COVID-19 transmission is still active, although at a low level. The low level
transmission is due largely to the lockdowns going on in Europe and some
countries. The ongoing transmission in the country is caused largely by those
inbound passengers from India and those countries with surges in the cases
reported daily. Many of them travel into Nigeria in direct flights. Our testing
strategy should still be Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) based, but look for
some other gene’s aside the S gene.”
Ashiru said
there is the urgent need to enforce the use of PTF regulations of social
distancing, hand sanitisers/washing and wearing of facemask. He said Prof
Christian Tientcha Happi, a Fellow of the Academy, also reported that they have
found five sequences of the India B.1.617 in the country, specifically in Edo
and Osun states.
Happi, a
professor of Molecular Biology and Genomics in the Department of Biological
Sciences, and the Director, African Center of Excellence for Genomics of
Infectious Diseases (ACEGID) located at Redeemer’s University, Ede, Osun State,
noted in their most recent findings: “A new B.1. 1.318 variant that emerged in
Nigeria with major characteristics of other Variants of Concern (VOCs) is
spread out of the country in January this year and is creating havoc in
Mauritius Island. The B.1. 525 that we discovered in Nigeria late last year are
now the dominant variant in Nigeria (spreading faster than the UK B.1.1.7).
This lineage is also spreading at a super fast speed in the United Kingdom (UK)
and other European countries. The B.1.525 is now also the second most popular
variant in Africa after the B.1.351Y V2 from South Africa.”
MEANWHILE,
the second round of a WHO “pulse survey“ revealed that over one year into the
COVID-19 pandemic, substantial disruptions persist, with about 90 per cent of
countries still reporting one or more disruptions to essential health services,
marking no substantial global change since the first survey conducted in the
summer of 2020.
The WHO,
however, noted that within countries, the magnitude and extent of disruptions
has generally decreased. In 2020, countries reported that, on average; about
half of essential health services were disrupted. In the first three months of
2021, however, they reported progress, with just over one third of services now
being disrupted.
Director
General, WHO, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said: “It is encouraging to see
that countries are beginning to build back their essential health services, but
much remains to be done.
“The survey
highlights the need to intensify efforts and take additional steps to close
gaps and strengthen services. It will be especially important to monitor the
situation in countries that were struggling to provide health services before
the pandemic.”
SO far, the Federal Government, through the National Primary Health Care
Development Agency (NPHCDA), has refused to comment despite concerns that
growing AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in East Africa that might have
led to the expiration of the products.
Health
campaigners, who raised the concerns, say the countries face destroying
thousands of doses of COVID-19 vaccines that expired before they could be used.
The
situation has raised concerns also in Nigeria that the over 1.3 million doses
of AstraZeneca vaccine remaining from the 3.92 million doses received from the
COVAX Facility by the Federal Government in March 2021 might have expired.
According to
reports monitored yesterday, Malawi was reportedly set to destroy more than 16,000
doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, part of a shipment of 102,000 vaccines that
arrived in the country in March, three weeks before their expiration date,
donated by the African Union.
While the
country has administered over 230,000 doses of vaccine, this has only been
enough to cover one per cent of its population. It also received 360,000 doses
of vaccine of the AstraZeneca vaccines from the COVAX Facility — which is
aiming to get two billion doses this year to low- and middle-income countries —
and the Indian government. According to Africa News, of the total number of
vaccines that arrived in the country, however, just 46 per cent were used.
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