WHO Expresses Concern Over More Than 6,000 Cases of Covid-19 Reported in Africa.
World Health Organisation (WHO) has expressed concerns over the increasing figure of the confirmed cases of Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Africa.
With more than 6,000 Coronavirus (COVID-19) cases reported in Africa, the deadly disease is threatening fragile health systems on the continent.
Infections are increasingly spreading not only between African countries but within different localities in the hardest-hit countries.
For instance, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where COVID-19 cases were at first confined to Kinshasa, now a handful of cases have been reported in the easternmost regions of the country that were until recently in the grip of an Ebola outbreak.
In South Africa, all provinces have now reported cases. The outbreaks in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Nigeria and Senegal are also widespread.
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“Case numbers are increasing exponentially in the African region. It took 16 days from the first confirmed case in the region to reach 100 cases. It took a further 10 days to reach the first thousand. Three days after this, there were 2000 cases, and two days later we were at 3000,” said the Regional Director for Africa, World Health Organisation (WHO), Dr. Matshidiso Moeti.
To contain COVID-19, many countries in Africa are implementing measures, which restrict gatherings and the movement of people.
Nationwide lockdowns are in effect in Kenya, Uganda, the Republic of the Congo and elsewhere.
But WHO said governments must use these measures in a considered, evidence-based manner, and make sure that people could continue to access basic necessities.
“As many people in the region live in crowded conditions or work in the informal sector and need to earn money daily to survive, it’s important that countries make provisions to ensure that people can still access essential services.
“WHO is working closely with national governments and United Nations partners including the World Food Programme (WFP) to plan for these needs,” WHO added.
Moeti and WFP Regional Director for Southern Africa, Lola Castro, stated this during a virtual media briefing held on Thursday by the WHO Regional Office for Africa with the support of the World Economic Forum.
“For socially restrictive measures to be effective, they must be accompanied by strong, sustained and targeted public health measures that locate, isolate, test and treat COVID-19 cases,” Moeti pointed out.
“It’s vital that ports continue to operate to receive food and other essential humanitarian cargo; that borders and roads stay open so it can be moved where it is most needed; and that distributions to vulnerable people are conducted safely.
“It’s also crucial that the international community promptly provide the considerable funding needed to maintain and scale up assistance programmes,” said Castro.
As well as ensuring basic needs are met, WHO is pursuing innovative solutions to the region’s pressing public health problems.
On April 1, WHO hosted an online training session on the clinical management of COVID-19 cases. Nearly 500 attendees from across Africa logged in to learn about issues including case characterisation and triage, treating severely ill cases, infection prevention and control, and how to quarantine and manage cases in the community.
WHO also hosted a three-day ‘hackathon,’ bringing together Africa’s brightest minds to find solutions to some of the problems COVID-19 has presented.
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