According to
the agency, more than 215,000 cases have been confirmed so far, with over 5,800
deaths and 98,000 recoveries as of Friday, June 12.
The World
Health Organisation (WHO) has warned that the COVID-19 has continued to spread
in Africa since the virus was first detected on the continent in mid-February
2020.
The WHO
Regional Office for Africa in Brazzaville, Congo, said this in a statement
posted on its website.
“The pandemic
is accelerating – it took 98 days to reach 100, 000 cases and only 19 days to
move to 200, 000 cases.
“Ten out of
54 countries are currently driving the rise in numbers, accounting for nearly
80 percent of all the cases.
“More than 70
percent of the deaths are taking place in only five countries: Algeria, Egypt,
Nigeria, South Africa and Sudan.
“South Africa
is the most affected, accounting for 25 per cent of the continent’s total
cases, with the Western Cape and Eastern Cape provinces reporting high number
of cases and deaths daily.’’
The agency
said more than half of the countries in the continent were experiencing
COVID-19 community transmission; in many cases this is concentrated in capital
cities, but cases are spreading into the provinces.
The statement
quoted Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa, as saying, “for
now Africa still only accounts for a small fraction of cases worldwide.
“But the pace
of the spread is quickening. Swift and early action by African countries has helped
to keep numbers low but constant vigilance is needed to stop COVID-19 from
overwhelming health facilities.”
The UN health
agency said many countries were quick to make difficult decisions and put in
place lockdowns and key public health measures.
“They put in
place key public health measures such as promoting physical distancing, good
hand hygiene and testing, tracing of contacts of people with COVID-19 and
isolation of cases.
“With the
support of WHO and other partners, governments also rapidly started to scale up
health workforce and laboratory capacities, and to set up points-of-entry
screening at airports and border crossings.
“These public
health and social measures have been effective in slowing the spread of
COVID-19 in Africa,’’ it stated.
In addition,
it stated that in recent weeks, countries began relaxing lockdowns to resume
some economic and social activities, noting that the shutdowns have come at
considerable socioeconomic cost.
The statement
further quoted Moeti, as saying “Stay-at-home orders and closing of markets and
businesses have taken a heavy toll, particularly on the most vulnerable and
marginalised communities.
“So, the need
to balance between saving lives and protecting livelihoods is a key
consideration in this response, particularly in Africa,” it said.
According to
WHO, easing restrictions should be a controlled process and needs to be coupled
with ensuring that widespread testing capacities and mechanisms are in place.
“These steps
need to be constantly adapted according to the trends in the data and
maintained until the pandemic is contained or there is a vaccine or treatment
for COVID-19 which is accessible to everyone.

No comments:
Post a Comment