With a surge in daily reported cases, Africa may soon be the new hotspot for corona virus discuss. However, i believe that it needn't be with the right attitude from all concerned and the high recovery rate being touted in African countries.
below is a report by the BBC:
Africa is seeing
coronavirus cases rapidly increasing and deaths rising, according to the World
Health Organization (WHO).
We've looked at the
situation across the continent, and examined which countries are of most
concern.
How fast is coronavirus spreading?
In terms of overall numbers, Africa currently accounts for only
a small proportion of total global cases, but the acceleration in rates of
infection in some countries is of increasing concern to health authorities in
the region.
While it took nearly
100 days for Africa to reach an initial 100,000 cases, it took only 18 days for
that to double to 200,000. It doubled again to 400,000 cases over the next 20
days.
The upward trend in
Africa is starting to resemble other parts of the world that have been badly
hit by the coronavirus. Most African countries are now experiencing community
transmission, according to the WHO.
This is when a person
gets Covid-19 without having been in contact with a known case from abroad or a
confirmed domestic case, which makes it hard for for the authorities to track
down the source of a local outbreak.
Where are Africa's hotspots?
The two countries with
the highest numbers of cases are South Africa and Egypt. They accounted for
over 60% of all the new cases reported in late June.
South Africa has the
highest recorded number of total cases, while Egypt has the largest number of
recorded coronavirus deaths.
South Africa, which
imposed one of the world's strictest lockdowns in late March, has seen cases
rise steadily after this was relaxed in early May.
The Western Cape Province
(where Cape Town is located), accounts for nearly half of all cases in the
country and more than half of the deaths. But cases are steadily rising in
Gauteng province, which includes Johannesburg.
Egypt has seen case
numbers rising rapidly since mid-May, but there are indications that this may
now have reached a peak with recorded new infections levelling off slightly in
early July.
There is also concern
about what is happening in Nigeria, which recorded the second-highest increase
in deaths from Covid-19 after South Africa in the WHO report for 1 July.
Note: Data for Egypt can be
found by selecting the Middle East region from the drop-down menu in both the
map and country table below.
Mauritania has also
seen a steep increase in cases in recent weeks.
It's worth stressing
that parts of the continent have seen relatively few cases, such as some areas
of East Africa.
In fact, the latest WHO Africa region report said just 10 countries accounted
for more than 80% of all the reported cases on the continent.
The WHO says this
could be partly because of the relatively young population in Africa - more
than 60% under the age of 25. Covid-19 is known to have a higher mortality rate
for older age groups.
Another way to look at
death rates is to see what proportion of people who get Covid-19 go on to die.
On this basis, there
are five countries with death rates that are comparable to or higher than the
most recent global average rate of just under 5%:
§
Chad (8.5%)
§
Algeria (6.6%)
§
Niger (6.2%)
§
Burkina Faso (5.5%)
§
Mali (5.3)
But Githinji Gitahi,
the head of Amref Health Africa, an NGO which specialises in health matters,
says the higher rates could be an indication of much higher infection levels
than those being recorded, and that it could be down to low levels of testing.
The fewer tests you
carry out, the fewer cases you find, and so the number of deaths appears
relatively high.
Different methods of
reporting deaths may also affect the number.
For example, where
community health workers and other frontline staff record Covid-19 deaths, such
as in Chad, you could get a higher death rate.
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How much testing is done in Africa?
Ten countries account
for about 80% of the total tests conducted - South Africa, Morocco, Ghana,
Egypt, Ethiopia, Uganda, Mauritius, Kenya, Nigeria and Rwanda.
There are wide variations in testing rates, with South Africa
doing the most and Nigeria doing relatively few, according to Our World in
Data, a UK-based project which
collates Covid-19 information.
On 4 July, South
Africa was doing just over 30 tests per 1,000 people, compared with 72 in the
UK and 105 in the US.
Nigeria is achieving
0.7 tests per 1,000 people, Ghana 10 and Kenya 3.
It's worth pointing
out that for some African countries, it is impossible to know what exactly is
happening due to a lack of any data or data being incomplete.
"We have to take
the numbers with a pinch of salt," says Chiedo Nwankwor, a lecturer in
African affairs at Johns Hopkins University in the US.
In Tanzania, President
John Magufuli has voiced doubts about the validity of virus testing results at
the national laboratory, and has allowed only limited data on infection rates
and testing to be made public.
Equatorial Guinea had
a row with the WHO after accusing its country representative of inflating the
number of Covid-19 cases. For a while it held back its data, but has now
started sharing it again.
And in Kano state in
northern Nigeria, an unusual spike of close to 1,000 deaths was reported in
late April, but the government has not still confirmed how many were due to
Covid-19.
News Source: BBC
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