Coronavirus: Africa Next Epicentre, WHO Warns
UN officials also
say it is likely the pandemic will kill at least 300,000 people in Africa and
push nearly 30 million into poverty.
The past week in
Africa has seen a sharp rise in coronavirus cases.
There have been
almost 1,000 deaths and almost 19,000 infections across Africa, so far much
lower rates than in parts of Europe and the US.
The UN Economic
Commission for Africa - which warned 300,000 could die - called for a $100bn
(£80bn) safety net for the continent, including halting external debt payments.
The WHO says the
virus appears to be spreading away from African capitals.
It has also
highlighted that the continent lacks ventilators to deal with a pandemic.
More than a third of
Africa's population lacks access to adequate water supplies and nearly 60% of
urban dwellers live in overcrowded slums - conditions where the virus could
thrive.
There are almost
19,000 confirmed cases in Africa and at least 970 confirmed deaths across the
whole continent, which has a population of about 1.3 billion.
North Africa is the
worst affected region. Algeria, Egypt and Morocco have all had more than 2,000
cases and at least 100 deaths. Algeria has had the most deaths, with 348.
Elsewhere, South
Africa has also had more than 2,000 cases, with 48 deaths, while the
continent's most populous nation, Nigeria, has had 442 cases and 13 confirmed
deaths out of a population of some 200 million.
WHO Africa director
Dr Matshidiso Moeti told BBC Global Health correspondent Tulip Mazumdar that
international travel played a part.
"If you look at
the proportion of people who travel, Africa has fewer people who are travelling
internationally," she said.
But now that the
virus is in within Africa, she says that her organisation is acting under the
assumption that it will spread just as quickly as elsewhere.
The WHO has
witnessed the virus spreading from big cities to "the hinterland" in
South Africa, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Cameroon and Ghana, Dr Moeti said.
There are around 15
African countries where the virus has not spread far so, if these countries
adopt strong social distancing measures, they could contain the virus, she
added.
Since the first case
was reported in Africa, most of those infected have been concentrated in urban
areas where health facilities and access to care is in close proximity.
This cannot be said
of rural areas where treatment facilities are scarce or non-existent.
The fragile health
infrastructure in the continent means that it will be doubly strained by an
increasing number of new Covid-19 infections.
If the experiences
of countries like Italy, Spain, France and the US are anything to go by, then
Africa will struggle to manage an increasing number of people suffering from
the virus especially those who need critical care.
Healthcare workers
in different parts of the continent have complained about the lack of adequate
personal protective equipment.

Covid-19 is a highly
infectious disease and healthcare workers are at a higher risk of infection.
Tunisia already has
68 healthcare works infected, Liberia has 18 while Niger is reporting 32.
Provisional
projections from the WHO suggest that more than 10 million people could be
infected in the next 3-6 months, but that figure doesn't take into account
public health measures that are being put in place.
If Covid-19 is able
to take hold on the continent, the consequences could be far more devastating
than we've seen in Europe and the US, says our global health correspondent.
The WHO says there
are only around five intensive care beds available for every one million people
in most African countries, compared with around 4,000 beds for every million
people in Europe.
Dr Moeti said the
WHO was focusing on prevention rather than treating the virus, because many
African countries don't have the capacity to treat many coronavirus patients.
"We want to
minimise the proportion of people who get to the point of needing critical care
in an ICU, because we know that these types of facilities are not adequate by
any means in the majority of African countries," she said.
Dr Moeti said the
lack of ventilators was "one of the biggest challenges" that African
countries are facing.
For patients
critically ill with Covid-19, access to a ventilator could be a matter of life
or death.
The machines get
oxygen into the lungs and remove carbon dioxide from the body when people are
too sick to breathe on their own.
One of the first
recorded deaths from coronavirus in Africa was Zimbabwean journalist Zororo
Makamba in March.
The local
authorities in the capital, Harare, said that they did not have a ventilator to
treat him.
Several countries
have enforced lockdowns.
In some countries,
schools are been turned into healthcare facilities where people can be
quarantined and even offered care.
Textile industries
have been recalibrated to start manufacturing personal protective equipment
such as medical gowns.
Earlier this week
the UN Food Programme started distributing badly needed equipment around the
continent from a new hub in Ethiopia's Bole airport.
The cargo included
one million face masks, personal protective equipment, and ventilators.
And the Africa
Centre for Disease Control and Prevention has announced that it will roll out
one million coronavirus testing kits to meet the continent's "big
gap".
The
organisation's director John Nkengasong says testing
rates on the continent are too low.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-africa
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