Two day old baby dies of Covid-19 in South Africa

The
mother had tested positive for Covid-19 and the child subsequently tested
positive, the health minister said.
The
baby was born prematurely and needed help with breathing, he added.
The
country's death toll now stands at 339, and the number of confirmed cases has
climbed to 18,003.
The
latest modelling predicts that up to 40,000 people might die in South Africa over
the next few months.
"Sadly we have
recorded the first neonatal mortality related to Covid-19. The baby was two
days old and was born prematurely," South Africa's Health Minister Dr
Zweli Mkhize said.
"The
baby had lung difficulties which required ventilation support immediately after
birth.
"We
extend a special word of comfort to the mother of this child and salute the
neonatologists, nurses and all allied and technical personnel who had the
difficult task of caring for the neonate to the end," he added.
Asked
by the BBC whether this was the youngest victim of coronavirus in Africa, the
director of the Africa Centre for Disease Control (CDC) Dr John Nkengasong
said: "To the best of our knowledge that is the first case that the Africa
CDC is aware of."
Other
young victims of coronavirus, include a three-day-old who died on 5 May in the UK. In that case the
mother and baby tested positive for coronavirus after she gave birth.
The
baby was born with a low heart rate and the coroner listed the primary cause of
death as severe hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy, meaning the brain was starved
of blood and oxygen, while maternal Covid-19 was listed as a secondary cause.
Mr
Mkhize also said that the two-year-old baby was one of 27 new deaths recorded
in South Africa in the last 24 hours.
The
country has the highest number of cases of Covid-19 in Africa. However, Egypt
and Algeria have had more fatalities, with 680 and 568 respectively.
South
Africa has had some of the strictest lockdown measures in the world, including a ban on cigarettes and alcohol, but is now easing
some restrictions.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-africa-
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