The Sunday Guardian

WHO warns of global shortage of coronaviru­s protective equipment

- STEPHANIE NEBHEY GENEVA

The world is facing a chronic shortage of gowns, masks, gloves and other protective equipment in the fight against a spreading coronaviru­s epidemic, World Health Organisati­on (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said on Friday.

The UN agency has been sending testing kits, masks, gloves, respirator­s and gowns to every region, Tedros told the WHO Executive Board in Geneva. “However the world is facing a chronic shortage of personnel protective equipment, as you might imagine.

“This afternoon I will be speaking to the pandemic supply chain network to identify the bottleneck­s and find solutions and push (for) fairness in distributi­on of equipment,” he said. As of 6 a.m. Geneva time (0500 GMT) there were 31,211 confirmed coronaviru­s cases in China and 637 deaths, as well as 270 cases in 24 other countries with 1 death, Tedros said. “For the last two days there had been fewer reported infections in China, which is good news, but we caution against reading too much into that. The numbers could go up again,” he said.

During its technical briefing for member states, there was discussion about naming the virus - which emerged in a seafood market in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late December. WHO has already assigned an interim name of 2019-NCOV (novel coronaviru­s) acute respirator­y disease.

“We thought it very important that we provide an interim name so no location was associated with the name. I’m sure you have seen many media reports that are still calling this, using the name Wuhan or using China,” WHO epidemiolo­gist Maria van Kerkhove told the board.

“We wanted to ensure that there was no stigma associated with this virus, and so we’ve put out this interim name,” she said.

Dr. Mike Ryan, WHO’S top emergency expert, said: “I think the bigger point here is to ensure that some of the actions, some of the reactions internatio­nally, it is the responsibi­lity of us all to ensure there is no stigma associated with this disease. “The unnecessar­y, unhelpful profiling of individual­s based on ethnicity is utterly and completely unacceptab­le and it needs to stop. Government­s have a responsibi­lity to communicat­e with their population­s on this,” Ryan told the board.

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