The Guardian (Nigeria)

COVID- 19 Infections In Africa Has Dropped By 20%, WHO Reveals

- From Nkechi Onyedika- Ugoeze, Abuja

THE World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) has said that COVID- 19 infections in Africa had dropped by more than 20 per cent, noting that it was the sharpest sevenday drop in two months, as the third wave pandemic winds down.

The global health body, however, observed that the rate of decelerati­on was slower than the previous waves owing to the impact of more transmissi­ble variants.

Consequent­ly, the WHO said it was spearheadi­ng critical work and supporting countries in scaling up pathogen surveillan­ce through genome sequencing to detect and respond effectivel­y to COVID- 19 variants.

WHO Regional Director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti, who stated this during a virtual press conference facilitate­d by APO Group, yesterday, stated that although the COVID- 19 cases have declined appreciabl­y, the downward trend was frustratin­gly slow due to the lingering effects of the more infectious Delta variant.

Moeti noted that in the week that ended September 5, the continent recorded more than 165,000 cases, a 23 per cent decrease from the previous week, saying the decrease wasstillgr­eaterthant­heweekly instances recorded at the top of the first wave.

According to her, the more contagious Delta variant that partly fuelled the third wave has been dominant in several countries that experience­d COVID- 19 surge.

“In southern Africa, for instance, where more than 4,000 COVID- 19 genome sequencing data was produced in August, the Delta variantwas­detectedin­over70 per cent of samples from

Botswana, Malawi and South Africa, and in over 90 per cent from Zimbabwe. In collaborat­ion with the South African National Bioinforma­tics Institute, WHO is at the forefront of the efforts to set up the Regional Centre of Excellence for Genomic Surveillan­ce and Bioinforma­tics in Cape Town. The centre will support 14 countries before being expanded to serve more countries. Last year, WHO and partners establishe­d a COVID- 19 sequencing laboratory network in Africa, which has to date produced nearly 40 000 sequencing data,” she said.

Moeti, who was joined by Prof. Alan Christoffe­ls, Director of the South African National Bioinforma­tics Institute, and Dr Christian Happi, Prof. of Molecular Biology and Genomics and Director at the African Centre of Excellence for Genomics of Infectious Diseases at Redeemer’s

University in Nigeria, lamented that the continent lags far behind the rest of the world when it comes to sequencing, with only one per cent of over three million COVID- 19 sequences conducted worldwide occurring in Africa.

She added: “The third wave has shown us how variants can hijack the efforts to tame the pandemic. Countries must step up surveillan­ce because, without genomic informatio­n, variants can spread undetected. You can’t fix what you don’t measure. WHO has also recently provided financial support to countries including Eswatini, Sao Tome and Principe and Senegal to reinforce genomic surveillan­ce. To date, the dominant Delta variant has been detected in 31 African countries, while the Alpha and Beta variants have respective­ly been identified in 44 and 39 countries.”

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