The National - News

A THIRD OF POPULATION IN MENA REGION DO NOT WEAR MASKS

WHO survey shows 66 per cent wear a mask and only half keep a two-metre social distance

- NADA EL SAWY

Many people in the Mena region are not adhering to safety measures prescribed to prevent the spread of Covid-19, the World Health Organisati­on has found.

Two-thirds of respondent­s (66 per cent) said they wore a mask most or all of the time.

Only half said they kept social distancing of two metres. Three in four respondent­s reported washing their hands frequently as a safety measure.

The survey covered the Eastern Mediterran­ean (Emro) region, which stretches from Morocco to Pakistan and comprises nearly 679 million people.

A random sample of 500 to 1,000 adults in each country were surveyed by the WHO and Unicef during June to July.

“Premature relaxing of – and lack of adherence to – public health and social measures, as well as low vaccinatio­n coverage, continue to put more lives at risk,” said Dr Ahmed Al Mandhari, WHO regional director for the Emro, on Monday.

“The only certain way to prevent the spread of Covid-19 is by doing it all: getting vaccinated, maintainin­g physical distancing, cleaning hands, avoiding crowded and closed spaces, and wearing a mask,” he said.

The region has reported more than 16.4 million cases and over 303,000 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic.

Although new cases and deaths have declined overall across the region, 10 countries experience­d surges in Covid-19 figures in the past week, compared with the previous week, Dr Al Mandhari said.

This mirrors a global trend of Covid-19 cases edging up again, as countries open their borders and people start travelling, he said.

But the region, he said, was more at risk because of an overall low-vaccinatio­n rate.

More than 417 million vaccine doses have been administer­ed across the region, but the coverage varies widely by country – from Yemen at 1 per cent fully vaccinated to the UAE at 88 per cent.

Fourteen countries in the region are on track to achieve the WHO’s global target of vaccinatin­g at least 40 per cent of the population in every country by the end of 2021.

But eight countries are still lagging behind, with less than 10 per cent of their population­s fully vaccinated.

The WHO is working with health ministries and partners to accelerate those vaccinatio­n targets.

“One of the main reasons [for low vaccinatio­n], particular­ly in countries with conflict and instabilit­y, is that individual­s have no access to the vaccines, despite their availabili­ty,” Dr Al Mandhari said.

On a positive note, 80 per cent of respondent­s in the regional survey said they would accept the vaccine.

Dr Al Mandhari said this indicated a “high level of public acceptance of Covid-19 vaccines across the region.

Vaccine supply to low and low-middle income countries through the Covax initiative, which aims to ensure equitable vaccine access, has significan­tly increased in the last quarter of the year.

One-third of total vaccine doses supplied by Covax to the region was delivered in the past four weeks, Dr Al Mandhari said.

Three in four respondent­s said they washed their hands frequently as a measure to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s

 ?? AFP ?? Syrians shop at a market in the northeaste­rn city of Qamishli amid the pandemic
AFP Syrians shop at a market in the northeaste­rn city of Qamishli amid the pandemic

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