South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Africa’s response to virus made a difference

- By Cara Anna Associated Press

JOHANNESBU­RG — At a lecture to peers this month, John Nkengasong showed images that once dogged Africa, with a magazine cover declaring it “The Hopeless Continent.”

Then he quoted Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah: “It is clear that we must find an African solution to our problems, and that this can only be found in African unity.”

The coronaviru­s pandemic has fractured global relationsh­ips.

But as director of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Nkengasong has helped to steer Africa’s 54 countries into an alliance praised as responding better than some richer countries, including the United States.

As the world approaches 1 million COVID-19 deaths, Africa’s surge has been leveling off. Its 1.4 million confirmed cases are far from the horrors predicted. Antibody testing is expected to show many more infections, but most cases are asymptomat­ic.

Just over 34,000 deaths are confirmed on the continent of 1.3 billion people.

Experts caution that data collection in many African countries is incomplete, and Nkengasong warned against complacenc­y, saying a single case can spark a new surge.

“Africa is doing a lot of things right the rest of the world isn’t,” said Gayle Smith, a former administra­tor with the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

She’s watched in astonishme­nt as Washington looks inward instead of leading the world. But Africa “is a great story and one that needs to be told.”

Nkengasong, whom the Gates Foundation honored Tuesday with its Global Goalkeeper Award as a “relentless proponent of global collaborat­ion,” is the continent’s most visible narrator. A former official with the U.S. CDC, the Cameroonbo­rn virologist modeled the African version on his exemployer. It pains him to see the U.S. struggle now.

Nkengasong insists that Africa can stand up to COVID-19 if given a fighting chance.

Early modeling assumed “a large number of Africans would just die,” he said. The Africa CDC decided not to issue projection­s.

“When I looked at the data and the assumption­s, I wasn’t convinced,“he said.

Experts point to Africa’s youthful population as a factor why COVID -19 hasn’t taken a larger toll, along with fast lockdowns and later arrival of the virus.

“Be patient,” Nkengasong cautioned. “There’s a lot we still don’t know.”

As Africa’s top public health official, leading an agency launched only three years ago, he plunged into the race for medical supplies and now a vaccine. At first, it was a shock.

“The collapse of global cooperatio­n and a failure of internatio­nal solidarity have shoved Africa out of the diagnostic­s market,” Nkengasong wrote in the journal Nature in April. “If Africa loses, the world loses.”

Supplies slowly i mproved, and African countries have conducted 13 million tests, enough to cover 1% of the continent’s population. But the ideal is 13 million tests per month, Nkengasong said.

He and other African leaders are haunted by the memories of 12 million Africans dying during the decade it took for affordable HIV drugs to reach the continent. That must not happen again, he said.

This week, more world leaders than ever are gathering online for the biggest global endeavor since COVID-19 appeared, the United Nations General Assembly. If Nkengasong could address them, he would say this: “We should be very careful that history doesn’t record us on the wrong side of it.”

African leaders are expected to say much the same. “The COVID-19 pandemic has shown we have no option but to depend on each other,” Ghana’s president, Nana Akufo-Addo, told the gathering Monday.

Nkengasong urges African countries not to wait for help and rejects the image of the continent holding a begging bowl. The money is there, he said.

Acting on that idea, Africa’s public and private sectors created an online purchasing platform to focus their negotiatin­g power, launched by the African Union to buy directly from manufactur­ers. Government­s can browse and buy rapid testing kits, N95 masks and ventilator­s, some now manufactur­ed in Africa in another campaign endorsed by heads of state.

Impressed, Caribbean countries have signed on.

“It’s the only part of the world I’m aware of that actually built a supply chain,” said Smith, the former USAID chief.

When the pandemic began, just two African countries could test for the coronaviru­s. Now all can.

Nkengasong was struck by how much informatio­n “doesn’t get translated” to member states, so the Africa CDC holds online training on everything from safely handling bodies to genomic surveillan­ce.

“I look at Africa and I look at the U.S., and I’m more optimistic about Africa, to be honest, because of the leadership there and doing their best despite limited resources,” said Sema Sgaier, director of the Surgo Foundation, which produced a COVID-19 vulnerabil­ity index for each region. She spoke even as Africa’s cases were surging weeks ago.

With COVID-19 vaccines the next urgent issue, African countries held a conference to insist on equitable access and explore manufactur­ing to end their almost complete reliance on the outside world. They began securing the latestage clinical trials that long have been held outside the continent, aiming to land 10 as soon as possible.

Nkengasong said Africa needs at least 1.5 billion vaccine doses, enough to cover 60% of the population for “herd immunity” with the two likely required doses. That will cost about $10 billion.

The World Health Organizati­on says Africa should receive at least 220 million doses through an internatio­nal effort to develop and distribute a vaccine known as COVAX.

That’s welcome but not enough, Nkengasong said.

His next hurdle is how to deliver doses throughout the vast continent with the world’s worst infrastruc­ture. Less than half of Africa’s countries have access to modern health care facilities, he said.

COVID-19’s effects are “devastatin­g” for Africa, from education to economies to the fight against other diseases. Nkengasong plans a major conference next year to press countries to significan­tly increase health spending ahead of the next pandemic.

“If we do not,” he said, “something is terribly wrong with us.”

 ?? SUNDAY ALAMBA/AP ?? A teacher checks students for fever last month in Nigeria. About 34,000 COVID-19 deaths have been confirmed in Africa.
SUNDAY ALAMBA/AP A teacher checks students for fever last month in Nigeria. About 34,000 COVID-19 deaths have been confirmed in Africa.

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