The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘ Why entire country should be on red alert for COVID- 19 third wave’

People living with HIV more vulnerable, says UNAIDS

- By Chukwuma Muanya and Ijeoma Thomas- Odia

AVIROLOGIS­T and chairman, Expert Review Committee on COVID- 19, Prof. Oyewale Tomori, has faulted calls by the Presidenti­al Steering Committee on COVID- 19 ( PSC) that six states and Abuja should be placed on red alert following the impending third wave of the pandemic in the country and confirmati­on of the Delta variant of the disease.

The chairman of PSC and Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Boss Mustapha, had said that given the confirmati­on of the Delta variant, the rising number of infections and hospitalis­ations in the country, Lagos, Oyo, Rivers, Kaduna,

Kano, Plateau and the Federal Capital Territor y ( FCT) have been put on red alert as part of preventive measures against a third wa ve. But Tomori, who is also the pioneer vice chancellor of Redeemer’s University and a consultant to the W orld Health Organisati­on ( WHO), said: “This proclamati­on and red alert is the typical short sightednes­s and failure to be proactive. COVID- 19 goes where we take it - from Ikotun Egbe in Lagos to Oba in Idemili North Local Government Area of Anambra State. “The entire country should be on alert. After the Sallah holidays and the recent burials that violated all Non Pharmaceut­ical Interventi­ons ( NPIS), celebrants who may have asymptomat­ically harboured the virus before and after will travel and return to different destinatio­ns. PSC is basing its decision of the faulty towers of poor uncoordina­ted testing in the country. I say declare Nigeria at the reddest alert, and not some states!”

A new report from UNAIDS Global AIDS update 2021, meanwhile, has highlighte­d evidence that people living with HIV are more vulnerable to COVID- 19 and that widening inequaliti­es are preventing them from accessing COVID- 19 vaccines and HIV services.

According to the Executive Director of UNAIDS, Ms Winnie Byanyima, the report shows how COVID- 19 lockdowns and other restrictio­ns have badly disrupted HIV testing and, in many countries, this has led to steep drops in HIV diagnoses, referrals to care services and treatment initiation­s.

The report, ‘ Confrontin­g inequaliti­es: Lessons for pandemic responses from 40 years of AIDS’, notes that in 2020, 1.5 million new HIV infections were predominan­tly among key population­s and their sexual partners. Furthermor­e, people who inject drugs, transgende­r women, sex workers and gay men and other men who have sex with men, and the sexual partners of these key population­s, accounted for 65 per cent of HIV infections globally in 2020.

 ?? PHOTO: LUCY LADIDI ATEKO ?? The Country Director Pharmacces­s Foundation, Njide Ndili ( left) and Executive Secretary, National Health Insurance Scheme ( NHIS), Prof. Mohammed Nasir Sambo at the signing of an MOU between Pharmacces­s Foundation Nigeria and NHIS to provide technical assistance on accreditat­ion and quality improvemen­t tools in Abuja… yesterday.
PHOTO: LUCY LADIDI ATEKO The Country Director Pharmacces­s Foundation, Njide Ndili ( left) and Executive Secretary, National Health Insurance Scheme ( NHIS), Prof. Mohammed Nasir Sambo at the signing of an MOU between Pharmacces­s Foundation Nigeria and NHIS to provide technical assistance on accreditat­ion and quality improvemen­t tools in Abuja… yesterday.

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