Gulf Times

Africa may see millions of cases: WHO forecast

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Coronaviru­s cases in Africa could shoot up from thousands now to 10mn within three to six months according to very provisiona­l modelling, a WHO official said yesterday. But Michel Yao, head of emergency operations for WHO Africa, said that was a tentative projection which could change and noted worst-case prediction­s for the Ebola outbreak had not come true because people changed behaviour in time. “This is still to be fine-tuned,” he told a media teleconfer­ence. “It’s difficult to make a long-term estimation because the context changes too much and also public health measures when they are fully implemente­d, they can actually have an impact.” The world’s poorest continent has seen more than 17,000 confirmed cases of the Covid-19 disease and about 900 deaths so far — relatively little compared to some other regions. But there are fears that could balloon and overwhelm shaky health services.

“We are concerned that the virus continues to spread geographic­ally, within countries,” said Matshidiso Moeti, director for WHO’s Africa region, which comprises 46 sub-Saharan nations and Algeria. “The numbers continue to increase every day.” Infections in South Africa, which has the highest number of cases, have slowed after it began a strict lockdown, but other nations — like Burkina Faso, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Algeria — have seen higher than average fatalities. The WHO is working with authoritie­s there to improve patient care and reduce fatalities, Moeti said. She warned that President Donald Trump’s withdrawal of US funding for the WHO could harm both the fight against against other killers like polio, HIV and malaria. “The impact, potentiall­y, of this decision will be quite significan­t on areas such as polio eradicatio­n,” said Moeti, just when Africa was close to being declared polio-free.

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