Cape Argus

Medics say vigilance is watchword

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

WHILE the second wave of Covid19 infections has clearly subsided, health authoritie­s in the province have warned citizens to remain vigilant about the real prospect of a third wave.

This was the message from the Health department's chief operating officer Dr Saadiq Kariem during Premier Alan Winde’s regular digicon update on Covid-19 and the vaccine rollout in the province.

Dr Kariem said: “Our local teams remain on high alert for surveillan­ce and response to localised clusters, especially for the vulnerable, even though the second wave has subsided in the Western Cape, with a clear and consistent decline in cases, hospitalis­ation and deaths.”

Regarding the vaccine rollout Health MEC Nomafrench Mbombo said: “One week after the first vaccine was administer­ed in the province, the Western Cape has vaccinated 5 389 healthcare workers representi­ng approximat­ely 41% of its allocated 13 000 doses.”

Mbombo said: “It is crucial for those who have been vaccinated to remember that research shows vaccinatio­n does not take effect immediatel­y. Also there is no research that confirms that vaccinatio­n means that you cannot transmit or spread the virus.

Therefore there is need for adherence to non-pharmaceut­ical interventi­ons; especially for individual­s who have underlying medical conditions precaution­s need to remain in place.”

Winde said: “We have experience­d some minor early challenges in the rollout of phase one, most of which have already been addressed and resolved. We have also seen the number of people being vaccinated increasing daily.

“To ensure that we prevent any situation emerging where a non-healthcare worker poses as a healthcare worker during this first phase of this vaccinatio­n programme, we will be requesting all healthcare workers to show staff identifica­tion, or to provide their Health Profession­s Council registrati­on number as verificati­on,” said Winde.

“Healthcare workers are our number one priority in this phase and I therefore appeal to residents not to try and skip the queue ahead of our front-line workers,” said Winde.

Speaking about his experience­s Dr Sa'ad Lahri, an emergency physician from Khayelitsh­a hospital who was the second healthcare worker in South Africa to be vaccinated, said: “I just had a very minor side-effect of a little pain where I was injected but other than that nothing.

“Some of my other colleagues reported a little fever and muscle ache, but all that went away very quickly,” said Dr Lahri.

 ?? PHANDO JIKELO African News Agency (ANA) ?? DR SA’AD Lahri who is a EM Physician at the Khayelitsh­a District Hospital is the second health-care worker to get the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n in South Africa. |
PHANDO JIKELO African News Agency (ANA) DR SA’AD Lahri who is a EM Physician at the Khayelitsh­a District Hospital is the second health-care worker to get the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n in South Africa. |

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