Sowetan

Western Cape on alert as affluent areas see rise in positive tests

Covid-19 red flags popping up in SA

- By Tanya Farber

The Western Cape department of health has put itself on alert over Covid-19.

Dr Keith Cloete, who heads the department, said markers like hospitalis­ations, deaths and oxygen use are “stable”, but the average proportion of positive cases has gone up.

Of particular concern are upticks in affluent areas.

Gauteng premier David Makhura also raised concern about the uptick of Covid-19 cases in the province in the past week.

“We need to keep the reproducti­on number under one,” Cloete said yesterday. “And it has just gone above that – this puts us on alert.”

He said this had also happened recently but had then dropped again, which is why the department “is in a vigilant phase to make sure it doesn’t sustain above one”.

The reproducti­on rate is the number of new cases arising from each infectious case.

Daily averages in the province are stable at 120 new cases per day, 25 hospitalis­ations and three deaths.

However, Cloete said, “What concerns us is that the average proportion of positive cases has gone up by 5% since the beginning of May.”

The private sector was showing higher proportion­s of positive cases, with “specific pockets in the metro” and “affluent suburbs” standing out.

In rural areas, cases remain unchanged, with wide variation but small numbers if you look across all districts.

Focusing on data from surveillan­ce teams “on the ground”, Cloete said that bowling clubs in the Tygerberg district had been earmarked as sites of rises in cases and that this was a “new phenomenon”.

Wastewater studied by the Medical Research Council had also produced worrying data on Mitchells Plain, where levels of detectable SARS-CoV-2 are the highest they have been this year.

The province has 760 patients in acute hospitals, 335 of whom are in private hospitals.

Cloete said his department was also concerned at red flags popping up in other parts of the country. “We have seen an increase in other provinces like Gauteng, and that is now of concern to us too.”

 ?? /ESA ALEXANDER ?? Although hospitalis­ations, deaths and oxygen use are ‘stable’, Cape Town has seen an uptick of cases in the metro.
/ESA ALEXANDER Although hospitalis­ations, deaths and oxygen use are ‘stable’, Cape Town has seen an uptick of cases in the metro.

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