Sunday Times

COVID DEATH BELL TOLLS FOR SA

Gauteng infection rate now SA’s worst as disease kills 70 a day across country

- By GRAEME HOSKEN, CLAIRE KEETON, TANYA FARBER, BOBBY JORDAN and ORRIN SINGH

Almost the whole capacity of the hospital is geared over to Covid … We are stretched about as far as we can go

Groote Schuur doctor

● In the time it takes to read these first few lines, another four people in SA will have been diagnosed with Covid-19 as the disease comes closer to home, cutting a deadly swathe through the country and claiming an average of 70 lives a day.

Fatalities are surging in the Western Cape and Eastern Cape, and experts warn Gauteng will be the next frontline in the battle against the disease.

Hospitals and medical staff are at full stretch and makeshift mortuaries are being prepared. But even with the extra capacity, two questions are occupying experts’ minds: how bad will it get, and are we ready?

Amid the rising death toll, millions of children are preparing for the second phase of school reopening next week, and the opening of the economy is picking up pace, with the release of rules for sit-down restaurant­s.

More than 6,000 new infections were reported on both Thursday and Friday, translatin­g into about 266 cases an hour, or more than four a minute. The same two days registered 135 deaths, nearly three an hour.

National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases (NICD) modelling data shows Gauteng’s fatalities — which reached 149 on Friday — potentiall­y tripling every two weeks.

By tomorrow, the toll is expected to be 240, and by July 13 — two months ahead of SA’s expected coronaviru­s pandemic peak in September — it is predicted to be 730.

In the past week, Gauteng’s infections have almost doubled, from 17,261 to 31,344 by Friday. Gauteng health MEC Bandile Masuku said the National Health Laboratory Service in Gauteng was overwhelme­d, with a backlog of 30,000 tests, and the department had asked private labs to assist.

Wits University health economist professor Alex van den Heever said Gauteng will reach the Western Cape’s daily death figures — which for the past fortnight have averaged 50 a day — “within 10 days”.

He said Gauteng might have a smaller number of cases overall, but at 1,500 daily infections its new cases are now exceeding the 1,400 per day in the Western Cape.

Gauteng’s hotspots are the inner city and southern areas of Johannesbu­rg, followed by Soweto, Protea Glen and Doornkop, according to the provincial command council.

Five isolation and quarantine sites have been built in Gauteng, but no field hospitals have been constructe­d, according to provincial health spokespers­on Kwara Kwena.

Within two weeks, the bed shortage in the province is expected to reach 5,000.

Wits University vaccinolog­ist professor Shabir Madhi said that within three weeks Gauteng will be where the Western Cape is now in terms of deaths and infections, and will then potentiall­y overtake it.

Professor Martin Veller, dean of health at Wits, said because of limited test kit supplies, the number of infected people is likely higher than official figures. The NICD’s weekly epidemiolo­gy report says: “Fatalities may be an underestim­ate because deaths are more likely to be reported if a patient with Covid-19 died in hospital, and deaths out of hospital may be missed.”

Nationally, infections have increased more than fivefold in the past month, from 24,264 on May 26 to 124,590 on June 26, while deaths have more than quadrupled, from 524 to 2,340.

The Western Cape has the largest number of cases (57,941, 46%), followed by Gauteng (31,344, 25%) and the Eastern Cape (21,938, 18%).

By yesterday, the Western Cape had reported 1,696 Covid-19 deaths, and Cape Town is anticipati­ng that 10,000 people will have lost their lives to Covid by the end of September.

“The city has assured us that mass burials will only be considered as an absolute last resort, if the fatalities exceed the capacities of mortuaries,” said Lincoln Johnson, chair of the Western Cape region of the National Funeral Directors Associatio­n.

In Cape Town, Groote Schuur Hospital is stretched to breaking point, with 250-300 coronaviru­s patients a day and mostly full ICU beds.

“Almost the whole capacity of the hospital is geared over to Covid and we are just hanging in there,” said a doctor at the frontline of critical care, who preferred not to be named. “We are stretched about as far as we can go.”

Bed occupancy rates for Covid wards average 80% and are “close to 100% for ICU on most days”, Groote Schuur said in its Covid19 update on Thursday. Of the 2,086 Covid

patients admitted, 251 have died.

“We do have survivors now. In the first few weeks it felt like everyone being admitted to ICU was dying,” said the doctor. The hospital has extra high-care beds but lacks the nurses to increase the number, as planned, from 70 ICU beds to 100, he said.

Two ICU nurses shared the overwhelmi­ng demands on them on Facebook this week: “We used to have six beds in here, now we’re sitting with 18 beds in the unit I’m working in. We’ve only had one patient that’s actually left … We’ve been admitting constantly, it just goes on and on and on.”

Two Cape Town anaestheti­sts, working in mostly private hospitals, have seen wards and ICUs steadily filling up with Covid-19 patients. “They are getting crowded and there are definitely staff shortages,” said one doctor, who is distressed about the lack of protective equipment for nurses and other staff at some facilities.

“Some frontline staff are wearing homemade cloth masks. At one hospital I was given a sheet of green plastic with a hole for my head to go through as protection and no N95 mask, no visor,” she said.

In the Eastern Cape, Madhi said healthcare facilities were “under-prepared in terms of meeting the demands” of the population even before the pandemic.

Metros have “high-density population­s” and “people are simply not adequately buying into the non-pharmaceut­ical interventi­ons [distancing, masks and hand hygiene] as they should”. What happens next will be “dependent on the behaviour of the people rather than government interventi­ons”.

Capacity to provide critical care is low and “aggressive preventati­ve measures” are the only hope, with the likes of “youth leaders, community leaders and religious leaders” being co-opted.

A report by the Eastern Cape provincial command council predicts up to 6,000 deaths in the coming months and says the number of hospital beds will be insufficie­nt “unless capabiliti­es are exponentia­lly and rapidly increased”.

Professor Lungile Pepeta, dean of health sciences at Nelson Mandela University, said the official case count in Nelson Mandela Bay is about 5,500 but “the real figure” is probably about 30,000.

The effects of asymptomat­ic people fuelling the spread will soon be apparent.

“The lowest-hanging fruit is the prevention of the spread,” he said, otherwise it will be a case of, “Sorry, we just don’t have a bed for you … you will just be in a corner somewhere and you will perish.”

Pepeta added: “We don’t need high-level strategy meetings and an overhaul of the health system. It’s too late for that — this is an emergency.”

KwaZulu-Natal has registered only 5.7% of SA’s Covid-19 cases and professor Salim Abdool Karim, chair of the health ministry’s advisory committee, said: “The number of active Covid-19 cases in KZN is taking 18 days to double, whereas in Gauteng cases are doubling every nine days.”

Abdool Karim said the country should prepare for multiple small peaks, and the worst of the pandemic is likely to dissipate in October or November.

 ?? Picture: Alon Skuy ?? In Westpark Cemetery, Johannesbu­rg, an 80-year-old man who died of Covid-19 is buried by his family and friends. They permitted photograph­s on condition that their identities and those of their loved one be protected. In the Muslim section of the cemetery alone, more than 25 graves are marked ‘CD’ to indicate Covid-19 as the cause of death.
Picture: Alon Skuy In Westpark Cemetery, Johannesbu­rg, an 80-year-old man who died of Covid-19 is buried by his family and friends. They permitted photograph­s on condition that their identities and those of their loved one be protected. In the Muslim section of the cemetery alone, more than 25 graves are marked ‘CD’ to indicate Covid-19 as the cause of death.
 ?? Picture: Dino Lloyd ?? A general ward of quarantine beds at the Nasrec quarantine site near Soweto, where facilities are being prepared for more than 2,000 Covid patients.
Picture: Dino Lloyd A general ward of quarantine beds at the Nasrec quarantine site near Soweto, where facilities are being prepared for more than 2,000 Covid patients.

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