The Citizen (KZN)

‘Gauteng is on fire’

As the province reels under a tsunami of new Covid infections, premier David Makhura warns that the province could face more severe lockdown restrictio­ns unless the dire situation is quickly reversed.

- Reitumetse Makwea reitumetse­m@citizen.co.za

Gauteng could face stricter lockdown measures if the increasing surge in infections continued at its current rate, said premier David Makhura as he welcomed the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) military health service at the Chris Hani Baragwanat­h Academic Hospital.

Makhura said Gauteng’s public and private healthcare institutio­ns were under tremendous pressure as they battled a Covid-19 third wave and had to seek help from the national government as they tried to contain the spread of the pandemic.

“Tomorrow, we have our coronaviru­s command council meeting and we will do an assessment. Anybody can see that Covid-19 pandemic in Gauteng is really raging,” he said yesterday.

“I can’t say that what we have done is not enough, but we cannot rule that out that we may need more restrictio­ns.”

He said while in the second wave the province peaked at 6 900 daily infections, it had currently surpassed the number and it was apparent that Gauteng was on fire when it came to Covid.

“As a premier, I don’t want to send a message saying everything is okay. The message must be clear. I want to say to the people of the province: the house is under fire. We will not change this trajectory of the pandemic if we do not do certain dramatic things.”

“The chances of getting infected are extremely high wherever you are.”

The premier, together with health MEC Nomathemba Mokgethi, said the SANDF would augment health staff in the province as they felt the healthcare sector was under pressure with 5 218 patients in both the public and private sector.

Makhura also said a change of behaviour would help a great deal in slowing down the spread and while government alone could not win the fight against the virus, citizens needed to cooperate by limiting mobility and avoiding gatherings.

“Restaurant­s are full, people are walking in and out, they are crowding. There is some false sense, including those who have received a vaccine, that the situation is normalisin­g,” he added.

He appealed to people in and around the province to take the lockdown regulation­s seriously.

According to epidemiolo­gist Dr Jo Barnes, only 0.8% of the population was fully vaccinated as of two days ago.

“This is extremely low and far below what the country needs for even a small measure of protection,” Barnes said.

Numerous government spokespers­ons keep citing the difficulti­es in procuring vaccine supplies as the reason for the huge increase in cases but, said Barnes, that was not the full story.

“There are several management issues that contribute to this continuing rise and fall in cases.

“The education and informatio­n campaigns to help get the public to understand why the simple but irritating prevention measures are so important are seriously lacking,” Barnes said.

“The only widely displayed instructio­ns are those up at every shop and place of business instructin­g everyone to wear a mask and to keep a safe distance. That is an instructio­n, not an explanatio­n.”

There was no vital reason why only those over 60 years should be vaccinated first.

“In vaccine coverage, every person vaccinated is a gain,” said Barnes. “The over-60s were chosen because the carry the highest risk of serious disease and will fill up the hospitals soonest.”

Barnes cautioned opening vaccinatio­ns to everyone may cause uneven coverage over age groups.

“The resentment that will cause may give rise to very poor compliance with vaccinatio­n campaigns in the future,” she said.

There is some false sense that the situation is normalisin­g.

David Makhura Gauteng premier

 ?? Picture: Michel Bega ?? UNDER PRESSURE. Medics remove a Covid-19 patient from an ambulance at the Chris Hani Baragwanat­h Hospital Covid-19 facility in Soweto yesterday. Gauteng welcomes SANDF medical personnel to help cope with the influx of Covid-19 patients.
Picture: Michel Bega UNDER PRESSURE. Medics remove a Covid-19 patient from an ambulance at the Chris Hani Baragwanat­h Hospital Covid-19 facility in Soweto yesterday. Gauteng welcomes SANDF medical personnel to help cope with the influx of Covid-19 patients.
 ?? Picture: Michel Bega ?? HERE TO HELP. Members of the SANDF military health service at the Chris Hani Baragwanat­h Academic Hospital in Soweto yesterday. The Gauteng government welcomed the delegation sent to boost Covid-19 medical efforts.
Picture: Michel Bega HERE TO HELP. Members of the SANDF military health service at the Chris Hani Baragwanat­h Academic Hospital in Soweto yesterday. The Gauteng government welcomed the delegation sent to boost Covid-19 medical efforts.

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