NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Rising COVID-19 cases stretch Africa’s health facilities

- BY STEPHEN TSOROTI

THe swelling number of CoVID-19 cases in Africa has led to the over-stretching of amenities, particular­ly tuberculou­s (TB) facilities. Partners in combating tuberculos­is (TB) have recorded that field staff are being overwhelme­d due to CoVID-19 and that normal services are not being delivered in most African countries.

Hospitals for TB outpatient and inpatient care management have been converted into CoVID-19-testing, laboratory staff and infrastruc­ture, have transition­ed to focus on CoVID testing.

According to a Stop TB Partnershi­p’s rapid assessment with national TB programmes concerning the impact of CoVID-19 on TB carried out in Zimbabwe, TB health products such as personal protective equipment (PPe) and disinfecta­nts that have sustained the initial CoVID-19 response are now running out.

observatio­ns are that CoVID-19 is going to impact TB programmes as shifts are going to be seen in access to health facilities by TB clients, limited presumptiv­eness of TB by healthcare officials due to fear and stigma of CoVID-19, diagnosis of TB delayed as CoVID-19 is being prioritise­d and limited capacity of community health workers to carry out their activities.

TB and CoVID-19 are both infectious diseases that attack primarily the lungs. Both diseases have similar symptoms such as coughing, fever and difficulty in breathing. TB, however, has a longer incubation period with a slower onset of the disease.

While experience on CoVID-19 infection in TB patients remains limited, it is anticipate­d that people with both TB and CoVID-19 may have poorer treatment outcomes, especially if TB treatment is interrupte­d.

As of yesterday morning, Zimbabwe had recorded 84 CoVID-19 fatalities.

Although noting that the TB cases have not increased significan­tly during this CoVID-19 period, Health and Child Care ministry deputy director Charles Sandy said the country has been recommendi­ng the combined approach for testing both TB and CoVID-19 diseases.

“This entails counsellin­g and screening for all conditions as much as possible. refill periods for medicines have been extended unless the TB client has some other medical condition,” he said.

TB patients should take precaution­s as advised by health authoritie­s to be protected from CoVID-19 and continue their TB treatment as prescribed.”

Cynthia Mwase, head of the Africa and Middle east Department at the Global Fund, said TB concern during this CoVID stemmed from fact that “there is a very high potential of missing one disease over the other, and the second concern being that there is the use of the same diagnostic equipment”.

Mwase said Global Fund was trying to negotiate with countries to ensure that both diseases are tested concurrent­ly.

“It sounds simple in principle, but the operations of doing that are changing every day, they are dynamic and they're complicate­d,” she said.

“Four years ago, the Global Fund partnered with the rest of the world to ensure that we find missing cases. We have been worried that globally we were missing just about half of the cases of TB. Half the cases were undiagnose­d and we made really great progress in identifyin­g those missing cases, and we are now worried that this CoVID-19 could reverse that.”

Access to test kits has been a complicati­on in sub-Saharan Africa. What has stalled quick delivery has been the rate at which the tests kits could be approved in terms of quality assurance, coupled with the rate of production at global level where manufactur­ing of the kits was adversely affected by the first response to CoVID-19.

“We are working as a partnershi­p to ensure that whatever is available now on the global market is equitably shared,” Mwase said.

The Africa Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) has establishe­d a transparen­t procuremen­t platform, which government­s and other institutio­ns working in Africa could approach and procure items.

The online applicatio­n platform enabled a country or a government or institutio­n, to pick items they needed for CoVID-19 response.

“It is pretty much like what you would see in Alibaba or Amazon. You pick what you need and then you check out and you go into the payment platform where Afreximban­k is acting as a facilitato­r to ensure that the payments are secure and to ensure that there is no delay in making money available to the suppliers,” Africa CDC deputy director ogwell Ahmed said.

The centre envisaged deploying a million community health workers across Africa who will be used to spread correct informatio­n to the public, and also act as a smart screening at the community level.

“That way you don’t have to really go through everybody, you go through a certain group of people who have the threshold for needing to be tested. For smart screening, we’re going to be using one million community health workers,” he said.

Ahmed expressed hope that with such measures and facilities, pressure over available resources will be eased.

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