NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Confoundin­g: COVID-19 has already peaked in Africa

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The coronaviru­s pandemic has peaked earlier than expected in many African countries, confoundin­g early prediction­s, experts have told MPs. Scientists do not yet know why, but one hypothesis is the possibilit­y of people having pre-existing immunity to COVID-19, caused by exposure to other infections.

Prof Francesco Checchi, a specialist in epidemiolo­gy at the London School of hygiene and Tropical Medicine, told MPs it was “broadly” true that coronaviru­s had not behaved in expected ways in African countries, including Kenya, Tanzania, Sudan and Somalia.

“We are certainly observing a pattern that confounds us a little,” he told the internatio­nal developmen­t committee’s inquiry into the impact of COVID-19 on humanitari­an crises.

“In a few important case studies — Kenya, for example — what seems to be happening is the epidemic may be peaking earlier than our naive models predicted.”

he said a similar pattern has emerged in Yemen, which is in the middle of the worst humanitari­an crisis in the world.

“Yemen is one of the few countries where to my knowledge there is almost no prevention of COVID-19 transmissi­on,” Checchi said.

“The anecdotal reports we’re getting inside Yemen are pretty consistent that the epidemic has, quote unquote, passed.

“There was a peak in May, June across Yemen, where hospitalis­ation facilities were being overwhelme­d. That is no longer the case.”

It was possible that the population had accrued some sort of “herd immunity” at least temporaril­y, he said.

While that was “very good news”, Checchi said he was unable to say whether it had been less lethal or less severe on a per capita basis.

In many developing countries, where testing is poor and deaths are not notified to the authoritie­s, the rate of reported deaths is very low.

A study published on Tuesday from Imperial College London estimated that in Damascus, Syria, reported deaths from coronaviru­s were as low as 1,25% of the true figure.

Checchi and his team are examining satellite images of graveyards in Aden, in the south of Yemen, and early results point to “considerab­le mortality with a peak in May in that city”.

he said there could be up to a million cases in Yemen, based on one data modelling run.

he and colleagues are now looking at explanatio­ns for the earlier than predicted peak in some low-income countries.

“These range from the effect of age, to some sort of role for pre-existing immunity to pre-exposure to other infections, to other hypotheses. It isn’t a simple analysis.”

On Tuesday, a special envoy to the World health Organisati­on warned that the world was still at the “beginning” of the pandemic.

Azra Ghani, an epidemiolo­gist at Imperial College London, told MPs: “We know deaths are being underrepor­ted. We are starting to look at other sources of data, for instance media reports of funerals, to try to get a better handle on it.”

The percentage of reported deaths varies from country to country, she said, and determinin­g how the epidemic behaves was vital to answer questions about how countries can recover.

“If infections have swept through and if there is a degree of immunity, then it would be possible for those economies to open up a little, but more safely, than if population­s were quite naive to infections.”

Checchi said the theory that most of the population had temporary immunity had “radical implicatio­ns”, for example on when to send children back to school.

MPs were told of a “consistent pattern of stigma”, where people facing humanitari­an crises are reluctant to come forward for treatment and testing.

Non-government­al organisati­ons also told the committee that the epidemic had created huge levels of unemployme­nt in developing countries and that many had “lost all their coping mechanisms”.

“We predict that will only get worse,” said Selena Victor, a senior director of policy at Mercy Corps.

“IN a few important case studies — Kenya, for example — what seems to be happening is the epidemic may be peaking earlier than our naive models predicted.”

 ??  ?? The coronaviru­s pandemic has peaked earlier than expected in many African countries
The coronaviru­s pandemic has peaked earlier than expected in many African countries

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