The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Let’s subdue last kicks of Covid-19

- Ruth Butaumocho African Agenda ◆ chinhemaru­va@gmail.com

Afew weeks ago, a local doctor wrote an article in one of the daily newspapers on the possibilit­y of people spending Christmas indoors owing to a spike in new Covid19 cases.

Going through the article and assessing the points the learned doctor was putting across, the possibilit­y of spending the festive season under lock, sounded surreal and almost absurd.

Just looking at the milestone achievemen­ts most countries had made in flattening the Covid-19 graph, the advice from the doctor to remain vigilant and continue “masking up” sounded hollow and somewhat alarmist.

However, as days went by, the Covid-19 narrative began to emerge, what with global media houses reviving the Covid-19 story, which most people never imagined would resurface in their lifetime.

Sadly, the possibilit­y of another wave of new Covid-19 infection is now happening sooner than what the globe had hoped for.

Early this week in China’s capital Beijing, Covid-19 cases hit a record high, resulting in the immediate shutdown of social amenities such as parks and museums, in a bid to contain the situation.

According to online media reports, China reported 28 127 new local cases nationally for Monday, nearing its daily infection peak in April, with cases in the southern city of Guangzhou and the south-western municipali­ty of Chongqing accounting for about a half of the total.

In the capital Beijing, cases hit a fresh record high, prompting calls for more residents to stay put.

Two new deaths attributed to Covid19 were also reported on the same day, to three over the weekend, which were China’s first since May.

Since then, hardly a day passes without the media reporting on new cases being recorded across the globe.

The surge in new Covid-19 cases in China is a cause for concern, which calls for nations to be high on alert to avert a catastroph­ic situation, similar to the one experience­d in 2020 and 2021 where millions succumbed to the pandemic.

Although the cases are not anywhere near the initial numbers recorded in 2020 when Covid-19 hit the shores, the latest developmen­t should not be taken lightly, but needs to be curtailed before the situation goes out of control.

It is heartening to note that the Zimbabwe’s situation on Covid-19 remains under control, a situation that calls on everyone to be vigilant and continue maintainin­g the World Health Organisati­on mandatory safety requiremen­ts.

As part of a litany of measures to maintain the situation, the Cabinet announced this week that all Ministers will lead teams to all provinces across the country to ramp up vaccinatio­n uptake, with special focus on Harare where the vaccinatio­n levels remain low.

The teams will also focus on Midlands and Mashonalan­d West, where the second dose vaccinatio­n are still low.

With Zimbabwe’s active figures currently at 516, the situation is still manageable and can be contained once every citizen plays their part in the fight against Covid-19.

The Government’s alertness in keeping Covid-19 under wraps is commendabl­e and calls for everyone’s support to keep the figures down.

That level of commitment by the Government, discipline from citizens and regional cooperatio­n from neighbouri­ng countries are critical factors, which will sustain our situation, and avert a peak in new infections and even double digits deaths owing to the pandemic.

While many may still want to be complacent dismissing the recorded figures in China, basing it on geographic­al proximity, Africa could soon find itself under siege if necessary precaution­s are not taken, amid revelation­s that new infections are now peaking in some other African countries.

Early this week, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC called on African nations to increase surveillan­ce and mitigation against Covid-19, saying new cases were on the rise in a number of countries across the globe.

The Pan American Health Organisati­on, (PAHO) also made the same appeal to its region to implement the tools proven to keep communitie­s safe, including vaccines, surveillan­ce, mask wearing and social distancing, particular­ly in the run-up to the festive period.

“The rise of a single respirator­y infection is a cause for concern. When two or three start impacting a population concurrent­ly, this should put us all on alert,” said a PAHO spokespers­on.

The organisati­on has since recorded a 17 percent increase in new infections and deaths, as a result of Covid.

It is sad and very unfortunat­e that the globe is being confronted with a possibilit­y of a full blown Covid-19 pandemic, which could grow to unimaginab­le proportion­s once nations fail to take the necessary measures to contain the spread and a possible vicious outbreak, likely to contain a new and resistant strain.

That situation can be averted by implementi­ng necessary measures to keep the virus off the bay.

Some of the measures include vaccinatio­n, observing social distance, minimising contact, masking up and sanitising.

Human behaviour is a critical force in the fight against Covid-19.

Without the change in attitudes, how communitie­s socialise, what they are willing to discard such as huge funeral gatherings, clandestin­e church meetings and gatherings, the world is likely to witness the reincarnat­ion of the 2020 era, where millions succumbed to Covid-19.

At the rate at which Covid-19 ravages and decimates societies once it spirals out of control, history has shown that no nation in the world will be able to control Covid-19 by mere increasing hospital beds, equipping such with state of the art ventilator­s and pouring millions of building more health facilities to absorb the numbers.

Such measures are temporary and might not be the solution that the world will need once Covid-19 spreads across the globe.

History has taught us that if indeed well-equipped hospitals were a panacea and an answer in curbing the virulent various strains of Covid-19, confrontin­g the world today, millions from developed countries would not have succumbed to the consequenc­es of the pandemic in 2020 and 2021.

Such stark reality, calls for personal decisions by each one of us to stop the further spread of Covid-19 through adhering to World Health Organisati­ons regulation­s, if we are to save this generation from catastroph­ic consequenc­es.

Masking up, sanitising, avoiding gathering and isolating when sick or having tested positive for Covid-19 are some of the regulation­s, which might appear very simplistic, but are indeed very crucial.

We cannot rule out a possible global catastroph­e, a situation that our minds should prepare for. However, how we will come out of this pandemic, and the speed of our collective recovery, will largely depend on our shared values, change of behaviour and collective global responsibi­lity, to join hands to mobilize scientific and financial resources.

All this should be backed by strong individual commitment to save themselves and the next person.

Even in the face of hope, the fight against Covid-19 should not be the responsibi­lity of Government­s alone but the responsibi­lity of everyone through drawing from shared values as people and actively participat­e in the fight against the pandemic.

The fight against Covid-19, can surely be won. The victory will emanate from change in human behaviour and a commitment to save this generation from further harm and suffering.

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 ?? ?? The world needs a united approach in policy and methods to end Covid-19
The world needs a united approach in policy and methods to end Covid-19

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