Covid-19: Africa could be next epicentre, WHO warns as UN says up to 3.3 million Africans could die

Covid-19: Africa could be next epicentre, WHO warns as UN says up to 3.3 million Africans could die
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BRAZZAVILLE, April 18 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Africa could become the next epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak, the World Health Organization (WHO) has warned.

There was a sharp rise in cases in the past week.

There have been almost 1,000 deaths and more than 18,000 infections across Africa so far, although these rates are far lower than those seen in parts of Europe and the US.

The UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) said in a report that without intervention measures, estimates show that between 300,000 and 3.3 million African people could lose their lives due to Coronavirus.,

It said this could happen as the pandemic continues spreading across the continent’s weak economies whose growth is expected to slow down from 3.2 % to 1.8 % “in a best-case scenario, pushing close to 27 million people into extreme poverty.”

There are over 17,000 confirmed cases across the continent, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).

The continent has also recorded more than 3,500 coronavirus recoveries and 910 deaths, according to Africa CDC.

The WHO says the virus appears to be spreading away from African capitals.

It has also highlighted that the continent does not have enough ventilators to deal with a pandemic.

The organisation’s Africa director, Dr Matshidiso Moeti, said that the organisation had witnessed the virus spreading from capital cities to “the hinterland” in South Africa, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Cameroon and Ghana.

She said they were focusing on prevention rather than treating the virus because African countries don’t have the capacity to treat many coronavirus patients.

“We want to minimise the proportion of people who get to the point of needing critical care in an ICU, because we know that these types of facilities are not adequate by any means in the majority of African countries,” she said.

“I have to say the issue of ventilators is one of the biggest challenges that the countries are facing.”

For patients critically ill with Covid-19, access to a ventilator could be a matter of life or death.

The machines get oxygen into the lungs and remove carbon dioxide from the body when people are too sick to breathe on their own.

One of the first recorded deaths from coronavirus in Africa was Zimbabwean journalist Zororo Makamba in March.

The local authorities in the capital, Harare, said that they did not have a ventilator to treat him.

There are also fears that the disease could spread rapidly in overcrowded areas where it is impossible to practise social distancing and where many do not have access to clean water and soap. — NNN-AGENCIES

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