Warnings
are mounting about a fast-growing new wave of COVID-19 infections
across the continent of Africa amid insufficient vaccines and weakened
healthcare systems.
According to the WHO's data. slightly more
than 1% of the entire African population has been fully vaccinated
against the disease
Africa faces a rising threat of a Covid 3rd
Wave. Infections have surge by more than 300% in the past two weeks.
Oxygen supply and oxygen tanks are running out of stock very rapidly.
Medical supplies are inadequate. Hospitals are overcrowded and doctors
and nurses are overly stretched and exhausted, and never insufficient.
Since the beginning of June, the number of deaths is so high that it’s more than those from March to December last year.
All
the medical facilities are struggling to breaking point. Ventilators
are not being used because of a serious lack of medical staff.
“We
need the public to help us in this fight against COVID. As long as the
people out there do not practice those basic things – wearing masks,
hand hygiene, social distancing, and getting vaccinated where available,
it will be like a rat race we can’t keep up with.”
Most
governments have responded to the surge by banning gatherings of more
than 20 people and ordering the closure of bars and nightclubs, with
warnings of a possible lockdown to follow.
More than a dozen
countries have reported their worst figures since the start of the
pandemic, with more than 650,000 new cases recorded on the continent
between May 3, when the so-called third wave began.
At a press
briefing on Thursday, the World Health Organization’s Africa director Dr
Matshidiso Moeti warned that “the speed and scale of Africa’s third
wave is like nothing we’ve seen before.”
“COVID-19 cases are
doubling every three weeks, compared to every four weeks at the start of
the second wave. Almost 202,000 cases were reported in the past week
and the continent is on the verge of exceeding its worst week ever in
this pandemic,” she added.
Moeti said that, among the 14 African
countries now in resurgence, 12 have detected coronavirus variants of
concern, including nine with the highly contagious Delta variant.
“With the rampant spread of more contagious variants, the threat to Africa rises to a whole new level.”
A
recent situational report published by the Johns Hopkins Center for
Health Security stated that Africa “has exhibited a substantial increase
in daily incidence since mid-May”, with daily case numbers rising
threefold.
The COVID-19 situation in Africa is worrisome. Both
the number of cases and deaths are almost 40 percent higher than last
week, and hospitalisations due to COVID-19 have increased by a further
42 percent.
First identified in India, the Delta variant is 60
percent more transmissible than other variants. So far, it has been
detected in 16 African countries, including South Africa, Uganda and
Liberia.
South Africa accounts for close to 40 percent of all
COVID-19 deaths on the continent, with 60,038 officially recorded
fatalities so far. It is struggling to cope with growing coronavirus
infections driven by the highly contagious Delta variant.
The WHO
will set up a Hub for mRNA vaccines in South Africa, in what is being
described as a politically motivated move to counter China's efforts in
providing and promoting the Chinese vaccines Sinovac and Sinopharm.
SSO
As of 7 July 2021, 12pm, the Ministry of Health (MOH) has confirmed and verified that there are 5 cases of locally transmitted COVID-19 infection. 3 are linked to previous cases, and have already been placed on quarantine. 2 are currently unlinked. There are 7 imported cases, who have already been placed on Stay-Home Notice (SHN) or isolated upon arrival in Singapore. 5 were detected upon arrival in Singapore, while 2 developed the illness during SHN or isolation. In total, there are 12 new cases of COVID-19 infection in Singapore today.
ReplyDeleteMOH under new health minister Ong will now not reveal the source of imported cases, so Sinkies cannot condemn the ruling 4G elites for being lax in letting in cases from high-risk countries such as India . . .
Like a bad student who hide his report card from his parents.
ReplyDeleteVery Cunningly Done. But that can be called disinformation.
ReplyDeleteDisinformation and misinformation are two sides of a coin. They are not the same in appearance but the same in purpose. They are only thought out by insincere crooked brains and carried out by unscrupulous people to cheat others. No difference from a scammer ir con-man.
Disinformation is to intentionally and deliberately omit key or vital information.
Deliberately omitting vital information from the public during a global pandemic is a crime against humanity. This is a crime by omission, instead of commission. But it is still a crime against humanity.
The more they hide information, the more the people will have distrust and suspicion of them.
ReplyDeleteThe people demand complete, accurate, reliable and timely information on Singapore COVID-19 situation from the ruling PAP 4G elites . .
ReplyDeleteOnly crooks will hide evidence from the public or police.
ReplyDeletePeople who intend to hide evidence are people who intend to commit crimes.
For example, a snake oil salesman will not tell you his product is derived from a snake. He will just say it is oil, omitting the word "snake", a key and vital piece of information that will seriously affect your decision whether to buy or not.
When someone said, can't tell you, but trust me, you better run as far away from him as possible.
ReplyDeleteIf anyone tells you to trust him but refuses to let you know what you need to know, you had better don't trust him. Because he is a CROOK!
ReplyDelete