Johannesburg: More than 1 million coronavirus tests will be rolled out starting next week in Africa to address the big gap in assessing the true number of cases on the continent, the head of the African Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday while one projection estimates more than 10 million severe cases of the virus in the next six months.
"Maybe 15 million tests will be required in Africa over the next three months," John Nkengasong said.
The new initiative to dramatically accelerate testing comes as the continent of 1.3 billion people braces for its turn in the pandemic that has rolled from China to Europe and the US and now beyond. Experts have said Africa is weeks behind Europe and the US but the rise in cases has looked alarmingly similar.
Africa has suffered in the global race to obtain testing kits and other badly needed medical equipment. While the number of virus cases across the continent was above 17,000 on Thursday, health officials have said the testing shortage means more are out there.
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South Africa, the most assertive African nation in testing, has carried out 90,000 tests so far, according to its health ministry.
One projection over the next six months shows more than 10 million severe cases of the virus, Michel Yao, the World Health Organization's emergency operations manager in Africa, told a separate briefing. “But these are still to be fine-tuned,” he said and public health measures could have an impact. The West Africa Ebola outbreak in 2014-16 never reached the alarming numbers projected, he said.
The Africa CDC chief expressed concern for the US decision to cut funding for the WHO, saying it absolutely will affect African Union member states’ ability to receive support from the UN agency. The US is the top donor to the WHO but President Donald Trump has complained about alleged mismanagement to widespread objections.
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The WHO's regional chief for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti, said that for the current biennium, or two years, the region has received almost USD 50 million from the US.