The case-fatality rate of the coronavirus on the continent is 2.5%, compared to 2.2% worldwide.
The second wave of the Covid-19 epidemic is proving more deadly in Africa, where the case-fatality rate now exceeds the world average, the African Union (AU) Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa-CDC) announced on Thursday 21 January. This rate now stands at 2.5% of recorded cases, above the world average of 2.2%, explained CDC Director John Nkengasong at a press conference. The number of cases on the continent has increased by 14% per week in the past month.
Since the beginning of the pandemic, Africa officially remains one of the least affected continents, with 3.3 million cases of Covid-19 and almost 82,000 deaths, according to the agency. But the increase in the case-fatality rate marks a break with the first wave, when it had remained below the global average, Nkengasong said. We are now seeing a reversal,” he added. This is one of the notable features of the second wave, which we have to fight hard.’’
At present, 21 African countries have case-fatality rates above the world average. Among the examples given by the CDC, Sudan has a case-fatality rate of 6.2 per cent, Egypt 5.5 per cent and Liberia 4.4 per cent.
This excess mortality is caused by the accelerating number of cases, which is clogging up health systems on the continent, according to Mr Nkengasong. The dynamics of the epidemic “is overwhelming the capacity of nurses and doctors to manage patients,” he explained: “Patients are not getting the attention and care they need because we have a limited number of beds and supplies. “Mr. Nkengasong highlighted the need for oxygen, which is used to treat severe forms of Covid-19, which are becoming “critical. In Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, health authorities report having to “choose which patients to treat and which to refuse care,” he said.
The AU announced last week that it had ordered 270 million vaccines for the continent, in addition to those planned through Covax, an initiative of the World Health Organization (WHO) and private partners for equitable access to vaccines. Negotiations are “underway” with Russia and China to order additional doses, but “we don’t have an agreement yet,” Nkengasong said.