• Latest
  • Trending
Video: Ways to outsmart COVID-19 - WHO

Coronavirus: Africa could be next epicentre, WHO warns

April 17, 2020
PRURide Unveils 7th Edition with Promise of a "Perfect" 2026 Cycling Experience

7th Edition of PRURide Unveiled with Promise of a “Perfect” 2026 Cycling Experience

July 14, 2026
Miss Ghana 2026 Contestants Join Bus Stop Boys and BOST Energies to Support National Clean-Up Exercise

Miss Ghana 2026 Contestants Join Bus Stop Boys and BOST Energies to Support National Clean-Up Exercise

July 13, 2026
Integrity, Adaptability Key to Career Success, Absa Chief Risk Officer Urges UESD Students

Integrity, Adaptability Key to Career Success, Absa Chief Risk Officer Urges UESD Students

July 13, 2026
Galaxy Unpacked July 2026: A New Shape Unfolds

Galaxy Unpacked July 2026: A New Shape Unfolds

July 13, 2026
Colonel D.N.A. Quaye, Director of Operations, National Security

National Security at Avenor Clean-Up, Explains Waste Seen After Day One Exercise

July 11, 2026
National Clean-Up Exercise Ends After Two Days of Nationwide Sanitation Efforts

National Clean-Up Exercise Ends After Two Days of Nationwide Sanitation Efforts

July 11, 2026
Elizabeth Sey

Elizabeth Frances Sey Hall Announces Nexus Xperience 2026, Promises Biggest Hall Week Celebration Yet

July 11, 2026
"Not a Personality Issue": Opong-Fosu Calls for NDC to Build Systems That Outlast Individuals Amid Chairmanship Buzz

“Not a Personality Issue”: Opong-Fosu Calls for NDC to Build Systems That Outlast Individuals Amid Chairmanship Buzz

July 11, 2026
2026 CommonWealth Games: Eezzy Group Foundation Supports Team Ghana with GHS 800,000

2026 CommonWealth Games: Eezzy Group Foundation Supports Team Ghana with GHS 800,000

July 10, 2026
The Accra Floods: A Defining Test of Leadership

The Accra Floods: A Defining Test of Leadership

July 10, 2026
WPRD Festival: "Decolonising PR" as GMA, UniMAC host first PR Art Exhibition Friday

WPRD Festival: “Decolonising PR” as GMA, UniMAC host first PR Art Exhibition Friday

July 10, 2026
YFM and BBC Partner to Deliver World Cup's Biggest Moments to Ghanaian Football Fans

YFM and BBC Partner to Deliver World Cup’s Biggest Moments to Ghanaian Football Fans

July 9, 2026
Happy Ghana
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
    • International Sports
    • Afcon2017
    • Afcon2019
    • Corporate Knockout
    • U17 World Cup
    • World Cup 2018
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Bizarre
  • Feature
  • More
    • Technology
    • Opinion
    • Lifestyle
  • Listen Live
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
    • International Sports
    • Afcon2017
    • Afcon2019
    • Corporate Knockout
    • U17 World Cup
    • World Cup 2018
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Bizarre
  • Feature
  • More
    • Technology
    • Opinion
    • Lifestyle
  • Listen Live
No Result
View All Result
Happy Ghana
No Result
View All Result
Home News Africa

Coronavirus: Africa could be next epicentre, WHO warns

in Africa
Video: Ways to outsmart COVID-19 - WHO

Video: Ways to outsmart COVID-19 - WHO

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

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.

READ MORE: Convicted robber rejected at Prisons amid COVID-19 scare

ADVERTISEMENT

There have been almost 1,000 deaths and almost 19,000 infections across Africa so far, although these rates are far lower than those seen in parts of Europe and the US.

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.

READ MORE: Video: Pastor and Lieutenants arrested for defying Nana Addo’s ban on church gathering

How bad is the situation in Africa?

There are almost 19,000 confirmed cases in Africa and at least 970 confirmed deaths across the whole continent, which has a population of about 1.3 billion.

North Africa is the worst affected region. Algeria, Egypt, and Morocco have all had more than 2,000 cases and at least 100 deaths. Algeria has had the most deaths, with 348.

Elsewhere, South Africa has also had more than 2,000 cases, with 48 deaths, while the continent’s most populous nation, Nigeria, has had 442 cases and 13 confirmed deaths out of a population of some 200 million.

Why are there fewer cases compared to Europe and the US?

WHO Africa director Dr Matshidiso Moeti told BBC Global Health correspondent Tulip Mazumdar that international travel played a part.

“If you look at the proportion of people who travel, Africa has fewer people who are traveling internationally,” she said.

But now that the virus is in within Africa, she says that her organisation is acting under the assumption that it will spread just as quickly as elsewhere.

READ MORE: COVID-19: NUGS pleads with government to suspend payment of school fees

Where is the virus being spread now?

The WHO has witnessed the virus spreading from big cities to “the hinterland” in South Africa, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Cameroon and Ghana, Dr Moeti said.

There are around 15 African countries where the virus has not spread far so if these countries adopt strong social distancing measures, they could contain the virus, she added.

How bad could the situation get?

Provisional projections from the WHO suggest that more than 10 million people could be infected in the next 3-6 months, but that figure doesn’t take into account public health measures that are being put in place.

What happens if the virus spreads further in Africa?

If Covid-19 is able to take hold on the continent, the consequences could be far more devastating than we’ve seen in Europe and the US, says our global health correspondent.

The WHO says there are only around five intensive care beds available for every one million people in most African countries, compared with around 4,000 beds for every million people in Europe.

Dr Moeti said the WHO was focusing on prevention rather than treating the virus because many 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.

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

READ MORE:Our target is to qualify for Africa by winning the league- Felix Annan

Dr Moeti said the lack of ventilators was “one of the biggest challenges” that African countries are facing.

Why are ventilators so important?

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.

What is being done?

Several countries have enforced lockdowns.

In some countries, schools are been turned into healthcare facilities where people can be quarantined and even offered care.

Textile industries have been recalibrated to start manufacturing personal protective equipment such as medical gowns.

Earlier this week the UN Food Programme started distributing badly needed equipment around the continent from a new hub in Ethiopia’s Bole airport.

The cargo included one million face masks, personal protective equipment, and ventilators.

Source: BBC

Tags: CoronavirusWHO

Subscribe to receive notification everytime a new post is published. We promise to be discrete.

Unsubscribe
Previous Post

Convicted robber rejected at Prisons amid COVID-19 scare

Next Post

Alex Kotey, Richard Atifu apply for GFA Referees Manager position

Next Post
GFA Special Competition: Hearts-Sharks face off in Elmina as Kotoko-Medeama set for showdown

Alex Kotey, Richard Atifu apply for GFA Referees Manager position

Search

No Result
View All Result

Listen Live

Happy Kaseɛbɔ 600AM news bulletin
Happy Kaseɛbɔ 600AM news bulletin

BBC Match of the Day Africa

ADVERTISEMENT
Happy Ghana

Recent News

  • 7th Edition of PRURide Unveiled with Promise of a “Perfect” 2026 Cycling Experience
  • Miss Ghana 2026 Contestants Join Bus Stop Boys and BOST Energies to Support National Clean-Up Exercise
  • Integrity, Adaptability Key to Career Success, Absa Chief Risk Officer Urges UESD Students
  • About
  • advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Happy FM – Powered by Ghana’s leading radio network. Designed with passion by Global Media Alliance.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
    • International Sports
    • Afcon2017
    • Afcon2019
    • Corporate Knockout
    • U17 World Cup
    • World Cup 2018
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Bizarre
  • Feature
  • More
    • Technology
    • Opinion
    • Lifestyle
  • Listen Live

© 2025 Happy FM – Powered by Ghana’s leading radio network. Designed with passion by Global Media Alliance.