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44 African nations now have capacity for COVID-19 testing —WHO

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The World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Friday that at least 44 countries in Africa currently had the capacity to test for COVID-19.

The United Nations health agency disclosed this on its official twitter account @WHOAFRO, saying at the start of the outbreak, only two could conduct a test on the disease.

It said: “As COVID-19 spreads beyond capital cities in Africa, there must also be a response at the grassroots level.

“A wide network of community polio health workers in Nigeria had started using their expertise and technology to support COVID-19 surveillance.”

It said the number of COVID-19 cases in Africa had increased to 18,000 with over 900 deaths.

The breakdown on the WHO African Region COVID-19 dashboard showed that South Africa, Algeria, and Cameroon had continued to top the list of countries with the highest reported cases.

South Africa has 2,605 cases and 48 deaths followed by Algeria with 2,268 cases and 348 deaths, while Cameroon has 855 confirmed cases with 17 deaths.

According to WHO, South Sudan, Sao Tome and Principe, Burundi and Mauritania still remain countries with lowest confirmed cases in the region.

South Sudan and Sao Tome and Principe had four cases each with zero death.

Burundi was the second country with the lowest confirmed cases with five reported cases and zero death.

Mauritania in the third category with the lowest cases as the country had recorded seven confirmed cases with one death.

Also, the dashboard showed that COVID-19 cases had risen to 442 confirmed cases with 13 deaths in Nigeria.

“Also, the COVID-19 Situation Report showed the number of cases in WHO African Region had increased by 51 percent and the number of deaths by 60 percent.

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“As of 14 April 2020 (epidemiological week 16) a cumulative total of 10, 759 confirmed COVID-19 cases with 520 deaths (Case Fatality Ratio (CFR): 4.8 percent) have been reported across the 45 affected countries in the region,’’ it said.
According to the report, the COVID-19 pandemic has reached a new milestone in the region, with over 10, 000 cases and over 500 deaths being reported across all Member States with the exception of Comoros and Lesotho.

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