An isolation ward stands ready at a hospital in Khartoum, Sudan.
Laboratories in Senegal and Madagascar have the testing equipment they need.
Passengers arriving at airports in Gambia, Cameroon and Guinea are being screened for fever and other viral symptoms.
Africa’s
Centres for Disease Control and Prevention says it has activated its
emergency operation centre in the face of what global health officials
say is a high risk the coronavirus disease epidemic that began in China
will spread to its borders.
On a poor continent where healthcare capacity is limited, early detection of any outbreak will be crucial.
The fear is great that a spreading epidemic of coronavirus
infections will be hard to contain in countries where health systems are
already overburdened with cases of Ebola, measles, malaria and other
deadly infectious diseases.
“The key point is to limit
transmission from affected countries and the second point is to ensure
that we have the capacity to isolate and also to provide appropriate
treatment to people that may be infected,” said Michel Yao, emergency
operations program manager at the World Health Organisation’s regional
office for Africa in Brazzaville, Congo.
The Democratic
Republic of Congo is barring its citizens from flying to China. Burkina
Faso has asked Chinese citizens to delay travelling to Burkina, and is
warning that they face quarantine if they do.
Kenya, Tanzania and Rwanda have all suspended flights to China.
“What we are emphasising to all countries is that they should at least have early detection,” Yao said.
“We
know how fragile the health system is on the African continent and
these systems are already overwhelmed by many ongoing disease outbreaks,
so for us it is critical to detect earlier to that we can prevent the
spread.”
John Nkengasong, Africa’s CDC director, told a
briefing in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa this week that the
activation of the emergency operation centre would create a single
incident system to manage the outbreak across the continent.
The Africa CDC will also hold a training workshop in Senegal for 15 African countries on laboratory diagnosis, he said.
The
continent has more than doubled the number of laboratories now equipped
to diagnose the viral infection, this week adding facilities in Ghana,
Madagascar and Nigeria and to established testing labs in South Africa
and Sierra Leone.
“By the end of the week we expect
that an additional 24 countries (in Africa) will receive the reagents
needed to conduct the tests and will have the test running,” a
spokeswoman for the WHO’s Africa Region told Reuters.
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