By March 31, Africa had 5,431 confirmed cases of COVID-19 , with almost a quarter (,1,353) in South Africa, followed by 656 in Egypt and 584 in Algeria.
Virtually all 55
African countries have confirmed cases. These numbers are set to
skyrocket as under-
resourced public health systems grapple with
containing the pandemic.
The World Health
Organisation’s Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, former
health minister of Ethiopia, has implored Africa to wake up to the threat , and noted how the continent is least equipped on its own to combat the pandemic.
African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) Country Review Reports
(CRRs) from Sierra Leone, Lesotho and Tanzania illustrate how problems
in the health sector, coupled with poor governance and corruption, can
exacerbate outbreaks like the coronavirus and Ebola.
Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone was
peer reviewed in 2012. This was before the devastating Ebola outbreak in
2014 that caused 3,955 deaths in the West African country.
Sierra Leone’s
civil war from 1991 to 2002 damaged the quality of health service
delivery and the sector became chronically under-funded as a result.
Despite government efforts its CRR
said, “health service delivery, particularly to the poor and to rural
areas, continues to suffer from (i) limited access due to distance and
cost of services; (ii) inadequate transport and referral system; (iii)
inadequate supply of medicines and supplies; (iv) limited community
participation in sanitation and healthcare; and (v) critical shortage of
health professionals.”
The CRR reported
that a “shortage of clean water and poor sanitation are the major
factors contributing to the poor health situation”. A 2010 National Public Perception Survey on Corruption
listed the Ministry of Health and Sanitation as the most corrupt
ministry in the country. The CRR asserts that challenges in the health
sectors “are exacerbated by corruption and the continued theft of
medical supplies from government health facilities”.
Lesotho
In Lesotho – peer reviewed in 2010 – the CRR
reported that primary healthcare is available for free at all
government clinics. Access to healthcare nonetheless remains problematic
for many. Approximately 38 percent of the population need to travel for
over an hour to reach the nearest facility. In the rural mountainous
areas this increases to 78 percent of inhabitants. Commendably, Lesotho
utilises a ‘flying doctor service’, of providing medical services,
including ambulance by air to remote areas as part of its health system.
In spite of these
efforts, a survey conducted during the APRM review showed that the
population generally feels the government does not deliver effective
health services. Poverty, experienced by large segments of the
population, further erodes the ability of citizens to access health
services. The health information system in Lesotho is furthermore
reported to be weak, partially due to parallel collection of health
statistics from various sources. There are additional challenges in the
numbers of qualified medical staff, as well as drugs and other medical
supplies. The lack of personnel in particular makes it difficult to
provide adequate basic services. This situation is further exacerbated
by the brain drain to South Africa, where salaries are much higher.
Tanzania
Tanzania was peer reviewed in 2013. Its CRR
said, “While Government has attempted to restore free health services,
not only is access still a challenge but the situation is aggravated by
high costs and poor health services. There are also medical staff
shortages, inadequate facilities, and a lack of medicine in rural areas
especially.” Health reforms are overly dependent on donor funding, the
report added.
It was also noted
that “Drawbacks preventing citizens from enjoying their health rights
are: inaccessible health facilities which are also unequally
distributed; a lack of clearly-defined free care delivery strategies to
bring medical care to special groups such as pregnant women, children
under five, and elderly persons; the shortage and lack of qualified
health workers; increasing incidence of … cancer, strokes, diabetes, and
tuberculosis; and, poor service delivery.”
Tanzania’s Country
Self-Assessment Report (which feeds into the CRR) identified key
challenges, “including the fact that even the most basic equipment for
emergency obstetric procedures in health centres are missing; there is a
lack of ambulances and serious shortages in skilled birth attendants”.
There are hidden costs to “free healthcare”, including transport, bribes
and equipment.
Has the ability to deal with the current pandemic improved since the reviews?
These reports were
done several years ago. Africa grapples with unreliable or indeed
unavailable statistics, which is also bedevilling accurate monitoring of
the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Many African states lack the
statistical infrastructure to gather accurate data. More accurate data
is vital to make a true assessment of health needs, monitor progress and
foster greater accountability.
Updated figures
from the World Bank (including World Health Organisation figures) show
that there has not been much improvement in these states since the APRM
reviews were conducted.
The statistics on
the numbers of health professionals are extremely worrying: these states
are not in a position to monitor improvements or mount an effective
response in the event of a crisis.
Ebola lessons for COVID-19
Of the three
countries discussed, Sierra Leone had one case, Lesotho had no confirmed
coronavirus cases, and Tanzania had 13 at the time of writing. But the
weaknesses diagnosed by the APRM suggest that the virus will be
extremely damaging in these brittle health environments. The high
prevalence of tuberculosis, malaria and/or HIV/AIDS also makes these
states particularly vulnerable to COVID-19.
It’s worth remembering what was said by the deputy chief of staff for former Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, W Gyude Moore
, “It starts off as a health crisis, but it is always going to become a
governance crisis”. Liberia was hard-hit by the Ebola outbreak in 2014.
Other lessons from
the Ebola crisis he mentions: ensure links between national government
and lower levels work; trust in the government is vital and use credible
figures to convey key health messages; invest in testing, even with
limited resources; establish specialised health facilities for virus
sufferers; isolation is the top priority to break the transmission
chain, and enforce social distancing.
When discussing lessons from the Ebola outbreaks for COVID-19, Sorcha O'Callaghan of the London-based global think tank, the Overseas Development Institute, wrote:
“The spread of a
dangerous disease requires a broad response that goes beyond medical
provision. Treating Ebola predominantly as a health crisis meant that
the surge capacity and emergency funding characteristic of a large-scale
humanitarian crisis were not triggered. Wider implications - for
instance for food security, livelihoods and education - were neglected,
and NGOs were unclear on how or where to engage. A narrow focus on Ebola
also downplayed other health implications, and people with other
conditions were left without treatment due to the outbreak.”
These messages
sound very familiar in the context of the current outbreak of COVID-19.
The question is whether countries and their citizens will heed them with
the urgency that is needed.
Steven Gruzd is
head and Yarik Turianskyi deputy head of the African Governance and
Diplomacy Programme at the South African Institute of International
Affairs, an independent public policy think tank based in Johannesburg.
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