Thursday, April 30, 2020

Covid-19: Kenya reports highest number of recoveries as cases rise to 396

Health CAS Rashid Aman Health Chief Administrative Secretary (CAS) Rashid Aman updates the country on Covid-19 at Afya House, Nairobi on April 30, 2020. PHOTO | JEFF ANGOTE | NATION MEDIA GROUP 
JILL NAMATSI

Summary

    • Giving the ministry's daily update on new infections following the testing of 777 new samples, Dr Aman said 12 more people had tested positive for the coronavirus.
    • The ministry further announced that two more patients had died, raising Kenya's death toll to 17.
Health Chief Administrative Secretary (CAS) Rashid Aman announced on Thursday that the total number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Kenya had risen to 396.
Giving the ministry's daily update on new infections following the testing of 777 new samples, Dr Aman said 12 more people had tested positive for the coronavirus.
The ministry said a total of 20,268 samples had been tested in Kenya by April 30.
Dr Aman told the country that seven of the new patients were in Mombasa, three in Nairobi, one in Kitui and one in Wajir.
Mombasa's cases were recorded in Kuze (Old Town), which accounted for four, and in Bondeni, Bomani and Kidunguni, which accounted for one each. 
Nairobi's cases were in Eastleigh, Fedha and Kileleshwa.
MORE RECOVERIES
The ministry further announced that two more patients had died, raising Kenya's death toll to 17.
Dr Aman noted, however, that Kenya had discharged 15 patients - its highest number of recoveries in 24 hours since the first case of the virus.
This raised the country's total number of recoveries to 144.
Regarding testing, Dr Aman said that plans were in place for all cross-border truck drivers to be tested, following concerns about their transmission of the virus.

"Members of the EAC have agreed on a protocol for all Kenyans truck drivers to be tested from Mombasa to ease clearance at the border," he said.
On Tuesday, Health Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe told the National Assembly Health committee of a plan for mass testing that would cover 50,000 people at high risk of infection in two weeks.
The CS said 5,000 people would be tested in the Nairobi Metropolis, 2,000 in Mombasa and 1,000 each in Mandera, Kilifi and Kwale.
The government banned movement into and out of these five counties, which are considered high risk locations.
Nairobi and Mombasa have continued to account for the highest numbers of infections in the country.
WAJIR CASE
The case in Wajir was its first since Kenya confirmed its first case of Covid-19 on March 13.
On Monday, Wajir County Commissioner Jacob Narengo said that four people intercepted at Kenya's border with Somalia would be monitored at a local isolation centre.
Mr Narengo noted that they were quarantined as a precaution, especially since Kenya barred travel as a measure against the spread of the virus.
He also noted the surge in cases of the virus in Somalia, describing it as a wake-up call for the public, but said there was not yet a cause for alarm in Wajir.
A tally by Worldometer showed that Somalia had a total of 582 confirmed cases of Covid-19 by Thursday and a total of 28 deaths.
STATISTICS
In Africa, the coronavirus had infected at least 38,263 and killed over 1,595, according to Worldometer's count on April 30.
Since the first case was reported in Wuhan, China, on December 31, 2019, at least 3,234,915 people worldwide had been infected by April 30.
The total number of deaths worldwide was 228,598 and that of recoveries at 1,009,290.
The number of active cases stood at 1,997,027, with three per cent or 59,776 of them being critical and the rest mild.
Worldometer's count showed that the number of closed cases was 1,237,888, with 82 per cent or 1,009,290 being the number of recoveries or those discharged.

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