Dar es Salaam —
Like many African countries now making use of Ebola and Influenza
preparedness to
step up their COVID-19 response, Tanzania is tapping
into the skills of health workers already knowledgeable in infectious
disease control, established influenza sentinel surveillance system and
repurposing facilities to tackle the new virus.
When the tenth
Ebola outbreak erupted in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2018,
Tanzania trained 2400 health workers. Training sessions initially
planned for Ebola were reviewed to include COVID-19. More than 300 of
them have now been retrained to join the frontline ranks of the
country's COVID-19 battle.
In regions that had
been identified as being at high risk of Ebola, rapid response teams
were formed and trained, and authorities identified isolation areas at
specific health facilities in each district and health workers trained
to manage those units and handle suspected cases. The health workers and
the resources are now proving critical in COVID-19 response.
In addition,
structures such as isolation units in district health facilities set up
for Ebola preparedness are now being turned into COVID-19 units. All the
country's 26 regions have been instructed to designate isolation areas
for potential COVID-19 infection, while health worker training in
patient triage for Ebola readiness now counts among the assets in
curbing the spread of the new coronavirus.
"It is very
critical to empower health care workers with the right information,"
said Dr Nemes Iriya, in charge of Case Management at World Health
Organization in (WHO) in Tanzania.
WHO Tanzania is
working with the Ministries of Health in mainland Tanzania and in
Zanzibar to build the capacity of health workers on clinical care,
improving infection prevention, laboratory testing and other prevention
measures. A total of 182 facilities have been designated to be able to
isolate and treat COVID-19 in all district councils. The government has
also identified 26 regional referral facilities to be capacitated to
provide critical care. Most of the referral facilities already have
staff trained in advanced care for Ebola, which included critical care.
Angelina Malugu, a
nurse who was recently trained on handling COVID-19 patients, said
learning about the type of personal protective equipment needed for
COVID-19 was crucial. "I was worried because I did not know how to
distinguish COVID-19 from Ebola in terms of my safety."
"We still had gaps
in knowledge," Said Mohamed, a junior doctor at the main hospital in
Pemba island, recounted during a training session on response to the new
virus that was first reported in Tanzania on 16 March.
More health workers
have been trained through sessions organized by the Ministry of Health
in collaboration with United Nations agencies and non-governmental
organizations.
Getting the right messages out
The government has
also intensified public health education, working with WHO, UNICEF,
religious leaders and telecommunications firms to provide facts and
debunk rumours about COVID-19.
The COVID-19
response has been taken to a higher level, coordinated through the
disaster committees and the task force chaired by the Prime Minister.
Disaster committees have structures at national, regional, district and
village level.
Public health
officials and key government officials, including the President and
Prime Minister, as well as religious leaders have featured on national
TV and popular radio programmes to speak about the disease.
Handshake greetings
and crowds are avoided as much as possible - fewer buses during rush
hour makes crowd-shunning difficult. "I'm doing all I can to make sure
that I stay safe from any possibilities of getting the infection. I was
worried ... when I heard there is a case in Tanzania," said Ashura
Magongo, a resident of Dar es Salaam.
Columbus Masenga, a
Dar es Salaam mechanic, said he had never used a mask or a hand
sanitizer in his life until recently. "It sounded weird to hear that I
must clean my hands with something that I do not know about. I bought
one for my wife to keep in her handbag, but we are using soap and water
at home. I think this new disease has come to force everyone to observe
personal hygiene. When I got home one night my six-year-old did not hug
me. He said, 'daddy don't touch me'," Masenga said.
Tanzania has also
made quarantine mandatory for arrivals, both national and foreigners,
with travellers quarantined in designated hotels for 14 days. Large
public gatherings - community meetings, rallies, sports and
entertainment - were banned for a month on 17 March. Schools and
universities have also been shut for a month.
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