Africa's
lack of access to Covid-19 tests could undermine the global fight against the
virus, says the head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention
(Africa CDC).
Writing
in Nature, John Nkengasong
said powerful countries were racing to acquire tests, and without its own
manufacturing capacity Africa would be left behind.
John Nkengasong, head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, says test shortages are hampering the continent's Covid-19 response. |
“No country can securely eliminate Covid-19 — or its devastating
economic domino effects — if the disease becomes rampant across a continent of
1.3-billion people. For Africa to get ahead of the pandemic, we need to scale
up testing fast,” said Nkengasong.
On
Wednesday, Africa had confirmed 35,800 infections and 1,528 deaths, but the
numbers are rising by more than 40% a week, and Nkengasong said they were
likely to be underestimates.
“Ethiopia
has run about 11,000 tests — only 10 for every 100,000 people. Much-richer
South Africa has run about 280 per 100,000. For Australia, the number is about
2,000; for the US, 1,560,” he said.
Forty-three
countries had been trained by Africa CDC to test for the virus, but tests were
not available.
“The
collapse of global co-operation and a failure of international solidarity have
shoved Africa out of the diagnostics market,” said Nkengasong. “With its lack
of hospitals and high prevalence of conditions such as HIV, tuberculosis,
malaria and malnutrition, Africa could see Covid-19 mortality rates higher than
elsewhere, even in children. It will be higher still the more slowly we
implement testing.
“Lack of access to diagnostics is Africa’s achilles heel. When
SARS-CoV-2 [the virus strain which causes Covid-19] was first reported, genome
sequences were made available within weeks and several groups in Asia and
Europe started producing in-house tests.
“Africa lacked this capacity and
had to wait for the tests to be introduced, a tardy ‘trickle-down’ of
diagnostics. The situation has now become worse: a race is on by the powerful
to acquire whatever Covid-19 tests are available.”
Nkengasong
said global protectionism had led more than 70 countries to impose restrictions
on the export of medical materials.
“Wealthier
countries should reserve some fraction of these supplies for export; that would
cut their own risk that the disease will be reintroduced,” he said.
“Where export markets are open,
African countries must band together to negotiate as one large customer, rather
than as many small buyers fighting for a seat at the table.”
Once this was done, three more steps were needed to scale up testing:
- “We have to work with non-government
laboratories and the private sector to roll out testing on the subnational
level. In many countries, samples must be shipped to a centralised
diagnostic laboratory, which adds cost and delay;”
- “We need to make sure our testing technologies
can use the existing platforms that have been the backbone for large-scale
testing for HIV and tuberculosis;” and
- “We need to speed up the production of test
kits within Africa. Plans for production are under way in Kenya, Morocco,
Senegal and SA.”
Nkengasong said Africa CDC's Partnership to Accelerate Covid-19 Testing
(Pact), launched this month, aimed to reach 10-million tests in the next four
months.
“For Pact to succeed and save lives, it needs international support and
partnership with the private sector, not interference, and support from the
African Union Covid-19 Response Fund,” he said. “Government leaders, finance
and health ministers and global-health experts must be willing to work together
for a collective win, even when leaders feel pressure from their own nations.
“Hundreds of thousands of Africans
shouldn’t need to die because of a global crisis that requires global action
and global solidarity. If Africa loses, the world loses.” - Sowetan
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