Coronavirus crisis: ‘Africa not equipped to cope’ as outbreak spreads

“There are hospitals as healthcare facilities in Africa which do not have extensive intensive care capacity, diagnostic testing capacity, or large numbers of medical personnel.

“Ensuring Africa is capable of dealing with the surge of patients they may soon have is a vital task.

“As such, regional training exercises are important endeavor.

“Creating diagnostic capacity there is also essential.”

The WHO’s latest coronavirus disease situation report puts the total number of cases worldwide at 49,053 as of yesterday, 48,548 of which are in China, with 1381 deaths.

The WHO’s figures suggested all but two of these deaths, involving patients in the Phillipines and Japan, had occurred in China.

However, news broke today of the death of an 80-year old Chinese tourist in France, the first outside Asia.

The illness was first identified at a seafood market in the Chinese city of Wuhan at the end of last year.

Experts believe each infected person is likely to transmit the illness to about 2.5 other people, giving it an attack rate of between 60 and 80 percent.

If accurate, that could result in 60 percent of the world’s population being infected, which, even assuming a mortality rate of just two percent, would result in 50 million deaths.

Speaking earlier this week, WHO director-general Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus said the virus would likely have a bigger impact than “any terrorist action”, describing it as a “very grave threat”.

He urged the world to “wake up and consider this enemy virus as public enemy number one.”

source: express.co.uk