Africa seeing uptick in COVID cases driven by S.Africa, WHO says
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[April 28, 2022]
NAIROBI (Reuters) -Africa is seeing
an uptick in COVID-19 cases largely driven by a doubling in cases
reported in South Africa, the World Health Organization said on
Thursday.
"This week new COVID-19 cases and deaths on the continent increased for
the first time after a decline of more than two months for cases and one
month for deaths," Benido Impouma, director for communicable and
non-communicable diseases at the WHO's Africa office told an online news
conference.
"This uptick is largely associated with the increasing number of cases
reported from South Africa as the country enters its winter season when
respiratory illnesses become more prevalent," Impouma added.
Africa has been experiencing a lull in COVID cases, with the WHO earlier
this month pointing to the longest-running decline in weekly infections
on the continent since the start of the pandemic.
But last week cases started to pick
up in South Africa -- the country that has recorded the most
infections and deaths in Africa to date -- and health authorities
there are monitoring for signs of a fifth infection wave.
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People stand in line to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, at the Narok
County Referral Hospital, in Narok, Kenya, December 1, 2021. Picture
taken December 1, 2021. REUTERS/Baz Ratner
"Just in the last week the country's (South Africa's) cases have
doubled, and there is a small increase in hospitalisations. Although
the Omicron variant continues to mutate, there is no current
evidence to suggest that this new upsurge is linked to any new
sub-lineages or a new variant," the WHO's Impouma said.
(Reporting by Alexander Winning and Hereward Holland; Editing by
Estelle Shirbon)
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