In Africa's monkeypox outbreak, sickness and death go undetected
Send a link to a friend
[October 31, 2022]
By Djaffar al Katanty and Edward McAllister
YALOLIA, Democratic Republic of Congo
(Reuters) - At a village clinic in central Congo, separated from the
world by a tangle of waterways and forests, six-year-old Angelika Lifafu
grips her dress and screams as nurses in protective suits pick at one of
hundreds of boils that trouble her delicate skin.
Her uncle, 12-year-old Lisungi Lifafu, sits at the foot of her bed,
facing away from the sunlight that pours through the doorway and pains
his swollen, weeping eyes. When nurses approach, he raises his chin, but
cannot look up.
The children have monkeypox, a disease first detected in Congo 50 years
ago, but cases of which have spiked in West and Central Africa since
2019. The illness received little attention until it spread worldwide
this year, infecting 77,000 people.
Global health bodies have counted far fewer cases in Africa during the
current outbreak than in Europe and the United States, which snapped up
the limited number of vaccines this year when the illness arrived at
their shores.
But the outbreak, and death toll, in Congo could be much greater than
recorded in official statistics, Reuters reporting shows, in large part
because testing in underequipped, rural areas is so limited and
effective medicines are unavailable.
During a six-day trip to the remote region of Tshopo this month, Reuters
reporters found about 20 monkeypox patients, including two who had died,
whose cases were not recorded until reporters visited. None of them,
including Angelika and Lisungi, had access to vaccines or anti-viral
drugs.
The shortage of testing facilities and poor transport links makes
tracing the virus nearly impossible, more than a dozen health workers
said.
Asked about undercounting, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) acknowledged that its data did not capture the full
extent of the outbreak.
In the West, only about 10 people have died of monkeypox this year,
figures from the U.S. CDC show. Europe and the United States have been
able to vaccinate at-risk communities. Suspected cases are routinely
tested, isolated and treated early, which improves survival rates,
experts said. Case numbers in Europe and the United States have
stabilized and begun to fall.
But in poorer African countries where many people do not have quick
access to health facilities, or are not aware of the dangers, over 130
have died, almost all in Congo, according to the Africa CDC.
No monkeypox vaccines are publicly available in Africa.
Without treatment, Angelika and Lisungi can only wait for the illness to
run its course. Ahead of them lies a myriad of possible outcomes
including recovery, blindness, or, as was the case with a family member
in August, death.
"These children have a disease that makes them suffer so much," said
Lisungi's father Litumbe Lifafu at the clinic in Yalolia, a village of
scattered mud huts 1,200 kilometres (750 miles) from the capital
Kinshasa.
"We demand the government provides medicines for us poor farmers, and
the vaccine to fight this disease."
HISTORY REPEATS
The World Health Organization last year called out the "moral failure"
of the COVID-19 pandemic response, when African nations found themselves
at the back of the queue for vaccines, tests and treatment.
But those failures are being repeated a year on with monkeypox, the
health workers consulted by Reuters said. This risks future flare-ups of
the disease in Africa and globally, experts said.
While the sudden demand from Western countries sucked up available
vaccines, poor countries such as Congo, where the disease has existed
long enough to be endemic, have been slow to seek supplies from the WHO
and partners.
Congo health minister Jean-Jacques Mbungani told Reuters Congo was in
talks with the WHO to buy vaccines, but no formal request had been made.
A spokesperson for Gavi, the vaccine alliance, said it had not received
requests from African countries where the virus was endemic.
A WHO spokeswoman said that in the absence of available vaccines,
countries should instead focus on surveillance and contact tracing.
"History repeats itself," said Professor Dimie Ogoina, president of the
independent Nigerian Infectious Diseases Society. Time and again, he
said, disease containment in Africa does not get the funding it needs
until wealthier nations are at risk.
"It happened with HIV, it happened with Ebola and with COVID-19, and it
is happening again with monkeypox."
Without adequate resources, the true spread of the virus is unknowable,
he and other experts said.
"In Africa we are working blind," said Ogoina. "The case counts are
grossly underestimated."
Monkeypox is spread through close contact with skin lesions. For most,
it resolves within weeks. Young children and the immune compromised are
especially vulnerableto severe complications.
The Africa CDC says that Congo has had more than 4,000 suspected and
confirmed cases and 154 deaths this year, based in part on health
authority data. That is far lower than the 27,000-odd cases recorded in
the United States and 7,000 in Spain. African nations with outbreaks
include Ghana, where there are about 600 suspected and confirmed cases,
and Nigeria, where there are nearly 2,000.
[to top of second column]
|
Lisungi Lifafu, 12, has his eyes checked
by a nurse at the Yalolia health centre, in Yakusu, Tshopo,
Democratic Republic of Congo, October 3, 2022. REUTERS/Arlette
Bashizi
"Yes, there is an undercount," said
Ahmed Ogwell Ouma, acting director of the Africa CDC. "The
communities where the monkeypox is spreading generally don't have
access to regular health facilities." He said the CDC could not
currently say how big the undercount was.
Congo's health minister Mbungani said testing capabilities were
lacking outside Kinshasa but did not respond to a request for
comment about missed cases.
THE FRONT LINE
African countries hoped that the WHO's decision in July to declare
monkeypox a public health emergency of international concern would
mobilise resources.
WHO dispatched some 40,000 tests to Africa, including 1,500 to
Congo, said Ambrose Talisuna, WHO's monkeypox incident manager on
the continent.
This month, Congo's National Institute for Biomedical Research began
a clinical trial of the antiviral drug tecovirimat on monkeypox
patients. While no vaccines are available for public consumption,
trials are underway on health workers in Congo with Bavarian
Nordic's Imvanex vaccine, health minister Mbungani said.
But in central Congo, little has changed.
Yalolia, where Angelika and Lisungi are patients, is reachable only
by motorbike tracks that thread tunnel-like through the dense
jungle, or by canoes carved from felled tree trunks. An old road
connecting to nearby villages was cut off years ago when a series of
wooden bridges collapsed.
In August, Lisungi's older brother developed a rash and had trouble
breathing. The family thought it was smallpox. When his condition
worsened, a doctor put him on an intravenous drip. He died before it
was empty.
Grief stricken, Lisungi hugged his brother's infected corpse. Two
weeks later, in early September, he too developed a rash and his
eyes swelled shut. Then Angelika fell ill.
Lisumbe took the children to Yalolia where they were diagnosed with
monkeypox based on their symptoms. He sold his belongings to buy
medicine to reduce their fevers.
The nurses caring for them seethe at the lack of treatments.
"If there is a vaccine, it is us who should have it. If there is a
treatment, it is us who should have it," said nurse Marcel
Osekasomba.
None of the cases were reported to authorities until Reuters visited
Yalolia with a local health official called Theopiste Maloko. He
only went to the village at Reuters' suggestion.
Without test results, they are now logged as suspected cases.
ISOLATED CASES
Tshopo, nearly as big as the United Kingdom, is heavily wooded and
carved up by the Congo River and its many winding tributaries.
Maloko's job is to track cases over an area spanning 5,000 square
kilometres. But he cannot afford gasoline and has no means of
transport.
When nurses took samples from sores on Angelika's leg and placed
them in a polystyrene cool box strapped to the back of a motorbike,
Maloko was sceptical.
To avoid spoiling, samples need to be kept cold and reach a
laboratory within 48 hours, but they often do not, he said. The
nearest testing lab is in Kinshasa; results take weeks or months.
"We are suffering. This is really our cry of alarm. We are raising
our voices so that someone will hear," he said.
Sometimes samples are not even taken.
The village of Yalanga is a day's journey from Yalolia by land and
boat. Surrounded by jungle, it has no phone network or electricity.
When the light fades, patients at the health centre lie in the dark
on beds of hard bamboo.
The clinic, a small building with a tin roof and five rooms, has had
three cases in recent months. To notify authorities of a new case,
nurses must travel half a day to get phone reception. When they are
busy, getting away is impossible. The recent cases were recorded
weeks late, said nurse Alingo Likaka Manasse.
Lituka Wenda Dety, a 41-year-old mother, thinks she got sick from
eating infected bush meat. At the height of her illness in August,
her throat was so sore she struggled to swallow her own saliva.
Round scars still dot Dety's body, and her bones ache. She is
grieving. When she was ill in hospital, her six-month-old son caught
monkeypox and died. He is buried in a patch of sandy earth beside
her mud brick home.
At the end of the day, Dety and her family gather around the small
rectangular grave. She whispers prayers.
"We want there to be a vaccination campaign," she said. "Going by
what we have suffered, if many people catch this disease it will be
catastrophic."
(Reporting by Djaffar al Katanty in Tshopo and Edward McAllister in
Dakar; Writing by Edward McAllister; additional reporting by James
Macharia Chege in Johannesburg and Stanis Bujakera in Kinshasa;
Editing by Frank Jack Daniel)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |