Abstract


 This article provides insights into Cameroon’s crisis management of the coronavirus pandemic via an exploratory and descriptive qualitative research. Thematic analysis of data was done using a framework approach; the Comprehensive Pandemic Risk Management System (CPRMS) underpins the research and provided structure, order, and clarity to the article. From the findings, one can deduce that the government is working hard to mitigate the potentially awful consequences of the coronavirus pandemic. The authorities implemented temporary containment and infection control measures to stem virus spread and have relied heavily on international and humanitarian organisations for financial/technical help to operationalise the pandemic response. Attempts to control the spread of the virus, however, have been challenging. Deficiencies abound in many areas including slowness to institute containment measures after the first infected cases; Cameroon’s fragile/weak health infrastructure; insufficient critical care units and health workers disproportionately distributed in the country; safety concerns with insufficient protective equipment for health workers; overly centralised pandemic response at the national level to the detriment of the regions and lower administrative units; government politicising the response by refusing contributions/donations from opposition parties; high cost for COVID-19 treatment limiting access to healthcare and insufficient trust in health systems ability to deal with COVID-19. Recommendations are supplied on how to improve the coronavirus response as infections skyrocket. The recommendations also address enhancing later epidemics/pandemics and Cameroon’s health system.

Highlights

  • Responding effectively to an unprecedented health crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic with several “unknown unknowns” is a daunting task for several governments

  • Government primary sources of data on COVID-19 management was obtained from government/official policies, plans and programmes; inter-agency/ministerial press briefings, reports, circulars, guidelines, communiques, and statements published on the websites of stakeholder government agencies/ministries—Ministry of Public Health (MPH), Ministry of Territorial Administration (MTA); Ministry of Communication (MCOM), Ministry of Transport (MT), Ministry of Telecommunication (MTEL) etcetera

  • 5.0 FINDINGS The six component system building blocks (SBB) of the Institutional System in the Comprehensive Pandemic Risk Management System (CPRMS) informed the thematic analysis and have elicited knowledge on the pandemic response presented in the findings

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Summary

Introduction

Responding effectively to an unprecedented health crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic with several “unknown unknowns” is a daunting task for several governments. Publics expect the authorities to live up to expectations especially when the crisis is transboundary and involves rapidly metamorphosing events (Ola & Zeger, 2020). In such complicated and ambiguous situations, developing countries plagued with problems of governance may be entangled in policy paralysis and do not fully appreciate the unfolding risk which could lead to disastrous consequences (Idowu, 2020). The ramifications of the pandemic could be profound and long-lasting in the continent where the health systems of most African countries are permanently in crisis (Waal, 2020), worsened by weak governance (Idowu, 2020)

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