Abstract

Successive waves of COVID-19 transmission have led to exponential increases in new infections globally. In this study, we have applied a decision-making tool to assess the risk of continuing transmission to inform decisions on tailored public health and social measures (PHSM) using data on cases and deaths reported by Member States to the WHO Regional Office for Africa as of 31 December 2020. Transmission classification and health system capacity were used to assess the risk level of each country to guide implementation and adjustments to PHSM. Two countries out of 46 assessed met the criteria for sporadic transmission, one for clusters of cases, and 43 (93.5%) for community transmission (CT) including three with uncontrolled disease incidence (Eswatini, Namibia and South Africa). Health system response's capacities were assessed as adequate in two countries (4.3%), moderate in 13 countries (28.3%) and limited in 31 countries (64.4%). The risk level, calculated as a combination of transmission classification and health system response's capacities, was assessed at level 0 in one country (2.1%), level 1 in two countries (4.3%), level 2 in 11 countries (23.9%) and level 3 in 32 (69.6%) countries. The scale of severity ranged from 0 to 4, with 0 the lowest. CT coupled with limited response capacity resulted in a level 3 risk assessment in most countries. Countries at level 3 should be considered as priority focus for additional assistance, in order to prevent the risk rising to level 4, which may necessitate enforcing hard and costly lockdown measures. The large number of countries at level 3 indicates the need for an effective risk management system to be used as a basis for adjusting PHSM at national and sub-national levels.

Highlights

  • The novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, first identified in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China in December 2019, has caused a global outbreak of the disease COVID-19 [1], formally declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March 2020 [2].The WHO, the United Nations Agency lead for directing and coordinating international health [3], is grouped into six regions including the African region, which is made up of 47 countries

  • The response and rapid control of COVID-19 pandemic in the WHO African region depends on the ability and capacity of countries to closely monitor the changes in COVID-19 transmission pattern, the ability of public health and health system infrastructure to adapt, and use by national authorities of public health and social measures (PHSM) that are informed by scientific data and analysis

  • Through the application of WHO guidance on considerations for adjusting PHSM in the context of COVID-19, our study reveals that the majority of countries in the WHO African region were experiencing community transmission (93.5%, n=43) at the end of 2020, have a health system capacity to respond graded as limited (64.4%, n=31) and a risk of overwhelmed healthcare systems as result of continued COVID-19 spread at level 3 (69.6%, n=32)

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Summary

Introduction

The novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, first identified in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China in December 2019, has caused a global outbreak of the disease COVID-19 [1], formally declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March 2020 [2].The WHO, the United Nations Agency lead for directing and coordinating international health [3], is grouped into six regions including the African region, which is made up of 47 countries. In March 2020, in addition to public health measures, countries began to implement physical distancing and social measures aimed at slowing down the spread of COVID-19 [8]. These measures included but were not limited to travel restrictions, curfews, school closures, and partial or full lockdowns. From late April 2020, some countries started to gradually ease lockdown measures, and at the same time increased their testing capacity New cases declined through August and September 2020, and plateauing before increasing again during November and December 2020 [10,11]

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