Why Africa struggles to test for covid-19

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Africa CDC reckons that just 1.8m Africans have been tested for the virus, or slightly more than 0.1% of the population

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AFRICA’S FIRST confirmed case of coronavirus was recorded in Egypt on February 14th. Some worried that, as outbreaks took hold across the globe, the virus would rapidly overwhelm the continent’s fragile health-care systems. For the moment, if official figures are to be believed,: Africa, home to 17% of the world's population, currently accounts for just 1.5% of the world’s confirmed covid-19 cases and 0.1% of deaths, according to the World Health Organisation .

The true death toll may be far higher. The low numbers reported so far may partly reflect a paucity of testing. Africa CDC, a public-health agency of the African Union, reckons that just 1.8m Africans have been tested for the virus, or slightly more than 0.1% of the population . Africa CDC plans to distribute another 1m tests. But even if they succeed, this will still be just 0.2% of the population, far short of the 1% health experts reckon is needed for a successful testing strategy.

Testing has been uneven, too. South Africa, which is home to 4% of the continent’s population, has accounted for more than a third of all tests, thanks to an ambitious screening programme using community health workers. Nigeria, meanwhile, is home to 15% of Africans but has conducted just 2.5% of tests. In Sudan, where there have been 3,820 confirmed cases and 165 deaths from covid-19, authorities have tested only 1,700 people.

Africa’s covid figures would probably be relatively low even if testing were more widespread. Africans travel less, because of poor road networks, making it harder for the disease to spread. African population distribution is also skewed towards the young, which reduces the rate at which infected people are likely to die. But the continent’s poor—many of whom are employed informally—are suffering severely under lockdowns in crowded cities where social distancing is impossible.

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Maybe they could ask the Premiere League clubs for some tests .. at least for doctors and nurses in Africa.

We’ll likely never truly have any idea what the impact will be on Africa. Too few people tested, insufficient government resources to mount significant response, unreliable census taking and record keeping. It will never truly be known.

You dont need an article to explain why Africa struggles. We all expected this.

Because the whole continent is riddled with poverty , poor government leadership , lack of democracy (even the US isn’t a full democracy). In some ways the continent was better under colonial rule because there was solid leadership in place (except SA)

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