Per
Worldometer, COVID-19 infections have surpassed 2 million in Africa. Various articles that I've read places the population of the African continent at between 1.2 and 1.3 billion. As a coronavirus comparison, India has a population of 1.4 billion and has 9.4 million infections. When it comes to deaths, India is closing in on 150,000 while Africa is just over 50,000. And when it comes to the United States, there simply is no comparison. In a prior
blog post in October, I reported on 7 potential reasons for this lack of spread in the continent.
1. Age of the population.
2. Tuberculosis vaccine.
3. Exposure to previous coronaviruses.
4. Experience dealing with Ebola.
5. Lack of global travel.
6. Population spends more time outdoor than other parts of the globe.
7. Quick lockdowns.
For much of this time, the spread was more significant in countries such as South Africa, Morocco and Egypt. But it does look like Ethiopia and Kenya are having a spread of the virus. Kenya specifically looks like it is being hit with a second wave. Once again, the numbers being reported are very small when compared to other continents. For example, South Africa isn't even in the top 50 countries on a case per million basis.
The
Associated Press via the New York Post (Nov 19) reports:
The African continent of 1.3 billion people is being warned against “prevention fatigue” as countries loosen pandemic restrictions to ease their economies’ suffering and more people travel.
“We cannot relent. If we relent, then all the sacrifices we put into efforts over the past 10 months will be wiped away,” Africa CDC director John Nkengasong told reporters. He expressed concern that “many countries are not enforcing public health measures, including masking, which is extremely important.”
. . . The African continent has conducted 20 million coronavirus tests since the pandemic began, but shortages mean the true number of infections is unknown.
[World Health Organization’s Africa chief Matshidiso Moeti] worried that in some of Africa’s low-income countries, much of the limited testing capacity has been used on people who want to travel abroad instead of controlling the virus at home.
Of these 20 million tests,
Worldometer indicates that around 64% of these tests have occurred in South Africa, Morocco, Ethiopia, Egypt and Kenya. This list looks very similar to the list above in regards to countries with the most infections. These countries represent around 30% of the continent's population.