At a Chinese-run hospital in Zambia, some
employees watched as people who recently returned from China showed up
with coughs but were not placed in isolation. A doctor tending to those
patients has stopped coming to work, and health workers have been
ordered not to speak publicly about the new virus that has killed
hundreds around the world.
The virus that has spread through much of China
has yet to be confirmed in Africa, but global health authorities are
increasingly worried about the threat to the continent where an
estimated 1 million Chinese now live, as some health workers on the
ground warn they are not ready to handle an outbreak.
Countries are racing to take precautions
as hundreds of travelers arrive from China every day. Safeguards
include stronger surveillance at ports of entry and improved quarantine
and testing measures across Africa, home to 1.2 billion people and some
of the world’s weakest systems for detecting and treating disease.
But the effort has been complicated by a
critical shortage of testing kits and numerous illnesses that display
symptoms similar to the flu-like virus.
“The problem is, even if it’s mild, it can
paralyze the whole community,” said Dr. Michel Yao, emergency operations
manager in Africa for the World Health Organization.
Those growing worried include employees at the
Sino-Zambia Friendship Hospital in the mining city of Kitwe in northern
Zambia, near the Congo border. Chinese companies operate mines on the
outskirts of the city of more than half a million people. One company is
headquartered in Wuhan, the city at the center of the virus outbreak.
Hundreds of workers traveled between Zambia and China in recent weeks.
“We’re definitely not prepared. If we had a
couple of cases, it would spread very quickly,” physiotherapist Fundi
Sinkala said. “We’re doing the best we can with what resources we have.”
The Sino-Zambia Friendship Hospital, or Sinozam,
a low-slung facility near the city’s train station, has taken some
precautions, including checking patient temperatures with infrared
thermometers and establishing isolation areas. Employees wear masks.
Gloves, disinfectant and oxygen inhalers have been stockpiled. Sinozam
treats many Chinese in Kitwe and its precautions go further than other
hospitals in the area.
But the employees and others familiar with the
matter, some of whom spoke anonymously under the new rules, say some
Chinese patients checked in with coughs and fevers but did not get
placed in isolation.
Visiting Zambian health officials concluded the
patients did not merit special treatment and did not take samples to
test for the virus. After the people recovered, they were sent home with
antibiotics, employees said.
On Wednesday, the hospital set up a new fever
clinic, to which people arriving with a high temperature are now ushered
to right away. It’s “unfortunate” the ward wasn’t set up earlier,
Sinkala said.
Two people familiar with the matter say a doctor
tending to the sick has fallen ill. Dr. Yu Jianlan has not come to work
in the past week and hospital administrators have not explained her
absence, Sinkala said. The other person spoke on condition of anonymity
for fear of retribution.
Hospital administrator Li Zhibing said there
were no patients with a fever and said Yu had a urinary tract infection,
not a fever. But a notice posted by the Zambia-China Cooperation Zone,
which manages the hospital, quoted an employee as saying on Jan. 27 that
the facility “probably sees 120 fever patients a day, and at least 70
of them are carrying germs” of various diseases.
Earlier this week, a Zambian official
acknowledged for the first time that his country was following up on an
unspecified number of suspected cases. Zambia is one of 13 African
countries identified by WHO as a high priority because of busy travel
links with China.
Copperbelt provincial health director Dr. Robert
Zulu, who oversees Kitwe and the surrounding region, told The
Associated Press he would not discuss details, citing privacy. But he
added, “when any case is confirmed, you will be informed.”
Crucially, no one in Zambia has been able to
test for the virus so far. Like most African countries, it has been
waiting for a substance known as a reagent, which labs require to
confirm whether a patient is infected. Labs in just six of Africa’s 54
countries were equipped as of mid-week. That means a wait of two or more
days to know whether a sample shipped to South Africa or even outside
the continent tests positive.
Without testing, officials are “just relying on
the symptoms” and whether they persist. “But from what we are learning
right now, some people show hardly any symptoms at all,” Sinkala said,
calling that the hospital’s biggest worry.
Zambia is one of the additional countries WHO
planned to equip by the end of the week. As of Friday, WHO emergencies
chief Dr. Mike Ryan said 28 labs across the continent could diagnose the
new virus.
Adding to concerns at Sinozam, three employees
say Zambian health officials visited on Tuesday and have been testing
the bodies of two Chinese patients that have been in the morgue for
days, though some added it was out of an overabundance of caution.
Li, however, dismissed the accounts of testing
the bodies as “rumors.” He said one died last month of malaria and the
other of a heart attack. The bodies are still there because family
members in China wish to come and pay respects but cannot because of the
outbreak, he said.
Zambia’s health ministry spokesman, Dr. Abel
Kabalo, called the employee accounts of events at the hospital “very
strange.” He vowed that if Zambia confirms a case, authorities “will
definitely inform the world.”
It’s “pointless to hide information,” Kabalo said.
The WHO says countries are obligated to inform
it of any confirmed cases and are requested to report suspected cases as
well. The WHO chief has publicly urged countries to share information.
So far, African countries appear to be complying, a WHO adviser on
health security, Dr. Ambrose Talisuna, told reporters.
Several African nations such as Ghana, South
Africa and Ethiopia have announced their precautions, including updates
on negative test results for suspected cases and demonstrations of
surveillance and quarantine capabilities. Ethiopian Airlines, however,
faces questions by some in Africa about why it continues to operate more
than 30 China flights a week while other African airlines have
suspended theirs.
Adding to the difficulties in diagnosing the new
virus are numerous diseases in Africa with symptoms that include fever
or coughing or both.
It’s impossible to diagnose the new virus by
symptoms alone, Gates Foundation CEO Mark Suzman said, adding that there
is a “significant likelihood” that the virus will be confirmed in
Africa. And there is a risk that “panic overtakes good public health and
good science.”
The foundation has committed up to $20 million
to help health authorities in Africa and South Asia, another vulnerable
region, improve their disease surveillance, isolation and treatment for
the virus.
Concerns are high among some in Kitwe. A local
pharmacy manager, Edward Goma, estimated that his business had sold more
than 800 face masks in the past few days.
“So far everyone is scared,” he said. And yet he
has not noticed the stricter surveillance measures seen in other
countries, beyond temperature checks at the international airport an
hour’s drive away.
The 15th Metallurgical Construction Group, based
in Wuhan, said on its website that its overseas operations in Zambia
and Congo must purchase masks, disinfect living quarters and workspaces
daily and check workers’ temperatures three times a day.
Chinese employees are temporarily barred from
returning to Africa, while those in Zambia are not allowed to go to
China, said Li, the hospital administrator.
Chinese embassies in Zambia and elsewhere in
Africa have been unusually outspoken, giving news conferences and
television interviews to discuss their response to the outbreak.
Embassies require arriving Chinese citizens to declare where they have
been in China. They also urge citizens to voluntarily isolate themselves
for 14 days.
“We are now practicing hygiene, even in the
mines,” said the Kitwe-based president of the Mine Workers Union of
Zambia, Joseph Chewe. “Any report of a person with coronavirus here will
be very disastrous.”
‘We’re definitely not prepared’: Africa braces for new coronavirus
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