Tag: covid-19

  • WHO Director-General, Ghebreyesus, Hasn’t Tested Positive for COVID-19

    WHO Director-General, Ghebreyesus, Hasn’t Tested Positive for COVID-19

    Contrary to some reports, the Director General of the World Health Organisation (WHO), Tedros Ghebreyesus, has not tested positive for the Coronavirus (COVID-19).

    The clarification was made by WHO through its official Twitter handle, saying: “Contrary to some incorrect reports, @DrTedros hasn’t tested positive for #COVID19. He has been identified as a contact of a person who tested positive.
    Dr. Tedros is feeling well and is in self-quarantine as a precautionary measure, in line with WHO protocols.”

    It would be recalled that Ghebreyesus has announced in a series of tweet via his verified handle that he’s in self-isolation over the coming days and self-quarantine from home.

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    According to him: “I’ve been identified as a contact person of someone who has COVID-19 symptoms, I am well and without symptoms but will self quarantine over the coming days and self quarantine from home.

    “It is critically important that we all comply with health guidance. This is how we will break chains of #COVID19 transmission, suppress the virus, and protect health systems.

    “My colleagues and I at WHO will continue to engage with partners in solidarity to save lives and protect the vulnerable.”

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    Ghebreyesus and other WHO officials have been at the forefront of fighting the COVID-19 pandemic since it broke out early in the year.

    Idowu Sowunmi

  • COVID-19: Ogun Orders Full Reopening of Churches, Mosque, Hotels

    COVID-19: Ogun Orders Full Reopening of Churches, Mosque, Hotels

    Ogun State, Gov. Dapo Abiodun, has announced the reopening of all hotels and other establishments providing accommodation for tourists such as guest houses, motels, including restaurants, eateries, fast food, lounges and bars. Also to reopen for business are entertainment centres- cinemas, viewing centres, marquees and event centres.

    In a statement announcing the development by the Governor’s Chief Press Secretary, Kunle Somorin, the Governor was said to be pleased with the drop of COVID-19 infections.

    According to Somorin, while businesses can now fully reopen after a long period of lockdown restrictions occasioned by the dreaded virus, the hospitality establishments are to scrupulously adhere to a set of guidelines in order to keep up with the protocols aimed at further flattening the curve of COVID-19.

    “Government is aware of the excruciating implications of COVID-19 lockdown but we have emplaced measures and improved on testing to stem the tide. Empirical field research indicates that we have managed to stem community spread and treatment of the virus very well. We are convinced that opening of schools and entertainment centres would not harm our people. We would continue to monitor the development,” Somorin quoted Governor Abiodun.

    While reinstating the need to rebuild the economy, the State government maintained that it was irrevocably committed to the successful implementation of the “Building our Future Together” Agenda and as such would do everything possible to ensure that the people have increased prosperity that would place the State on a sound footing towards continued development.

    The statement said that government would not hesitate to do selective lockdown should there be any flagrant disobedience to the set COVID-19 protocols.

    These conditions set for the reopening of the entertainment centres are:

    i. Observance of temperature checks at all entry points.

    ii. Compulsory use of face masks within the premises/facilities.

    iii. Maintenance of two-metre social distancing by marking the floor to guide their customers on physical distancing.

    iv. Owners of business premises are required to offer only 50% of their space capacity to guests.

    v. Maintenance of physical distancing with a maximum of four persons per table, while Buffet services are not allowed.

    vi. Prior to holding any event, licence and safety clearance must be obtained from the Government.

    vii. the operation of all cinemas must not exceed 10pm.

    The statement added that all centres are to provide noise-proof equipment in the various facilities to ensure that they do not disturb the serenity of the neighbourhoods where they operate.

    While calling on owners of these facilities to cooperate with the State Government, Governor Abiodun warned that facilities that defy these guidelines would be sanctioned.

    “Let me say that our Task Force is already on the ground and is moving about to ensure compliance.

    “And, if perchance we discover that any of our centres is not complying or adhering to the laid down protocols, we will not hesitate to close down the centre,” he warned.

    Violation of these conditions, the statement concluded, would attract severe sanctions including, but not limited to fine and closure of premises.

  • Health Journalism: How the Reporting of Covid-19 Has Transformed the Jobs of African Journalists

    Health Journalism: How the Reporting of Covid-19 Has Transformed the Jobs of African Journalists

    By Wole Elegbede

    Health journalists in Africa have been given fecund avenue to discuss the impact of Covid-19 on their works at the 16th edition of the African Investigative Journalism Conference (AIJC2020) hosted by the Journalism Programme of the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.

    This year’s conference (October 6-30) holds virtually for the first time because of coronavirus concerns, and boasts of being the African continent’s biggest gathering of journalists. The conference deals with varied topics where the journalists shared experiences and learn new skills, techniques and tools to enhance their work.

    On 13th October 2020, there was a session on the topic “Journalism in the time of Covid” which dwelt on those issues and provided solutions on how journalists can navigate the complexities of reporting the virus. The session’s panel was moderated by Mia Malan, Editor-in-chief/Executive Director of Bhekisica Centre for Health Journalism in Johannesburg, South Africa, who opened up on the core issue of how the pandemic forced journalists to become emergency health reporters to “report on science research results and health policies that they were previously unfamiliar with”. She then posed thought-provoking questions like “Is this kind of situation good for health journalism or does it lead to misinformation, and how have business, investigative and political journalists cope with the situation?”

    Ferial Haffajee, influential South African journalist well-known for business, investigative and political reporting before the outbreak of the virus and who has never reported on a pandemic before now, said after her dive into reporting Covid-19 pandemic, she discovered the stereotype about the health beat as “soft” was wrong, adding that it is “probably the most vital of the beats; it’s literally a matter of life and death”.

    Hafajee has been able to overcome the challenges by her sheer resoluteness, and the epidemiological course she undertook in July this year in India together with other journalists from across the world. Journalists from 18 African countries participated in the training and a third of the total number of participants are non-health journalists.

    “For me, that (epidemiological course) is the way to go because it used every single technology, and then together with people like Dr. Taryn Young (an epidemiologist), it taught us how to ensure that we knew about vaccine trials, how to ensure that we understood the signs and that has been completely invaluable to me”, she opined.

    While on coronavirus beat, Haffajee learned that reporting the virus could lend itself to the methods of conventional investigation because of the fall outs of the disease such as Covid-19 corruption, police brutality, human rights abuses and unscientific vaccine claims.

    She said the reporting of Covid-19 “did become more conventionally investigative”, adding “that’s when we learned that all the billions of Rand (South Africa’s currency) that were being invested into the response in South Africa, but I know it’s also happening in the rest of Africa, was as usual being corrupted. We have to get at the top and watch how the money is planned and then how It’s spent, and for me, that’s where health reporting should go, in the next couple of years, to catch corruption before it happens”.

    Asha Mwilu, a Kenyan traditional television journalist and CNN African journalist of year 2016, disclosed that coronavirus changed her life and that she had to put aside her role as an editor to go to the field to report on the virus.

    “I started going to the markets and talking to people and seeing how coronavirus was affecting lives and livelihoods, and I just had to go back to the basics of reporting, and then I had to re-learn a lot of things”, she remarked.

    After Mwilu resigned from her post as Editor, Special Projects, Citizen Television, Kenya, she launched Debunk Media on July 1, 2020, where she currently serves as Founder/Editor-at-large. The platform came in the midst of Covid-19 and this development changed its orientation.

    “The plan was to launch Debunk in April, but we had to put it on hold”, she explains. “First and foremost, the content that we had created could not even resonate with the audience because everyone was talking about coronavirus. We had created content around issues like legalization of marijuana, feel good content around music but using data to drive those stories. What coronavirus did for us is to really center us into what Debunk Media wanted to do, and is now doing, which is putting data at the center of storytelling “.

    At a time that fatigue was setting in the coverage of the pandemic, her team decided to look for areas that had not been reported on, and learned how to scrape data from the web to give new dimensions to reporting the disease.

    Professor Taryn Young, an epidemiologist and Director of the Centre for Evidence-based Healthcare at Stellenbosch University, South Africa, who has collaborated effectively with journalists, said health reporters need basic knowledge of science and research assessment to be able to write critically on health, and to prevent misinformation.

    “Yes, I have seen misinformation and flawed research being reported in the media”, she disclosed. “An example is linked to the big difference between association and causation. For instance, there have been reports linked to smoking, that if you smoke more, you are less likely to become inflicted with Covid-19 but these studies are reported without critically about how big was the study. Was the result big enough to give a robust answer?”
    Speaking on the epidemiological course in which she was one of the hosts, Young said on a certain day at the event “there were more than 60 people online all joining to learn more about epidemiology, to learn more about different types of research designs, different types of bias, and talking about error, and also covering tips on how to critically appraise medical research”.

    Journalists and medical researchers need to work together to enhance the reporting of research findings, she suggests.

    In her own contribution, Ida Jooste, who works for the International Media Development Organization called Internews, said Covid-19 had brought many other areas of life into storytelling and cited the instance of mathematics and statistics.

    “It’s brought mathematics and statistics and dealing with numbers right into our faces every single day”, adding that this is something that journalists should learn to add to their understanding of Covid-19 reporting.

    The author:
    Elegbede is a Multimedia journalist and Project Director of Press Attack Monitor, a platform that exposes press freedom violations in Nigeria. He was chosen by the Journalism Program (Wits Journalism) of the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, as a fellow of the African Investigative Journalism Conference 2020 hosted by Wits Journalism.

  • 181 Students, Staff Contract COVID-19 in Lagos School

    181 Students, Staff Contract COVID-19 in Lagos School

    The Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu-led Lagos State Government Friday said a total of 181 students and members of staff of a private boarding school located in Lekki area of the state have tested positive for the Coronavirus (COVID-19).

    The Sanwo-Olu administration disclosed that the positive cases were detected during surveillance and case investigation in the school.

    The state government, however, did not disclose the name of the school.

    “181 students and staff members of a private school located in a suburb of Lekki tested positive to COVID19 during surveillance and case investigation in the school.

    “There are 441 students and staff in the school.

    “A 14-year-old SS1 female student fell ill on the 3rd of October and was sent home after receiving first aid at the school.

    “The student subsequently tested positive for COVID-19 on Tuesday 6th of October in one of the accredited private labs in Lagos.

    “There is a total lockdown and movement restriction in the school with the Epidemiology and Surveillance Pillar of the EOC and Ibeju-Lekki Local Government Area State Disease Surveillance and Notification Officer (DSNO) reporting at the school daily to conduct further investigation.

    “Positive students and staff have been isolated on the premises and given the COVID-19 home-care treatment packs and are being monitored in isolation within the school premises,” said a statement by Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Akin Abayomi, entitled: ‘Lagos confirms COVID-19 infection in a private school.’

    Idowu Sowunmi

  • COVID-19 Still Present, Danger of Community Spread Looms – IPCR Warns

    COVID-19 Still Present, Danger of Community Spread Looms – IPCR Warns

    The Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR) has called on the general public to adhere strictly to the NCDC protocols on COVID-19 with a view to preventing the spread of the pandemic in the country.

    The Director General of the Institute Dr. Bakut T. Bakut made the call on Monday 21st September, 2020 in Awka, Anambra State at the occasion to mark 2020 World Peace Day celebration.

    The Director General who was represented by Grace Awodu, Chairlady, local Organizing Committee, World Peace Day, said that because of the COVID-19 pandemic, celebration of the 2020 World Peace Day was low-key.

    He said the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution through South-East Zonal Office is collaborating with people and Anambra State Government to organize “Peace Summit” in Awka, Anambra State to mark the Day.

    Dr. Bakut further observed that COVID-19 is still present in the country, the danger of community spread still looms large and as such all efforts must be in place to resist further spread through adhering to the preventive measures prescribed by Nigeria Centre for Diseases Control (NCDC).

    The IPCR Boss enthused “I appeal to all to embrace the advice on physical distancing, wearing of facemask, sanitizing or washing of hands and caution in social gatherings.”

    Dr. Bakut further explained that conflict is a major distraction of efforts being made at combating the COVID-19 Pandemic and other diseases in Nigeria. He said resources, energy and time are wasted in quelling conflicts at the expense of facing the COVID-19 and other health related diseases.

    The Director General call for an end to all forms of violence, armed banditry and criminality in Nigeria. He advocated for the use of dialogue in the management of conflict.

    While speaking on the theme of the event “Shaping Peace Together” Dr. Bakut called on State Government and non- governmental organization to mark the day by spreading compassion, kindness and hope in the face of the pandemic.

    He urged Nigerians to stand against any attempt to use the virus to promote stigmatization, conflict and criminality in Nigeria.

  • Sanwo-Olu Says Lagos Public, Private Schools Can Reopen Sept 21, But  Gym, Cinemas to Wait

    Sanwo-Olu Says Lagos Public, Private Schools Can Reopen Sept 21, But Gym, Cinemas to Wait

    The Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu-led Lagos State Government has granted permission for the re-opening of basic and secondary schools, although with a note of caution to private proprietors and public administrators.

    Sanwo-Olu, who stated this during a briefing on Saturday, ordered the resumption of all public and private schools from September 21, but only pupils in Junior Secondary School Three (JSS 3) and Senior Secondary School Two (SSS 2) are allowed to resume for physical classes in public schools.

    The governor also granted permission for the immediate reopening of cinemas and gyms, but with a maximum of 33 per cent occupancy, noting that there must be a minimum of two empty seats between occupied seats in the cinemas.

    Sanwo-Olu Announces Resumption Dates for Academic Session in Lagos

    Sanwo-Olu said the public schools’ resumption would allow the JSS 3 students to revise and prepare for Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) slated for October 12, adding that students in SSS 2 would use the period to prepare for their transitional exams to SSS 3.

    Unlike the resumption schedule for the public schools, the governor permitted all levels of class in private schools to resume, but with strong advice to private school owners to consider implementing a staggered daily resumption schedule and classes on alternate days during the week.

    But, all pre-primary school classes, including nursery, daycare centres and kindergarten, in both public and private schools are not permitted to open.

    According to him, “It has become necessary to issue clarifications regarding the resumption of schools, in order to clear any confusion that may have arisen since the resumption date was announced. Public Schools will adopt a phased protocol for resumption of physical classes. Students in JSS 3 and SSS 2 in public schools in Lagos are to resume physical classes from September 21.

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    “In the same vein, all private primary and secondary schools are permitted to resume from September 21. We have strongly advised school owners and managers to put safety first and open in phases similar to the announced schedule for public schools.

    “School owners and managers are advised to seriously consider implementing a staggered daily resumption schedule, classes on alternate days during the week, and utilisation of distance learning methods as a complement to physical classes. All pre-primary – nursery, daycare and kindergarten – classes and schools in both public and private schools must remain closed.”

    The governor said all re-opened schools must comply with safety protocols and hygiene guidelines as instructed by Lagos State Government through the Office of Education Quality Assurance (OEQA). He said the department would monitor and evaluate schools’ preparedness.

    He said: “For all other public school classes in primary school and JSS 1, JSS 2, and SSS 1, announcements for resumption will be made as soon as the State Government is satisfied that all necessary resumption protocols have been put in place.

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    “In the meantime, these yet-to-resume classes in public schools are expected to continue their lessons on our various distance learning platforms (online, radio, television and WhatsApp) pending the announcement of dates for physical resumption.”

    From next week, Sanwo-Olu said all primary and secondary schools in the state that have more than two-storey structures would be subjected to integrity test to ensure the safety of pupils. He spoke against the backdrop of the Saturday collapse of Excel Secondary School – a private school – in Ejigbo area of the state.

    The school, Sanwo-Olu observed, flouted the state’s structural regulations, resulting in its collapse. He directed the complete demolition of the failed structure, while directing Lagos State Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development to embark on integrity test on all schools’ structures.

    In the case of gyms, the governor said there must be constant disinfection of machines and equipment throughout the day.

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    He said Lagos State Government would be taking definite decisions on the reopening of night-clubs, bars, event centres, spas and public parks next month, warning that dire consequences awaited those in this category that may want to flout the restrictive order.

    During the briefing, Sanwo-Olu further eased the restrictions on houses of worships, permitting observation of daily prayers in mosques and granting mid-week services in churches.

    He said: “As regards our places of worship, we are now also permitting the mosques to resume their five times a day prayers; and in the case of churches, they are now also permitted to resume their mid-week services. We must not forget that the Coronavirus pandemic is still very much with us, and we must therefore strive to prioritise the safety of all our children, teachers, parents, and the entire society.”

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    Since resumption of international flights, Sanwo-Olu said his administration has worked closely with the Federal Government and the Port Health Authority to monitor all flights arriving and departing the state.

    He said Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos recorded a total of 50 flights since September 5, carrying a total of 8,000 passengers.

    “Despite this inbound volume of passengers, the number of COVID-19 positive still remains on the downward trend at under five per cent,” he said.

    Idowu Sowunmi

  • Sanwo-Olu Announces Resumption Dates for Academic Session in Lagos

    Sanwo-Olu Announces Resumption Dates for Academic Session in Lagos

    The Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu-led Lagos State Government has announced dates for the resumption of public and private schools after the closure, resulting from the novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic a few months ago.

    Sanwo-Olu, in a statement on Sunday by Lagos State Commissioner for Education, Folasade Adefisayo, explained that his administration is adopting a phased approach to the reopening of public schools in Lagos State in order to observe the COVID-19 safety protocols.

    The statement said the present set of JS3 and SS2 students in public schools in the state would resume classes from September 21, so as to allow JS3 students who are already in an exit-class to revise and prepare adequately for their forthcoming Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) organised by the Lagos State Examination Board and scheduled to hold between October 6 and 12.

    The commissioner added that the resumption would also afford the present SS2 students the opportunity to prepare effectively for their transition to SS3.

    Regarding the resumption of private primary and secondary schools in the state, the statement said the schools are permitted to resume from September 21, reaffirming the need for school owners to institute all necessary safety protocols as well as resume in phases similar to the plans for public schools.

    “Phased opening includes strategies for staggered resumption in the mornings, classes on alternate days during the week and teaching through various distance learning methods.

    “Schools must also comply with safety protocols and hygiene guidelines as instructed by Lagos State Government, through the Office of Education Quality Assurance (OEQA), which will also continue to monitor and evaluate Schools’ preparedness,” Adefisayo said.

    She emphasised that pre-primary classes in both public and private schools would remain closed until further announcements are made, reiterating that the pandemic still exists, urging all stakeholders to prioritise the safety of the children, teachers and parents as well as the whole community.

    She added that the scheduled dates and venues for the Entrance Examination into Lagos State Model Colleges would soon be announced by Lagos State Examination Board.

    Assuring parents that announcements relating to the resumption of other classes would be made as soon as the government is certain of safety, Adefisayo disclosed that the students belonging to the yet-to-resume classes in public schools would continue their lessons on the various distance learning platforms created by the state government.

    Idowu Sowunmi

  • Governors resolve to retain Tax reliefs in states till 2021

    Governors resolve to retain Tax reliefs in states till 2021

    The Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) says it will retain till next year the tax reliefs for individuals and businesses in states, which was implemented to mitigate the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

    The NGF made this known in a resolution that was passed at its 16th teleconference meeting of the governors held on Wednesday, August 2, 2020.

    In a statement issued at the end of the meeting and signed by the NGF Chairman, Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State, “all state governments, through their internal revenue services, will ensure seamless implementation of the tax relief programmes for businesses and other taxpayers.

    “These programmes which were released in some states since March 2020 were designed to reduce the financial burden of taxpayers in the country up till 2021 in some cases.”

    Also, for the purpose of addressing concerns raised by states on the reception of new inmates amidst measures being taken to curtail the spread of COVID-19 at the correctional facilities in the country, the NGF resolved to work, through its sub-committee interfacing with the Presidential Task Force (PTF) on COVID-19.

    “The NGF resolved to provide leadership to the COVID-19 response in their respective states by ramping up risk communication activities and community testing.”

    In its desire to interface with the Ministry of Petroleum Resources on the actualization of the National Gas Expansion Programme (NGEP), the forum mandated state governments to nominate focal persons for the implementation of the process.

    However, leadership of the forum emphasized the need to be vigilant and ensure that the structures put in place for routine polio immunization are not jeopardised by the COVID-19 pandemic in the light of the Rotary International’s recognition of the forum’s role in ending the polio infection in the country.

  • Buhari Celebrates His Administration’s Efforts to Contain Spread of Coronavirus Pandemic

    Buhari Celebrates His Administration’s Efforts to Contain Spread of Coronavirus Pandemic

    President Muhammadu Buhari Wednesday praised his administration for confronting the novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) head-on.

    The President said Nigeria developed a robust framework led by Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 to coordinate and oversee the country’s multi-sectoral inter-governmental efforts at containing the spread and mitigating the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    He noted that his administration would sustain efforts to make adjustments to new lifestyles and be sensitive to the security underpinnings, as experts try to find vaccines for COVID-19, and a possible acceptable cure,

    Speaking at the AQABA Process virtual meeting in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Buhari said: “This was done while currently monitoring effects of the measures and taking steps to mitigate these effects as quick as possible. This was in a bid to ensure sustained human security across the population.

    “Earlier, we had established the National Humanitarian Coordination Committee with the responsibility of providing among others a national vision for humanitarian actors and settling disputes that may arise from interactions between security services and the humanitarian community. This committee was timely as a stop gap measure in coping with the effects of COVID-19.”

    The President added that the government has also taken measures to tackle the devastation of social and economic dimensions of the pandemic with a focus on the most vulnerable citizens in the society through provision of palliatives as well as other economic stimulus packages.

    He pointed out that those measures came at a cost, but would be sustained, while citing Mali as an example where social and economic challenges took a toll on government and pushed democracy to a “breaking point.”

    “Such situation could create a vacuum that can be exploited by terrorists and violent extremists,” Buhari was quoted to have said in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina.

    The President told the gathering of Heads of Governments that the security landscape in Nigeria and across West Africa continued to evolve with the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, noting that various systems in society came grinding to a halt as a result of the urgent measures taken to slow down the spread of the disease.

    According to him, “These measures were taken while being mindful of the toll that the virus has had in the various epicentres across the world where medical structures were strained up to breaking point while dealing with mass casualties as a result of infections from the disease.

    “These measures are not without their challenges as livelihood were drastically affected and civic lifestyle is being tested to its limits. The whole instruments of government are now mobilised to confront what has now turned both a health emergency and an economic crisis.”

    Buhari noted that the government would continue to monitor activities of terrorists online to control radicalisation of citizens by terrorist groups, and other violent cells, following huge traffic online due to the COVID-19.

    He said the migration to cyber space posed greater risk for radicalisation, especially with the growing constraints on physical contacts and movements.

    “It is important to state that the spread of the COVID-19 has led to the movement of activities to cyber space. Furthermore, lock-down policies and restrictions of movement in affected areas means that people would move their day to day social and business activities to cyber space. This, however, comes with an increase in the risk of individuals being radicalised online,” he added.

    Buhari appreciated His Majesty King Abdullah II for the invitation to the meeting and also thanked Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan for hosting the meeting under the AQABA Process.

    Idowu Sowunmi

  • AU Patners Novartis to Facilitate Affordable COVID-19-related Supplies to Africa

    AU Patners Novartis to Facilitate Affordable COVID-19-related Supplies to Africa

    Novartis and the African Union (AU) through the Africa Medical Supplies Platform (AMSP) have announced a new collaboration to facilitate the supply of medicines from the Novartis Pandemic Response Portfolio to AU member-states and Caricom countries.

    AMSP portal is an online marketplace that enables the supply of COVID-19-related critical medical equipment in Africa. It was developed under the leadership of the AU Special Envoy, Strive Masiyiwa, and powered by Janngo, on behalf of Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).

    The platform was also developed in partnership with African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA).

    The new collaboration would help alleviate supply and logistical constraints by ensuring efficient and rapid access to the pandemic portfolio medicines to African and Caricom governments.

    AU comprises 55 member-states, representing all the countries on the African continent, while 15 Caricom countries are eligible for the pandemic portfolio.

    “Our collaboration with AMSP is a continuation of our efforts at Novartis to combat COVID-19 across the world.

    “Together, we are aiming to accelerate and expand access to affordable essential medicines in Africa to meet the very urgent patient needs across the continent as it continues battling this pandemic,” said Chief Executive Officer of Novartis, Vas Narasimhan.

    AMSP was developed to ease the difficulties and open up the medical supplies market to Africa, and as part of the Partnership to Accelerate COVID-19 Testing (PACT) of Africa CDC.

    It’s designed to integrate African and globally vetted medical suppliers to ensure cost-effectiveness and transparency in the procurement and distribution of the COVID-19-related supplies.

    Speaking on the collaboration, Masiyiwa said: “Following the successful listing of test kits, personal protective equipment, and clinical management devices, the African Union Chairperson has expanded our mandate to include groundbreaking medicines to treat the COVID-19 patients in Africa.

    “As a global pharmaceutical leader, Novartis is a strategic partner for AMSP to unlock access to the latest and best-performing medicines for Africans in an affordable way.”

    There was a shortage of diagnostics, medical supplies and essential medical equipment such as personal protective equipment for healthcare workers, face masks, ventilators, and many others in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and its spread worldwide.

    Many African governments had severe challenges with the procurement of essential supplies to support their response activities and face stiff competition with the more industrialised countries for the limited available supplies.

    “As a continental body, we are working with several partners to ensure smooth and predictable access to essential medical supplies.

    “We found that during the Ebola outbreak in 2014, many people died because of Ebola but not due to Ebola. This is because they did not have access to essential medicines needed for treatment.

    “With AMSP, countries don’t have to search the market for supplies. The prices are negotiated and fixed to unlock the supply space,” said Director of Africa CDC, John Nkengasong.

    Novartis Pandemic Response Portfolio from Sandoz, the generics and biosimilar division of Novartis, comprises 15 medicines: Amoxicillin, Ceftriaxone, Clarithromycin, Colchicine, Dexamethasone, Dobutamine, Fluconazole, Heparin, Levofloxacin, Loperamide, Pantoprazole, Prednisone, Prednisolone, Salbutamol, Vancomycin.

    The portfolio was launched in July 2020 and sells medicines at zero-profit to governments, non-governmental organisations and other institutional customers in up to 79 eligible countries to address the urgent unmet needs of low-and lower-middle-income countries for medicines to be used for symptomatic treatment at various stages of the COVID-19.

    Eligible countries must be included on the World Bank’s list of Low-Income Economies and Lower-Middle-Income Economies.

    Idowu Sowunmi