World Health Organization has revealed that so far this year, 20 countries in Africa have reported more than 14 thousand confirmed cases, including 55 deaths.
WHO Director-General, Dr Tedro Ghebreyesus who made the revelation in a Press Briefing on Thursday disclosed that more than 75% of all confirmed cases and deaths in Africa this year have been in Democratic Republic of the Congo, where the outbreak of clade 1b has now spread to six provinces, including the capital Kinshasa.
He said, “Clade 1b has also spread to four neighbouring countries: In Burundi, more than 2 000 cases have been reported, largely in urban areas; In Uganda, there are 649 cases and a fast-expanding epidemic, especially in the capital Kampala”.
The DG stated that WHO, Africa CDC and the partners are continuing to support countries to respond to these outbreaks and prevent further ones under our joint continental preparedness and response plan.
He made it that together with these organizatios, they are strengthening the “five Cs” of outbreak response, are Coordination; Collaborative surveillance and detection; Community protection; Care that is safe and scalable; And countermeasures, including vaccines.
“And health officials there are preparing to administer a second dose, with vaccination starting in Kinshasa this week. We still face many challenges to bring these outbreaks under control.
“To meet them, we need stronger political commitment to scale up response activities; We need fully resourced preparedness and response plans;
“We need further contributions of medical countermeasures including diagnostics and vaccines; we need continued transparency and collaboration between affected countries and partners”.
He said the Investment Round is about mobilizing the resources to implement the WHO’s global strategy to help keep the world safe and save 40 million lives over the next four years.
He added, “Through a series of events, WHO has received 70 pledges worth $1.7 billion dollars. Of these pledges, 39 are first-time voluntary contributors to WHO, including 21 from middle-income countries.
“Some of the world’s poorest countries have contributed, because they see the difference that WHO makes on the ground. Along with other funding agreements and partnerships, we can now count on at least US$3.8 billion, or 53% of the voluntary contributions needed for the next four years.
“This is truly significant, because for decades, only a small portion of WHO’s total budget was predictable. The funding from the Investment Round gives predictability and flexibility, and ability to respond rapidly to continually evolving health threats around the world”, he said.