Youths will be encouraged “to play an active role” in ramping
up inoculations across the continent where the vaccination rate is far below
other regions in the world, Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
director John Nkengasong said Thursday.
Africa so far has 10.8 million confirmed infections and 240,000
deaths and vaccination efforts have been accelerating as vaccines doses are
“becoming readily available” on the continent, Nkengasong said. In the last
four weeks, Africa has seen an average 10% decrease in new cases, he said.
Of the 597 million doses of vaccines that Africa has so far
received, 64% have been administered, he said.
The campaign tagged “African Youths for COVID-19
vaccination: Initiative for Saving Lives, Saving Livelihoods” “will be an
important initiative” as the median age of Africa’s population at 19.5 years,
Nkengasong said.
“At least 70% of the population are less than 30, so we
really have to engage the youths to play an active role in scaling up the
vaccination in terms of mobilizing their peers and reaching out,” he said.
Another effort will seek to promote self-testing “so that
the communities and population take ownership of their own testing and take the
appropriate measures,” he said.
“If they know their status, they can take appropriate
measures to stay home, protect themselves, protect their loved ones and protect
their communities,” Nkengasong said. Rapid tests that can be done at home are
not widely available or free in most of Africa’s 54 countries. If they are
available they are often much too costly for the majority of Africans.
Only 94 million tests — 1.1 million in the last week — have
so far been conducted across Africa and the test positivity rate remains
relatively high at 11.4%, according to official statistics.
At another briefing on Thursday, the World Health
Organization Africa regional director Matshidiso Moeti urged people to comply
with public health measures in their respective countries.
In trying to “reach balance,” countries are now “working on
normalizing the response while managing the risk,” Moeti said. South Africa, in
particular, has scrapped isolation for people who test positive for the virus
but have no symptoms.
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