Tag: COVID-19

  • Ghana Institution of Engineering inducts 44 senior engineers via Zoom

    The Ghana Institution of Engineering (GhIE) has inducted 44 senior engineers into the fold of the institution online via Zoom.

    The senior engineers who were inducted online included 10 Civil Engineers, 24 in the Mechanical/Agric/Marine Technical Division, five in the Chemical/Mining Technical Division and five in the Electrical/Electronic Technical Division.

    The inductees included 10 senior officers of the Ghana Army from the ranks of Lt. Col. to Brigadier and an Israeli engineer by name Ing. Mahmud Attila of Amandi, was also inducted.

    Swearing in the inductees, the President of GhIE, Ing. Alexander Leslie Ayeh said, the Institution is like a stream connected with its environment. “What is happening today is allowing you to extend your coordinates to flow along with the ever-rolling stream called the GhIE”.

    He congratulated all the inductees for their endurance, particularly during this novel period of COVID-19, saying, “I believe that the Almighty God has called you to be part of this stream at this time for a purpose”.

    Ing. Ayeh charged all the newly-inducted senior engineers to ensure that the minutes of several GhIE committees and meetings would have their names recorded to enable them contribute to the workings of the Institution and have a smooth renewal of their annual license.

    The Immediate Past President (IPP) of GhIE, Ing. Steve Amoaning-Yankson advised the senior engineering inductees to use their expertise in engineering to improve the quality of life of Ghanaians in key areas like development of water supply, power, roads, health, sanitation, communication, housing and other infrastructural development in the country.

    The Executive Director of the GhIE, Ing. Kwabena Agyei Agyepong reminded the senior engineers to participate in seminars and evening sessions at the Institution, which helps to mentor the new and young engineers of the Institution. He hinted that participating in GhIE-organized programmes earns members Continuous Professional Development (CPD) points; adding that engineers need 18 CPD points to qualify them for yearly renewal of their engineering license.

    On his part, the chairman of the GhIE Membership Committee of GhIE, Ing. Kwabena Bempong, said the novel maiden edition of the Special Induction of senior engineers online, is a true testimony of the fact that with or without COVID-19, life must go on and without engineering there would be no development in the country.

    Source: B&FT Online

  • 5 African countries with no Covid-19 deaths

    Since the novel Covid 19 virus recorded it’s first case in the month of March, it has gone ahead to affect a total of 52 countries in the continent. There has been 8,618 confirmed deaths from the virus in Africa. The first case was recorded in Egypt on the 14th of February 2020. Countries like South Africa, Ghana and Algeria have been hit hard.

    According to statistics from the Africa Center for Diseases Control and Infections (Africa CDC), as at June 24th 2020, the number of cases confirmed in Africa so far is 324,696 cases, alongside 154,170 recoveries and counting. The deaths are also 8,618 and also counting.

    In case you thought all countries in Africa have recorded deaths, you guessed wrong. Below is a list of the countries in Africa who have recorded cases, but hasn’t yet had anybody dead from the Covid 19 virus.

    1. Eritrea

    Eritrea is located in East Africa with a police of 3.214 million. The East African country has one of the lowest recorded cases at 143. So far, 39 people have recorded with 104 cases still active. No death recorded.

    2. Lesotho

    Lesotho is located in Southern Africa and has a population of 2.108 million since last cencus. They have just 17 cases, 2 recoveries and 15 active cases. It’s suprising because they share border with South Africa, who are stunned by the numbers.

    3. Namibia

    Namibia is also in Southern Africa, with an estimated population of 2.448 million. They have had 72 confirmed cases, with 21 recoveries and 51 still active.

    4. Seychelles

    The East African country with 97,762 citizens has recorded as little as 11 Covid 19 cases. All 11 have miraculously recovered.

    5. Uganda

    Another East African country with a population of 45,741,007, have recorded 797 Covid 19 cases, with 699 recoveries. Only 98 cases are still active.

    Source: opera.com
  • Renowned journalist, Ben Ephson in ICU after testing positive for COVID-19

    With each passing day more and more Ghanaians are contracting the deadly COVID-19 disease.

    Another renowned personality, pollster and popular journalist Ben Ephson is reported to have contracted the novel coronavirus.

    According to inside information reaching us, the renowned pollster tested positive for Coronavirus and has been admitted at the Intensive Care Unit of the University of Ghana Medical Centre (UGMC) receiving treatment.

    Per what we gathered, Ben Ephson started experiencing breathing difficulties and is currently under observation.

    He is not the first journalist to contract the virus in Ghana because some five journalists of Multimedia tested positive for the virus, Joy FM’s Gary Al-Smith was one of those who contracted same and had to be admitted to the Hospital mid-June.

    Meanwhile, not long ago, the Sekondi-Takoradi Mayor, Anthony K.K. Sam and former General Secretary of the NPP Sir John died after testing positive for COVID-19.

    The disease COVID-19 has no respect for status and can catch anybody.

    Born Emmanuel Benjamin Ephson, the ace journalist has distinguished himself among his peers.

    He started reporting for the London based monthly Africa Magazine in 1974 and is also a former BBC and Agence France Presse correspondent.

    Source: opera.com
  • Coronavirus: UK economy hit worse than first thought

    The UK economy shrank more than first thought between January and March, contracting 2.2% in the joint largest fall since 1979, official figures show.

    The Office for National Statistics (ONS) revised down its previous estimate of a 2% contraction, with all the main economic sectors dropping.

    There was a significant economic impact in March, as the coronavirus pandemic began to have an effect.

    The data comes as the prime minister is set for a major speech on the economy.

    Jonathan Athow, Deputy national statistician at the ONS, said: “Our more detailed picture of the economy in the first quarter showed GDP shrank a little more than first estimated.

    Information from government showed health activities declined more than we previously showed.

    All main sectors of the economy shrank significantly in March as the effects of the pandemic hit.

    The first-quarter contraction is now the joint biggest drop since the July-to-September period in 1979.

    Mr Athow said: “The sharp fall in consumer spending at the end of March led to a notable increase in households’ savings.

    The new data showed 6.9% GDP contraction in March.

    The first-quarter figures show that the services sector – which accounts for about three-quarters of UK GDP – shrank by a record 2.3%.

    The ONS said production output fell by a revised 1.5% in the three months, driven by declines in manufacturing as factories temporarily shut down, while there was a fall in construction output of 1.7%.

    When compared with the same three-month period a year ago, the economy shrank by 1.7%, worse than the previous estimate of a 1.6% contraction.

    But as the coronavirus lockdown only came into force on 23 March, the second quarter will show the full hit on the economy.

    Recent ONS monthly figures showed the economy plummeted by 20.4% in April – the largest drop in a single month since records began.

    That contraction was three times greater than the decline seen during the whole of the 2008 to 2009 economic downturn.

    Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said the latest figures could be summed up in one line: “The biggest contraction for 40 years, even though Q1 contained just nine lockdown days.

    “The data was just the prelude”, with worse to come, he added.

    However, while economists are braced for a dire set of second-quarter figures, Howard Archer, at the EY Item Club, believes April’s sharp contraction is likely to have been the low point.

    He predicted the economy would “return to a clear growth in the third quarter with GDP expanding close to 10% quarter-on-quarter” as lockdown restrictions are eased further.

    Weaker finances Later on Tuesday, Boris Johnson is set to make a keynote speech on the economy, with a promise to “build back better”.

    Speaking in the West Midlands, the prime minister will say he wants to use the coronavirus crisis “to tackle this country’s great unresolved challenges”.

    As part of what he is expected to call a “new deal”, Mr Johnson will set out plans to accelerate £5bn of spending on infrastructure projects.

    Meanwhile, separate ONS data on the nation’s finances showed that Britain’s current account deficit widened by more than expected in the first quarter.

    The balance of payments deficit – the difference between the value of the goods and services that a country imports and the goods and services it exports – rose to £21.1bn, or 3.8% of GDP.

    This means the UK is reliant on inflows of cash from abroad and leaves the pound vulnerable, according to Mr Tombs.

    “Sterling almost certainly would depreciate sharply again if a major second wave of COVID-19 emerges or if the UK and EU fail to either sign a trade deal or to extend the transition period before the end of this year,” he said

    Source: bbc.com

  • YES approves 100 disable athletes for relief package

    The National Paralympic Committee (NPC) has said the Youth Employment Agency (YES) has approved 100 para-athletes for relief support following the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Mr. Peter Adjei, Secretary-General told the GNA Sports that, they submitted 204 athletes to YES through the Ministry of Youth and Sports and out of the number 100 was approved for the support.

    “We have had an extensive meeting with The Ministry of Youth and Sports. Pursuant to that The Government managed to give us stimulus packages to 100 of the athletes NPC to be distributed among the various Elite Para Sports Athletes and also ensure fairness in distribution these slots.”

    “Through the collaboration with YEA, the government is offering to help these individuals for a period of six months beginning from July this year. This is aimed at cushioning the Para athletes in these trying times.

    “We hope this would help our athletes to remain focused on their training taking into consideration the frustrations and disappointments this CoronaVirus has brought upon us.

    “These athletes have been training since 2015 for international games and have not received any amount from Ghana. It is our hope that government would provide them with the needed assistance,” he stated.

    Mr. Adjei called on the athletes to make good use of the support from the government, whilst they themselves in good shape for the resumption of sporting activities.

    Source: GNA

  • Accra Technical University records first COVID-19 case

    The Accra Technical University formerly known as Accra Poly has recorded its first COVID-19 case, authorities announced to students on Tuesday, June 23, 2020.

    The affected patient is a national service personnel at one of the academic departments, a circular to the university community said.

    “The said person is currently in isolation at a medical facility and responding well to treatment. Six colleagues who came into contact with the confirmed Covid-19 patient, have been counseled, re-assured and their samples taken for laboratory testing.

    “The contacts have been asked to self-isolate while waiting for the results of the test. The University Medical team and the Safety and Health Committee are however in touch with the patient and contacts, to provide the needed medical and psychological support,” the letter to students said.

    The ATU authorities say efforts are underway to fumigate the affected offices among others.

    It added: “Members of the University Community are entreated to remain calm while adhering strictly to the published personal protection etiquettes.”

    Below is a statement:

    Our Ref:     ATIJ/COVI /2020                                                                                          88.06/2020

    Your Ref:

    To The Accra Technical University Community
    CONFIRMED COVID -19 CASE AT ACCRA TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY

    We are writing to inform you that we learned yesterday, Monday, 22nd June 2020 at I I .20am, a member of our University Community (a National Service Personnel in an Academic Department) has tested positive for COVID-19.

    The personnel reported to a medical facility in her neighbourhood after experiencing symptoms of fever, headache and runny nose. After Covid-19 tests were conducted, the result was communicated to the service personnel on Sunday, 21 stJune 2020.

    The said person is currently in isolation at a medical facility and responding well to treatment. Six colleagues who came into contact with the confirmed Covid-19 patient, have been counselled, re-assured and their samples taken for laboratory testing.

    The contacts have been asked to self-isolate while waiting for the results of the test.The University Medical team and the Safety and Health Committee are however in touch with the patient and contacts, to provide the needed medical and psychological support.

    The offices of the affected Department and its environs will be fumigated while contact tracing continues.

    Please, continue to do everything you can to stay healthy: Wash your hands; frequently; Wipe down surfaces; avoid touching your face whenever possible. Cover your coughs and sneezes with your arm and elbow. Remember that social distancing remains the key strategy in the University response.

    Members of the University Community are entreated to remain calm while adhering strictly to the published personal protection etiquette.

    Sincere

    Ag. irect r Public Affairs

    Cc: ice-Chancellor, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Ag. Registrar

    All Staff, Students, Notice Boards

    Source: https://mynewsghana.net

  • Grigor Dimitrov: Bulgarian tests positive for coronavirus after Adria Tour events

    Bulgaria’s Grigor Dimitrov, who played in both of Novak Djokovic’s recent Adria Tour events, says he has tested positive for coronavirus.

    Dimitrov, 29, withdrew from the second tournament in Zadar, Croatia on Saturday with sickness after his opening loss to Borna Coric.

    The world number 19 also played in the first event in Belgrade last week.

    In a statement on Instagram, Dimitrov wrote: “I am so sorry for any harm I might have caused.”

    He added: “I tested positive back in Monaco for Covid-19. I want to make sure anyone who has been in contact with me during these past days gets tested and takes the necessary precautions.

    “I am back home now and recovering. Thanks for your support and please stay safe and healthy.”

    Disclaimer : “Opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not in any way reflect those of backend.theindependentghana.com. Our outfit will hereby not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Persons with disability appeal to be considered for stimulus packages

    Mrs Felicity Amponsemkyere, Secretary of the Ghana Federation of the Disabled (GFD) in the New Juaben South Municipality (NJSMA) in the Eastern Region, has called on the government to prioritise Persons With Disability (PWD) when providing stimulus packages.

    She explained that giving preferential treatment to PWDs when implementing the stimulus package policy would help the disabled to have sustainable resources and further reduce their reliance on society for their livelihoods.

    Mrs Amponsemkyere made this call when a group named, Nii and Friends COVID-19 PPEPWD donated items to PWDs in New Juaben South Municipality to support them during the COVID-19 era.

    The items included over 500 nose masks, alcohol-based hand sanitizers, liquid soaps, bottles of red oil and vegetable oil, boxes of tinned tomatoes, sardines, cornflakes, toiletries, detergents, bread, and confectionery, were presented by Neil Nii Amartey- Kanarku, a Citi TV Correspondent in Eastern Region.

    The GFD Secretary said it was sometimes embarrassing when the disabled were gathered in an area and given pieces of bread and cups of rice.

    She called on the government to provide them with support for them to expand their businesses so that they could be independent.

    Nii Amartey- Kanarku, Founder of Nii and Friends COVID-19 PPE4PWD, indicated that it was evident that abled persons were struggling to go through this COVID-19 season, hence, his decision to go to the aid of the PWDs as they have been badly affected by COVID-19.

    Nana Twumasi Dankwah, Gyaasehene of New Juaben Traditional Council, thanked the group for their support to the PWDs to help them conquer the disease and assured that the Traditional Council would ensure that PWDs were factored in all community projects.

    Source: GNA

  • China locks down Beijing neighbourhoods to contain Covid-19 cluster

    China is locking now ten more neighbourhoods in Beijing to try and contain the spread of a new coronavirus outbreak linked to a food market, authorities announced Monday.

    City official Li Junjie said at a press conference that fresh cases had been found in a second wholesale market in northwestern Haidian district, and as a result, the market and nearby schools would be closed, and people living in ten communities around it placed under lockdown.

    Beijing reported its second consecutive day of record new numbers of Covid-19 cases on Monday, adding urgency to efforts to rein in a sudden resurgence of the coronavirus in the Chinese capital.

    The recent outbreak has been traced to a major wholesale food market, Xinfadi, which accounts for 80 percent of Beijing’s farm produce supply sourced both domestically and from overseas.

    The market has been shut, tens of thousands of nearby residents are being tested for the virus and a city-wide campaign was launched to identify people who have recently visited the market or have been in contact with people who have.

    Beijing officials on Monday confirmed 36 new Covid-19 cases for June 14, the same as a day earlier, which was the city’s highest daily infection count since late March. Officials have now reported 79 cases over just four days, the biggest concentration of infections since February.

    A number of neighbourhoods in the west and southwest of Beijing have been upgraded to medium-risk, including Financial Street where banks and financial firms converge. This entails measures such as strict control of people and vehicle movements, disinfections and temperature checks. One neighbourhood in the same district as the food market was raised to high-risk, denoting the most severe level of infection.

    As three other provinces reported new cases linked to the Beijing cluster, several provinces warned their residents against non-essential travel to the capital and implemented isolation protocols for travellers from riskier parts of Beijing.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Sunday it was informed of the outbreak by Chinese officials who were investigating its source and extent. WHO called for thorough investigations to better understand the source of the cluster.

    The Xinfadi market spans an area the size of near 160 soccer pitches. Thousands of tonnes of vegetables, fruits and meats are traded at Asia’s largest wholesale food centre.

    Disclaimer : “Opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not in any way reflect those of backend.theindependentghana.com. Our outfit will hereby not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article.”

    Source: france24.com

  • Brazil governors accused of Covid corruption

    Two Brazilian state governors have been accused of corruption related to spending on medical equipment in the fight against COVID-19.

    In Rio de Janeiro the legislative assembly voted to open impeachment proceedings against the governor, Wilson Witzel, for alleged corruption. In the northern state of Pará, federal police raided offices and the home of the governor, Helder Barbalho.

    Both governors deny any wrongdoing and both have clashed with President Jair Bolsonaro over his handling of the pandemic and his opposition to introducing lockdowns.

    Brazil is the epicenter of the pandemic in Latin America with more than 770,000 confirmed cases and almost 40,000 fatalities.

    Source: bbc.com

  • New Zealand lifts all Covid restrictions, declaring the nation virus-free

    New Zealand has lifted almost all of its coronavirus restrictions after reporting no active cases in the country.

    At midnight local time (12:00 GMT), all of New Zealand moved to level one, the lowest of a four-tier alert system.

    Under new rules, social distancing is not required and there are no limits on public gatherings, but borders remain closed to foreigners.

    New Zealand has reported no new Covid-19 cases for more than two weeks.

    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told reporters she did “a little dance” when she was told the country no longer had any active virus cases.

    “While we’re in a safer, stronger position, there’s still no easy path back to pre-Covid life, but the determination and focus we have had on our health response will now be vested in our economic rebuild,” Ms Ardern said.

    “While the job is not done, there is no denying this is a milestone. So can I finish with a very simple, ‘Thank you, New Zealand’.”

    ‘A sustained effort’

    New Zealand first went into lockdown on 25 March, setting up a new four-stage alert system and going in at level four, where most businesses were shut, schools closed and people told to stay at home.

    After more than five weeks, it moved to level three in April, allowing takeaway food shops and some non-essential businesses to re-open.

    As the number of community cases continued to decline, the country moved into level two in mid-May.

    The move to level one comes ahead of time – the government had originally planned to make the move on 22 June, but it was brought forward after no new cases were reported for 17 days.

    Under the new rules, all schools and workplaces can open. Weddings, funerals and public transport can resume without any restrictions. Social distancing is no longer required but will be encouraged.

    The country’s borders remain closed to foreign travellers, and rules remain in place requiring New Zealanders arriving from abroad to go through a 14-day period of isolation or quarantine.

    Ms Ardern warned that the country would “certainly see cases again”, adding that “elimination is not a point in time, it is a sustained effort”.

    New Zealand has recorded 1,154 confirmed cases and 22 deaths from Covid-19 since the virus arrived in late February, but has been widely praised for its handling of the crisis.

    For many, the latest announcement is a cause for celebration – but not without caution. Auckland-based lorry driver Patrick Weston told the BBC: “Everyone is so happy we’re finally through this, but we’re still nervous.

    “I think the main thing people are worried about is the economy – so many people out of work, so many people looking for work at the same time.

    “[On Tuesday] all restrictions are lifted and we can carry on as normal. Sporting events, music events can all take place with no restriction of numbers. We’re still being encouraged to social distance of course, so we hope people will be sensible.

    “We’re happy, but nervous about the future.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Do not pay any fee for stimulus package registration NBSSI

    Mrs Kosi Yankey Ayeh, the Executive Director of the National Board for Small Scale Industries (NBSSI), said the application process for the COVID-19 Alleviation Programme (CAP) is free hence no one should pay any fee for it.

    The caution comes on the back of reports that some of the applicants were being charged between GH¢50 and GH¢150 to access the GH¢1 billion loan announced by the Government to mitigate the impact of the pandemic on businesses.

    Mrs Ayeh, who disclosed this in an interview with the media in Assin Fosu, cautioned the public to be wary of such fraudsters.

    “The NBSSI is not charging anyone to register and we are not going around telling people to pay any fee to register with us but what some unscrupulous persons are doing is taking advantage of the situation to make money, which is fraudulent,” she said.

    Mrs Ayeh advised persons interested in applying to decline working with people who came around the markets posing as staff of the NBSSI or members of any association working for the Board.

    Beneficiaries include businesses providing services in demand during the pandemic and which have the potential to grow and positively impact communities affected by COVID-19, as well as those focusing on digitisation to support Micro, Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (MSMEs).

    The maximum amount a business could receive would be determined after assessment by the Committee.

    “We are looking at kick-starting the schemes as early as this month. We just want to put in place structures to ensure that only deserving SMEs benefit from the support,” she said.

    To ensure fairness and transparency, Mrs Ayeh said the Board had launched a portal that received applications for the utilisation of the soft loan scheme for MSMEs affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, with application forms available online on www.nbssi.gov.gh.

    Businesses could also call the CAP Business Centre on 0302 477 777, or visit the nearest NBSSI Business Advisory Centre for assistance with their applications.

    The Board has received more than 5,000 applications with more than 1000 people making inquiries on how to access the facility.

    Government earlier announced a sum of GH¢600 million, which had been made available for businesses negatively impacted by the pandemic, but the amount was later increased to GH¢1 billion.

    Out of the GH¢1.2 billion earmarked for the programme, GH¢600 million will be disbursed as soft loans to MSMEs with up to a one-year moratorium and a two-year repayment period. The interest is pegged at three per cent.

    Additionally, selected participating banks will provide negotiated counterpart funding to the tune of GH¢400 million, summing up to GH¢1 billion for disbursement under this Business Support Scheme, with the entire scheme set to attract some 180,000 beneficiaries across the country.

    Source: GNA

  • GIS calls for inclusion of COVID-19 testing in international certificate of vaccination

    Mr Kwame Asuah Takyi, the Comptroller-General of Immigration (CGI), has called for the inclusion of COVID-19 testing in the International Certificate of Vaccination otherwise known as Yellow Card to strengthen health security.

    He said the inclusion would help prevent, protect and contain the spread of the coronavirus disease across borders and avoid the interference with international traffic and trade.

    A statement issued by Superintendent Michael Amoako-Atta, the Head of Public Affairs, said the call was made during a web-based seminar on the impact of COVID-19 on the Economic Community of West Africa States (ECOWAS) free movement protocol and the regional integration agenda.

    It was organised organized by the International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD) under the auspices of European Union, ECOWAS Commission and International Labour Organization.

    The statement said there is the need for health clearance for COVID-19 and other infectious diseases to be strictly enforced as part of requirements for entry into member states when implemented.

    It expressed concern over the nonexistence of health facilities at the various entry points of member States of ECOWAS to cater for the health needs of border officials who were unwell and exposed to infectious diseases and other ever-changing health risks.

    “We need effective collaboration between border security agencies and health institutions to curtail the possible spread of infectious diseases across borders”, Mr Takyi said.

    The CGI said member states should consider building capacity of port health officials through a continuous training programme to strengthen health security in West Africa as part of the new paradigm shift, post COVID-19.

    The statement said as part of policy intervention, member States must leverage on technology to install closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras along the borders for effective monitoring of movements of persons along the frontiers.

    It said some of the lessons learnt from the closure of the borders were the increasing use of unapproved routes by migrants to enter the entry, which has led to the identification of several unapproved routes of entry and exist.

    Others, the statement said, were the connivance of transport operators and border residents who aided travelers to cross borders illegally, adding: tip-offs from border residents and the sharing of intelligence among border security agencies are therefore crucial to combating irregular migration and the fight against infectious diseases such as COVID-19.

    Other panelists for the webinar were H.E. Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, the Minister for the Interior of Federal Government of Nigeria; Mr Tei Konzi, Commissioner of Trade, Customs and Free Movement for ECOWAS Commission; Ms Melita Gruevska-Graham, Head of Anti-Trafficking Programme for ICMPD; and Ms Lotte Kejser Chief Technical Adviser for International Labour Organization (ILO).

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Brazil now fourth-highest nation in Covid-19 deaths

    The number of coronavirus fatalities in Brazil has risen by almost 1,000 in a day, making the country’s overall death toll the world’s fourth-highest.

    Its figure of 28,834 has now surpassed France, and only the US, the UK and Italy have recorded more deaths.

    President Jair Bolsonaro has consistently played down the outbreak, although the country has the world’s second-highest number of cases.

    He has criticised state lockdowns for harming Brazil’s economy and jobs.

    What are the latest figures?

    Brazil’s health ministry said the past 24 hours had seen 956 new deaths.

    This puts it past France’s total of 28,774. Even if new figures raised the French total back above Brazil, the trends in the two countries show deaths in the Latin American nation are on a far steeper upward trend.

    According to a count by Johns Hopkins University, Brazil now has 498,440 confirmed cases.

    Only the US has more, with 1.77 million.

    The number of deaths in Brazil has been doubling roughly every two weeks, compared to about every two months in the UK, four months in France, and five months in Italy.

    Experts have warned that the real figure may be far higher due to a lack of testing.

    Will this change Brazil’s policies?

    Mr Bolsonaro is unlikely to alter his stance, arguing that the economic fallout of lockdowns is worse than the outbreak.

    He has fought what he calls “the tyranny of total quarantine” by state governors – despite the upward tick in cases – and has even called for Brazil’s football season to resume.

    He has also been seen mingling with hundreds of supporters in Brasilia while not wearing a face mask.

    On Sunday, Pope Francis added to the pressure on the president by highlighting the plight of the people of the Amazon.

    “We call on the Holy Spirit to grant light and strength to the Church and to society in Amazonia, which has been harshly tested by the pandemic,” he said.

    Amazonas state has one of Brazil’s highest infection rates and also one of the most underfunded health systems.

    Many experts believe Central and South America are now the major hotspots for increased infections.

    A combination of under-pressure healthcare systems and a mixed response by governments to the severity of Covid-19 has meant the region cannot apply the same easing of lockdowns taking place in Europe and elsewhere.

    Source: bbc.com

  • IoD-Gh supports COVID-19 Trust Fund

    The Institute of Directors-Ghana (IoD- Gh) has presented a cheque for GHC 33,000.00 to the COVID-19 Trust Fund to help fight the pandemic.

    The cheque was presented by Mr Fred Aryeetey, Chief Executive Officer and Mrs Comfort Oduro-Nyarko, Council Member of the Institute.

    It forms part of the Institute’s nine initiatives to be rolled out aimed at supporting Government’s efforts at containing the novel Coronavirus disease.

    Mr Rockson K. Dogbegah, President of the Institute, commended government and other stakeholders, especially frontline workers for efforts at stopping the spread of the virus and the care and support for infected persons.

    He said the Coronavirus had presented an opportunity for the country to develop a national policy for innovation and creativity, which must be anchored on ethical and effective leadership, adding that, “it is our hope that we will overcome the effects of this disease soon.”

    “It has also presented us an opportunity to review our way of life, examine our processes and systems as a nation with the aim of developing a more resilient approach towards value creation,” Mr Dogbegah stated.

    Source: GNA

  • Agona Nkwanta Health Directorate traces 343 contacts in connection with 10 coronavirus cases

    Mr Timothy Kwabena Ofori, the Ahanta West Municipal Director of Health says so far, the Directorate had successfully traced 343 contacts in connection with the 10 COVID-19 cases recorded in the Municipality.

    Out of the 10 cases, six males and three females are now in the specialized centre created by the Directorate, while the remaining three were treated from their homes.

    Mr Ofori told the Ghana News Agency that the Municipality needed proper isolation centres in order to house infected individuals for intensive care. The Municipal Health Director said the Directorate also lacked PPE, particularly overalls for frontliners to work with.

    In the meantime, the MCE of the Ahanta West, Mrs. Henrietta Eyison has announced that the Wednesday market days in the Municipality had been suspended.

    She said, “The women are failing to oblige to instructions and so the Assembly has decided to close the market until further notice”.

    Source: GNA

  • Tema environmental health officers appeal for intensification of corona virus education

    Environmental health officers of the Tema Metropolitan Assembly (TMA) have appealed to government to intensify education on the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure that Ghana curbs its spread.

    In an interview with the Ghana News Agency, they said they need for more intensified education could not be overemphasized as some citizens still did not believe that the virus was real.

    Mr Benjamin Kwame Opare, an Environmental Health Officer, said the education on the disease must be well structured to capture the attention of all citizens and residents.

    He observed that many people who might have had a piece of information on the virus but did not fully appreciate it, leading to their refusal to comply with the various preventive protocols.

    He said it was not enough to play jingles on radio and television or use information vans without assessing the impact of the messaging adding that “the alarming rate at which the information on the ground outweighs awareness creation is a cause for worry”

    Mr Opare, who is also the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Benemef Foundation, a Non-Governmental Organization, reiterated the need for government and other stakeholders to cause a behavioural change among the public through intensive education.

    He stated for instance that even though commercial vehicles has been directed to reduce the number of passengers they carried, their vehicles could still be a source of spread of the diseases and therefore the need for passengers to receive proper education on how to prevent contracting the disease in public transport.

    He explained that critical attention must be paid to the seats in commercial vehicles as some passengers touch the surfaces and back of the seats to either board or alight and unknowingly touch their faces.

    He added that on several occasions, the commercial vehicle conductors “mates” also use their lips to hold the notes when collecting the fares and afterwards issue those monies to passengers as change, a situation he said could transfer the virus to unsuspecting persons.

    He said there was the need to support and engage Environmental Health officers in the fight against COVID-19 in the various communities as their work involved interacting with residents in their residents.

    Mr Joshua Manab, Assistant Chief Environmental Officer at TMA, on his part reminded residents that the COVID-19 was real and close to 7,000 people had been infected in Ghana and therefore reiterated the need for proper hand washing, wearing of mask and adhering to the various protocols.

    Mr Manab said it was unfortunate that some Ghanaians claimed God was bigger than the virus therefore they would not comply with the COVID-19 protocols saying “yes God is bigger than the disease but this same God gives instructions for mankind to follow to preserve their lives”.

    He reminded the public that even though it was part of the Ghanaian culture to shake hands, they should consciously avoid it in this time of the COVID-19 and rather resort to other means of greeting.

    Source: GNA

  • Pentecostal & Charismatic Council advocates for gradual easing of COVID-19 restrictions

    The Ghana Pentecostal and Charismatic Council has indicated that it is not expecting a spontaneous easing of the  COVID-19 restrictions in the country.

    The Council has rather advised that such a move should be done in a gradual process.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has hinted that consultations are ongoing with relevant stakeholders on the form and timing for the easing of COVID-19 restrictions.

    The President says the proposed easing is meant to restore social and economic lives.

    Speaking to Citi News the General Secretary of the Ghana Pentecostal and Charismatic Council, Rev. Emmanuel Barrigah said their call for a gradual easing of the restrictions will give them ample time to prepare their congregants on how to embrace the new normal.

    “When we think about the easing of restrictions, we are not thinking of a sudden lifting of the ban on social gatherings including churches for instance, an announcement coming in a day telling us to reopen the following day for activities. We think we should put in place certain protocols and then educate our members so that when we start with the new normal life of the church, we will know how to behave when we come to church at all times.”

    Rev. Barrigah also announced that they have presented to government some measures that will make the church safe for congregants.

    He said during communion services, churches “could get the kind of communion that has the bread and the wine together in one small pack so that each member will pick and administer to him or herself after the priest has said prayers over them.”

    “In the area of offertory, we want to discourage the use of offertory bowl that is passed around. We are advising the use of placing of that offertory bowl in front of the congregation so that in rows with social distancing in mind church members could move around and drop the offertory in the bowl.”

    A ban was also placed on all public, social and religious gatherings by President Akufo-Addo on March 15, 2020, as part of measures to curb the spread of the coronavirus disease.

    When he extended the ban, the President said there was a unanimous decision with the leaders of the major interest groups that it was early to lift it.

    Heads of Christian Ecumenical Bodies in Ghana recently, however, expressed their preparedness to resume activities, as they put together a proposal for the government to clearly spell out modalities under which they can safely perform their programmes without endangering the lives of congregants.

    Lifting restrictions on schools, churches could trigger a spike in COVID-19 cases Yieleh Chireh

    Meanwhile, former Minister of Health, Joseph Yieleh Chireh, has urged the government to be cautious in easing restrictions on schools, places of religious worship among others.

    His comments come at a time when there is a vigorous debate in the public space about the appropriate time for schools to reopen, given the circumstances of COVID-19.

    Speaking on the Floor of Parliament, the Wa West MP called on the Government to resist the temptation of lifting the ban at the risk of a new wave of cases.

    “My position on this matter is very clear; We have to hasten slowly because in France when they opened the schools, they had to close them again. No one knows how this disease can be effectively managed.”

    “The scientists are still trying to find out the true nature of the disease and how it can be confronted and therefore if we rush and release all of us into a market place situation where everyone is doing what they want to do, we are likely to have an increase in respect to this disease,” the legislator said.

    Source: Kojo Agyeman | citinewsroom.com | Ghana
  • WHO lists African countries with less coronavirus cases

    The World Health Organisation on Tuesday reported that COVID-19 cases in Africa increased to about 86,000 on Tuesday.

    WHO Regional Office for Africa in Brazzaville, Congo, gave the update on its official Twitter account, @WHOAFRO.

    WHO also said Lesotho, Comoros, and Seychelles were countries currently with the lowest confirmed cases in the region.

    It said that Lesotho had only one confirmed case with zero death; Comoros had 11 reported cases and one death, while Seychelles recorded 11 confirmed cases with no death.

    “There over 86,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases on the African continent with more than 33,000 recoveries and 2,700 deaths,” it said.

    The figures showed that South Africa, Algeria, and Nigeria had the highest reported cases in Africa.

    According to the report, South Africa had 16,433 cases and 286 deaths followed by Algeria with 7,201 cases and 555 deaths, while Nigeria had 6,175 confirmed cases and 191 deaths.

    It added that Ghana had 5,735 reported cases and 29 deaths, while Cameroon recorded 3,529 confirmed cases, and 140 deaths.

    Source: punchng.com

  • Brazil recommends chloroquine to treat even mild COVID-19 cases

    Brazil’s health ministry recommended Wednesday using chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine to treat even mild cases of COVID-19, a treatment President Jair Bolsonaro has pushed for despite a lack of conclusive evidence of their effectiveness.

    New federal guidelines released by the ministry recommend doctors prescribe the anti-malarial drugs from the onset of symptoms of coronavirus infection, together with the antibiotic azithromycin.

    Patients will be required to sign a waiver acknowledging they have been informed of potential side effects, including heart and liver problems and retina damage.

    The two medications have been swept up in a politically charged debate amid the pandemic.

    Bolsonaro and his US counterpart Donald Trump, to whom he is often compared, tout them as potential wonder drugs against COVID-19.

    Trump even revealed Monday he has been taking hydroxychloroquine daily as a preventive measure.

    But some studies have cast doubt on the drugs’ effectiveness and safety against coronavirus.

    The health ministry acknowledged that “there are still no meta-analyses of randomized, controlled, blind, large-scale clinical trials of these medications in the treatment of COVID-19.”

    However, it said the government had a responsibility to issue guidelines using the information currently available.

    Preliminary studies of the drugs in China and France showed promising results against COVID-19.

    However, other studies have cast doubt on their effectiveness and raised concerns about the potential for heart, liver and kidney problems, as well as nerve damage.

    Brazil’s former health minister Nelson Teich resigned last week after less than a month on the job, reportedly after clashing with Bolsonaro over the far-right president’s insistence on recommending chloroquine against COVID-19.

    Bolsonaro, who has compared the new coronavirus to a “little flu” and railed against social distancing measures to fight it, fired Teich’s predecessor, Luiz Henrique Mandetta, also after clashing over how to respond to the pandemic.

    Brazil has emerged as the latest flashpoint in the coronavirus pandemic.

    It registered more than 1,000 COVID-19 deaths Tuesday, its highest yet, bringing its total death toll to 17,971.

    The country now has the third-highest number of infections in the world, with more than 270,000, behind only the United States and Russia.

    Source: france24.com

  • Italy’s daily coronavirus death toll and new cases climb

    Deaths from the COVID-19 epidemic in Italy climbed by 162 on Tuesday, against 99 the day before, the Civil Protection Agency said, while the daily tally of new cases rose sharply to 813 from 451 on Monday.

    The total death toll since the outbreak came to light on Feb. 21 now stands at 32,169 the agency said, the third-highest in the world after those of the United States and Britain.

    The number of confirmed cases amounts to 226,699 the sixth highest global tally behind those of the United States, Russia, Spain, Britain, and Brazil.

    People registered as currently carrying the illness fell to 65,129 from 66,553 the day before.

    There were 716 people in intensive care on Tuesday, down from 749 on Monday, maintaining a long-running decline. Of those originally infected, 129,401 were declared recovered against 127,326 a day earlier.

    The agency said 2.0 million people have so far been tested for the virus, against 1.959 million on Monday, out of a population of around 60 million.

    Source: reuters.com

  • UN chief calls out countries who ignored WHO on coronavirus

    The planet is paying a heavy price for countries ignoring the recommendations of the World Health Organization to fight the Covid-19 pandemic, UN chief Antonio Guterres told a virtual meeting of the WHO’s World Health Assembly on Monday.

    “Different countries have followed different, sometimes contradictory strategies and we are all paying a heavy price,” the secretary-general told the WHO gathering.

    Speaking after Guterres, the head of the WHO said he would initiate an independent evaluation of its handling of the coronavirus pandemic at the “earliest appropriate moment” and vowed transparency and accountability.

    “We all have lessons to learn from the pandemic. Every country and every organisation must examine its response and learn from its experience. WHO is committed to transparency, accountability and continuous improvement,” WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told the assembly.

    Tedros thanked early high-level speakers for their “strong support for WHO at this critical time” and said that the review must encompass responsibility of “all actors in good faith”.

    “The risk remains high and we have a long road to travel,” Tedros said. Preliminary serological tests in some countries showed that at most 20% of populations had contracted the disease and “in most places less than 10 per cent”, he said.

    Source: france24.com

  • 100 countries want a probe into handling of COVID-19

    China has been trying to avoid the fallout from coronavirus. Now 100 countries are pushing for an investigation

    Russian President Vladimir Putin once called Xi Jinping, the Chinese leader, a “lone warrior.”

    Putin was joking, but that description is starting to look more and more accurate. Russia has joined about 100 countries in backing a resolution at the upcoming World Health Assembly (WHA), calling for an independent inquiry into the coronavirus pandemic.

    The European Union-drafted resolution comes on the back of a push by Australia for an inquiry into China’s initial handling of the crisis.

    That was met with an angry response from Beijing, which accused Canberra of a “highly irresponsible” move that could “disrupt international cooperation in fighting the pandemic and goes against people’s shared aspiration.”

    While the resolution to be presented at the annual meeting of World Health Organization (WHO) members, which begins on Monday in Geneva, does not single out China or any other country, it calls for an “impartial, independent and comprehensive evaluation” of “the (WHO)-coordinated international health response to Covid-19.”

    The wording of the resolution is weak compared to Australia’s previous calls for a probe into China’s role and responsibility in the origin of the pandemic. This may have been necessary to get a majority of WHO member states to sign on — particularly those, such as Russia, with traditionally strong ties to Beijing.

    But that doesn’t mean China’s government should rest easy. The potential for an independent probe, even one not initially tasked with investigating an individual country’s response, to turn up damning or embarrassing information is great. Australian government sources told the ABC, the country’s public broadcaster, that the resolution’s language was sufficiently strong to “ensure that a proper and thorough investigation took place.”

    Beijing has previously said it would only support an investigation held by the WHO, which has been accused of being overly influenced by China — a charge top WHO officials refute.

    Speaking last week, China’s ambassador to the UK, Liu Xiaoming said: “We’re open, we are transparent, we have nothing to hide, we have nothing to fear. We welcome an international, independent review, but it has to be organized by the WHO.”

    With more countries signing on to the EU resolution as the assembly nears, that may be out of China’s hands. There were also indications that Beijing may accept the resolution: Chinese state media reported Monday that Xi would deliver a speech at the opening ceremony of the WHA, an unlikely move if Beijing was preparing to push back against a key agenda item.

    Source: edition.cnn.com

  • CCF supports women in Lamashegu and Zogbli communities

    Management of the Crime Check Foundation (CCF), a crime prevention advocacy organisation, has presented 100 bags of rice and 30 bags of sugar to some women in Lamashegu and Zogbli in the Tamale North Constituency of the Northern Region.

    This is to ease the financial burden on the women and their families during this Covid-19 pandemic.

    Mr Ibrahim Oppong Kwarteng, the CCF Executive Director, told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) after the donation that Management decided to respond to calls for support from the two communities and “we were shocked to see the number of people who desperately need help”.

    The effects of COVID-19 and the Ramadan fast was making life unbearable for residents of those communities, he said.

    He expressed gratitude to the Foundation’s donors and partners for their support in providing for the less-privileged in society.

    Mr Kwarteng said Management would extend its activities to the northern part of the country to support the vulnerable and called on non-governmental organisations to continue to complement government’s efforts to provide for the citizenry.

    He used the opportunity to educate residents on the COVID-19 pandemic and urged them to observe the safety measures to stay safe to contain the virus. He promised to provide the women with face masks and sanitizers.

    Madam Juliana Bawa, a representative of the Tamale North MP, Alhaji Alhassan Suhuyini, expressed gratitude to the CCF for the gesture.

    Source: GNA

  • Breakdown of families responsible for streetism – Ag Director

    Mr Gbeawu Daniel Y. Nonah, Acting Director of the Department of Social Welfare has attributed the increase in street children in major cities of the country to the breakdown of the extended Family system.

    “Parents tend to get involved with their community more often than people living alone. What’s more, they teach their children at a young age that the only way they can control what kind of community they have is to contribute to it. When parents contribute to their community by donating money or needed supplies.”

    These were in a statement signed by Mr Nonah and copied to the Ghana News Agency on Friday to commemorate the International day of the Family on the theme;” Families in Development.”

    International Family day is an occasion to celebrate the importance of the family and the benefits from the family and to reflect on how families were affected by changing social and economic trends, and what could be done to strengthen families in response especially during this COVID-19 era. The statement said the purpose of families was to maintain the well-being of its members and of society.

    “Ideally, families would offer predictability, structure, and safety as members mature and participate in the community. In most societies, it is within families that children acquire socialization for life outside the family.

    “Additionally, as the basic unit for meeting the basic needs of its members, it provides a sense of boundaries for performing tasks in a safe environment, ideally builds a person into a functional adult, transmits culture, and ensures continuity of humankind with precedents of knowledge.

    The statement said Parents and sibling were the closest and the biggest security in our families.

    “The kind of person we become depends of the families we grow in. “ It said the theme focused on the importance of the family, the basic social unit called the family was tasked with meeting the basic needs of those family members who could not provide for themselves. “This include; minors, the elderly and disabled, or simply those who can’t afford to live by themselves. Basic needs such as food, water, shelter, and clean air are accessible when one or more members can provide these things for the whole family.

    “Families spend so much time and energy supporting each other through difficult times because of the bonds they’ve created and nurtured since the time each of them became a part of the family.

    “The community benefits when the family relieves it of the burden of supporting members of that family.

    The statement said Healthy families produced people who made positive contributions to the community too.”

    Source: GNA

  • Kevin-Prince Boateng’s Besiktas confirm eight COVID-19 cases

    Kevin-Prince Boateng Turkish club Besiktas have confirmed their club President and eight people between the squad and staff have tested positive for the coronavirus.

    The coronavirus continues to affect football all over the world, with many teams having at least one positive case.

    Besiktas announced via two statements that President Ahmet Nur Cebi had contracted the illness, then that further blanket tests across the entire squad and club employees flagged up eight positive results.

    They have been quarantined as per the medical protocol, as the Turkish Super Lig is set to resume on June 12.

    Turkey has officially recorded 143,114 cases of the new coronavirus while 3,952 people have died, according to the health minister Wednesday.

    Boateng is currently in Italy but is expected to return to Turkey in the coming days ahead of the resumption of the Super Lig on June 12.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Retailers asked to practice ‘First Expired First Out’ principle

    Mr Sabastian Mawuli Hotor, the Upper East Regional Director of the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) has advised retailers in the Region to practice good storage and stocking practices.

    He said such as practice known as “First Expired First Out (FEFO)” would be to rid the market of unwholesome products.

    He explained that products near expiration dates should be arranged in front of shelves while those with later dates of expiration be arranged behind to easily notice expired products for appropriate action.

    Mr Hotor gave the advice when he addressed the media at Pumpuugu, a community at Sherigu in the Bolgatanga Municipality after his outfit destroyed some unwholesome regulated products valued at an estimated cost of Gh¢ 203, 181.64.

    He urged members of the public to check for expiry dates and registration status of products before buying and insisted that regulated products be purchased from accredited and recognized sources to ensure the safety of members of the public.

    “Public health and safety is our prime objective, and our activities are always geared towards providing assurance of safe food, drugs, cosmetics, household chemicals, medical devices, and all other regulated products in Ghana,” he emphasized.

    Mr Hotor said the FDA during its routine Post Market Surveillance activities in the Region confiscated several unwholesome products such as food products and supplements, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, herbal medicines, and household chemicals from the market over the past one year.

    The Regional Director indicated that the purpose of the exercise was to rid the market of expired, counterfeit, contaminated, unregistered, and all other kinds of unwholesome regulated products on the market.

    He added that the exercise was to prevent the potential re-entry of those unwholesome regulated products into the supply chain, and said the disposal consignments were seized from provisions shops, Over the Counter Chemical shops, pharmacies, warehouses, herbal clinics, cosmetic shops and open markets across all 15 districts of the Region.

    Mr Hotor further called on members of the public to: “Report anybody selling expired, unregistered and unwholesome products to the FDA via the following media platforms; WhatsApp 0206973065, Facebook @ Food and Drugs Authority Ghana, Twitter @gh_fda, Instagram@ Food and Drugs Authority Ghana.”

    He said the FDA could also be contacted through the hotlines; 0299802932/0299802933 or SMS to 4015.

    The Director acknowledged the collaboration of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Environmental and Sanitation Agency, the Ghana Standards Authority, Ghana Police Service, the Customs Division of the Ghana Revenue Authority, Pharmacy Council, the Economic and Organised Crime Office, Ghana Health Service, the Ghana National Fire Service and other stakeholders who complement efforts of the FDA to execute its mandate.

    Mr Hotor urged the general public to continue to observe all protocols from the Ghana Health Service towards the prevention of the spread of COVID-19.

    Source: GNA

  • COVID-19: Inject GHs18 bn into economy to mitigate losses TUC to government

    The Trades Union Congress (TUC) is asking the government to inject about GHS 18 billion into the various sectors of the economy to help mitigate the losses associated with the COVID19 pandemic.

    According to the TUC, research by its Labour Research and Policy Institute showed the devastating effects of the COVID-19 health crisis on jobs and livelihoods in both the formal and informal segments of the economy.

    Speaking to Citi News, Director of Labour Research and Policy Institute of the TUC, Dr. Kwabena Nyarko Otoo, said the government needs to do more to revive the economy and also manage the potential job losses.

    “One of the things we did was to estimate the loss of GDP that we are likely to experience because of COVID-19 and our estimation is based on the data provided by the Minister for Finance when he told Parliament that the 2020 GDP growth which was initially estimated at 6.6% will now be 1.5%.”

    “When we look at the numbers we are looking at an output loss of about GHs 18 billion and our proposal is for government to find the resources that will fully restore us in terms of the output loss so we are asking government to invest about GHs 18 billion into the economy between now and December.”

    Dr. Kwabena Nyarko Otoo added that the TUC recognises that the government finds itself in a difficult situation due to the impact of the COVID-19 on the economy.

    However, he said, the government can either print more money or borrow from the Ghana Heritage Fund (GHF) to support the economy at this moment.

    He added: “We went to borrow from the IMF with all the conditionality. If we were able to borrow from the IMF, it should be safer to ask government to borrow from the future. So that we replenish that fund when the COVID-19 storm is over.”

    Source: citinewroom.com

     

  • Two confirmed patients of COVID-19 in Ellembelle responding to treatment

    The Ellembelle District Health Directorate has announced that the two confirmed cases of COVID-19 are responding to treatment with normal body temperature.

    This follows the last update on the first and second confirmed cases of the COVID-19 in the District on May 4 and 7 through the routine follow-up of the District Health Directorate.

    This was contained in a press release issued and signed by the District Chief Executive, Mr Kwasi Bonzoh, and copied to the media.

    According to the statement, the health directorate has received the test results of the two cases together with the eight contacts traced so far who are residents in the Ellembelle District and have all tested Negative for COVID-19 as of Sunday, 10 May, 2020.

    The statement said in line with COVID-19 Case management protocols, the first confirmed case was billed to undergo another test to ascertain cure for the disease.

    “The patient will, therefore, remain self-isolated till the next result confirms cure from the disease”, the statement indicated.

    The statement said the eight traced contacts residents in the District were also under self-quarantine awaiting the results for further action.

    Meanwhile, two contacts who are not residents of the district have been traced and handed over to the Effia-kwesimintim Municipal Health Directorate for further action.

    The statement said, “while waiting for the results of the samples sent for testing, our COVID-19 team is not relenting on its efforts on actions and enforcement of protocols”.

    “These include daily follow-ups on patients and contacts traced in the two confirmed cases, intensified Community sensitization and education on COVID-19 with emphasis on avoidance of stigmatization associated with the disease as well as aggressive tracing and testing of people who might have come into contact with both patients”.

    The statement urged all residents in the District to remain calm and help contain the spread of the virus by strictly adhering to all the COVID-19 preventive measures and directives.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Government not contemplating to stay in power without elections – Oppong-Nkrumah

    Kojo Oppong-Nkrumah, the Minister of Information, has said the government is not considering any alternative plan to hold on to power if election 2020 is not held as a result of COVID-19 pandemic outbreak.

    He stated that the government was deep-rooted in the rule of law and would only seek the extension of its mandate to govern for the next four years through safe, free, fair, and transparent elections.

    Speaking at the Meet the Press on COVID-19 update, Mr Nkrumah said the government rather than hiding behind COVID-19 and contemplating an unconstitutional arrangement to cling to power, was focusing its energies to exploring innovative ways to ensure free, safe, transparent elections.

    “…If countries like South Korea and Mali have successfully conducted elections in the midst of COVID-19 and Serbia, Ivory Coast, Burundi and the United States of America were looking for novel avenues to holding elections, our country will focus on finding way to conduct the 2020 December polls,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the Minister said the government had requested the mission abroad to compile data on Ghanaians, who were stranded in countries to inform government policy direction and that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs by the end of the week would receive the data.

    The Minister, however, said it was untrue that data gathering process meant the government was going to evacuate the persons from their locations to Ghana.

    Source: GNA

  • Stigma is a killer and must be stopped – Hohoe MCE

    Andrews Teddy Ofori, the Hohoe Municipal Chief Executive (MCE) has called on the citizenry to desist from stigmatizing patients who have recovered from the novel corona virus disease.

    He said stigma was a killer and must be stopped for a successful fight against COVID19.

    Mr Ofori made the call through the Ghana News Agency (GNA) after he presented items to some patients who have recovered from COVID-19.

    He said the continuous stigmatization of suspected, confirmed and recovered patients may hinder the fight against the pandemic and called on the support of all.

    The beneficiaries expressed gratitude to the Municipal Chief Executive for his kind gesture and support.

    Mr Ofori who also presented ten non-contact infrared thermometers and hand sanitizers to the Hohoe Municipal Hospital said the supply of additional thermometers to the Hospital was to ease the pressure on existing ones for each ward to have one.

    He commended the management and staff of the Hospital for their hard work and urged them to make good use of the thermometers.

    Mr. Serene Akpanya, Administrator of the Hohoe Municipal Hospital who received the items on behalf of the facility thanked the MCE and said the items came at the right time to support the fight against the spread of the disease.

    Source: GNA

  • Ryanair boss calls quarantine rules ‘idiotic’

    Ryanair chief executive Michael O’Leary has described quarantine rules as “idiotic” as he announced plans to restart flights from July.

    The budget airline boss told BBC Breakfast the firm would look to sell all of the seats on its flights, but would put in place temperature checks and face masks for passengers and crews.

    He said: “The business only functions if we can sell most of the seats on most of the flights.

    “We accept in July and August the load factors will be lower than that, but we don’t need social distancing. In fact the government has already recommended where social distancing isn’t possible, wear face masks – that is the effective measure against the spread of Covid-19, not ineffective measures like a 14-day quarantine which no one will observe anyway.”

    The government is introducing the 14-day quarantine as Covid-19 has a one to 14-day incubation period, during which it can be transmitted even without symptoms.

    Mr O’Leary disputed that the quarantine was science-based, due to French and Irish travellers being exempt.

    Ryanair has announced today that it plans to restart 40% of its flights, almost 1,000 a day, from 1 July, subject to restrictions being lifted in the EU.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Strengthen observance of safety protocols Mahama

    The flag bearer of the main opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), Mr John Dramani Mahama, has advised Ghanaians to strengthen the observance of the required safety protocols before admitting all persons including staff into their premises to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

    Mr Mahama further encouraged Ghanaians to wear a mask and ensure that all others do same.

    “Handwashing with soap under running water must be mandatory for all, and have a queue manager to ensure appropriate physical distancing as clients wait for their turn. But as we have been advised, if you do not have anything essential doing, please stay home. Help protect yourself and your family,” Mr Mahama said in a Facebook post.

    The former President also encouraged Ghanaians not to forget the vulnerable in society as the coronavirus has brought untold hardship on them.

    Mr Mahama gave these pieces of advice as he visited some communities in Sukura and Nima in Accra on Sunday, 10 May 2020 to share food items to households to help ease their burden as a result of COVID-19.

    Source: Class FM

  • Consider online adjudication in the midst of COVID-19 – Judge

    Professor Justice Sir Dennis Adjei, a Justice of the Court of Appeal, has suggested that the Judicial Service considers authorising the conduct of some trials through electronic platforms and internet-based applications as a stop-gap measure to the fight of COVID-19.

    Professor Justice Sir Dennis Adjei made the call when he delivered via Zoom, the maiden lecture of the 14-week long Law and Ethics Web Series, on the theme: “COVID-19, Legal Practice and its implications for Judicial Decision Making”.

    The lecture is being jointly organised by the African Centre on Law and Ethics (ACLE) and the African Centre of International Criminal Justice (ACICJ), both based at the GIMPA Faculty of Law.

    Prof Justice Sir Adjei said “Doctors are working, Engineers are working, Lecturers are teaching online, so Judges too must deliver and the Courts must work.”

    “In the phase of Covid-19, every institution must work but we must observe physical distancing and where you can use internet facility to achieve the purpose of your work, you must use it.”

    The Justice of the Court of Appeal said there were few laws on the statute books of Ghana that would have to be amended to accommodate his suggestion of online adjudication of court cases.

    “We should look at Order 33 of CI 47, which requires the Court to provide for a place of trial. It could be amended to include any other electronic mode that the Court may determine and not a physical place as in the courtroom,” he indicated.

    “Order 36 of the High Court civil procedure rules, CI 47, which requires parties to attend trial in person and failure of which attracts sanctions could also be amended to make video link or any other digital means to amount to physical appearance”.

    The Law and Ethics Web Series is expected to be held every Wednesday at 1400 hours, which began May 6, this year, on the online meeting platform; Zoom.

    There are pending presentations on May 13, May 20, May 27, June 3, June 10, June 17, June 24, July 1, July 8, July 15, July 22, July 29, and August 5, which will come on as scheduled.

    Various speakers have been lined up for the series.

    It is being coordinated by Dr Kwaku Agyeman-Budu, a Lecturer and Head of Law Centre at the GIMPA Faculty of Law.

    The maiden session was moderated by Ms Diana Asonaba Dapaah, also a Lecturer at the GIMPA Faculty of Law, under the distinguished patronage of the Rector of GIMPA, Professor Philip Ebow Bondzi-Simpson.

    Source: GNA

  • Virus symptoms multiply as pandemic deepens

    Every week, it seems, the list of coronavirus symptoms, ranging from disagreeable to deadly, from “COVID toes” to toxic shock, grows longer.

    What began as a familiar flu-like cluster of chills, headaches and fever has rapidly expanded over the last three months into a catalogue of syndromes affecting most of the body’s main organs.

    The new coronavirus can also push the immune system into overdrive, unleashing an indiscriminate assault on pathogens and their human hosts alike.

    “Most viruses can cause disease in two ways,” explained Jeremy Rossman, a senior lecturer in virology at the University of Kent.

    “They can damage tissue where the virus replicates, or they can cause damage as a side effect of the immune system fighting off the disease.”

    Doctors suspect, for example, that COVID-19 is behind the hospitalisation in recent weeks of more than 100 children and adolescent in New York, London and Paris diagnosed with a disorder similar to toxic shock syndrome that attacks blood vessel walls and can cause fever, vomiting and in extreme cases organ failure.

    Three deaths in New York state have been attributed to so-calling paediatric multi-system inflammatory syndrome, with two others deemed likely.

    In adults, COVID-19 had been linked in dozens of medical studies to other life-threatening symptoms, including strokes, heart damage and brain swelling.

    Researchers from the urology department of Nanjing Medical University, writing last week in Nature Reviews, described patients developing severe urinary complications and acute kidney injury.

    They also observed “dramatic changes” in male sex hormones.

    “After recovery from COVID-19, young men who are interested in having children should receive a consultation regarding their fertility,” they advised.

    Cascading symptoms

    Does that mean that COVID-19 causes a uniquely broad array of symptoms? Not necessarily, virologists and other experts say.

    “If it is a common disease, then even rare complications will happen frequently,” Babak Javid, a consultant in infectious diseases at Cambridge University Hospitals, told AFP.

    There are more than 4.1 million confirmed COVID-19 cases around the world, but the true number of infections – taking into account undetected and asymptomatic infection – “is going to be in the tens, possibly hundreds of millions” he said.

    “So if one-in-1,000, or even one-in-10,000, get complications, that is still thousands of people.”

    Some of the rare symptoms associated with the new coronavirus also show up with influenza, which kills several hundred thousand people worldwide every year, he noted. But with a crucial difference: “Compared to influenza, you are much more likely to become seriously ill, and to die.”

    The number of confirmed COVID-19 deaths is fast approaching 300,000.

    Frontline general practitioners have been the first to see patterns as the pandemic spread across the globe from ground zero in central China in a matter of weeks.

    “At the outset, we were told to watch out for headaches, fever and a light cough,” recalls Sylvie Monnoye, a family doctor in central Paris.

    “Then they added a runny nose and a scratchy throat. After that, digestive problems, including stomach aches and severe diarrhoea.”

    The list kept growing: skin lesions, neurological problems, sharp chest pains, loss of taste and smell.

    A feeling of confusion

    “We started to think that we should suspect everything,” Monnoye said, dressed from head-to-toe in protective wear.

    Some patients were so terrified, she added, that they cowered in the corner of her office afraid to touch anything or get too close to her.

    An internal US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) report with a breakdown of symptoms for 2,591 COVID-10 patients admitted to hospital between March 1 and May 1 chimes with such anecdotal accounts.

    Three-quarters of the patients experienced chills, fever and/or coughing, with nearly as many showing shortness of breath.

    These are, by far, the most common COVID-19 symptoms.

    Nearly a third complained of flu-like muscle aches, while 28 percent experienced diarrhoea and a quarter nausea or vomiting, according to the internal report, leaked to the media.

    Some 18 percent had headaches, while 10 to 15 percent were hit by chest or abdominal pain, runny nose, sore throat and/or a feeling of confusion.

    Less than one percent of the CDC cohort had other symptoms, including seizures, rashes and conjunctivitis.

    Health authorities have been slow in alerting the public to this panoply of possible impacts.

    Loss of smell

    Until the end of April, the CDC itself only listed three on its website: coughing, fever and shortness of breath. The update included only a few more: chills, muscle pain, headaches and loss of smell or taste.

    A loss of smell and taste was found in only 3.5 percent of patients included in the CDC report, but experts suspect these symptoms are – for reasons unknown – more prevalent in less severe cases where people were not hospitalised.

    “I don’t have any patients with these symptoms who had serious complications,” said Monnoye.

    The loss of taste and smell, experts note, is extremely rare with other types of virus.

    Another cluster of symptoms rarely found in flu patients appears to arise from blood clots.

    Heart problems, liver thrombosis, lung embolisms and brain damage in COVID-19 patients have been traced to such clots in recent studies.

    “When one is very sick with COVID, you can have a problem with blood clots forming, and that seems to be much, much more common than with other viral infections,” added Javid.

    A third cluster of unusual symptoms involve skin eruptions.

    “COVID-associated ‘rashes’ seem to be as numerous as they are hard to pin down,” dermatologist Graeme Lipper said on Medscape, a medical information website.

    A condition known as pseudo-chilblains, or “COVID toes”, has garnered the most attention, with photos on social media showing digits discoloured as if with frostbite.

    Like loss of smell, the symptom – which can cause painful itching and burning – is associated with benign forms of the virus.

    Source: france24.com

  • Deputy Minister for Works and Housing support Abura gymnasium

    Ms Barbara Asher Ayisi, the Member of Parliament for Cape Coast North Constituency and Deputy Minister for Works and Housing, has donated an undisclosed amount of money to support the Abura gymnasium.

    She explained that the donation was to help reconstruct the Abura dilapidated gymnasium in fulfilment of her campaign promise made in 2016.

    Ms Ayisi advised the caretakers of the gymnasium to utilize the amount to equip the facility with modern equipment.

    The MP used the platform to call on the public to adhere to all the directives and precautionary measures given by the President in the fight against the COVID-19.

    She encouraged the people to eat nutritious food and do regular exercise to help boost their immune system to fight this pandemic and other related diseases.

    Ms Ayisi called on the people to avoid all sort of stigmatization since everyone can be infected with COVID-19, no matter the person’s status, age, colour, origin, tribe or political party.

    The leadership of the gymnasium who received the money, promised to use the donation for its purpose.

    They also encouraged her to continue with her good works for the Constituency.

    Source: GNA

  • CIKOD urged to lead research into Indigenous immune building fruits

    Sir Dr Edward Gyaderi, a retired Surgeon has appealed to the Center for Indigenous Knowledge and Organizational Development (CIKOD) to lead research into finding out indigenous fruits in northern Ghana that can help build a strong human immune system.

    He said this would enable the people to depend on their local fruits to boost their immune system against the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Sir Dr Gyaderi who said this during CIKOD’s Community COVID-19 support sensitization for Traditional Authorities in the Nandom Municipality, noted that fruits such as orange, banana, and avocado pear among others were not locally grown in the north, hence, were not affordable and easily accessible to the ordinary rural folks.

    He said in the North, wild fruits were abundant with unknown nutritional values, stressing that a study that would expose the nutritional values of these wild fruits to the people would be highly appreciated.

    On the COVID-19 pandemic, Sir Dr Gyaderi who is also a former member of the Council of State lauded CIKOD for its decision to empower Chiefs to lead the community sensitization against the global pandemic.

    “When Chiefs and Queen mothers speak to their subjects in their language, they will understand and willing to comply”, he said.

    The renowned Surgeon stressed on the fact that the disease had no cure yet, adding that the best alternative now was to educate the populace on how to protect themselves.

    “We are fighting a world war, an enemy we cannot see and we must be innovative in our approaches”, he said.

    Sir Dr Gyaderi explained that the handwashing with soap under running water was important because “the coronavirus was covered by a thin layer of fat and if you do not use soap or alcohol-based hand sanitizer, you cannot dissolve it”.

    He appealed to the chiefs to take the message and endeavor to preach it to their Community people to protect them.

    Mr Daniel Banuoku, Deputy Executive Director of CIKOD-North noted that the COVID-19 pandemic had exposed the weaknesses of many countries and they must begin to rethink the kind of priorities they set for themselves as nations.

    He said in times such as these, required internal innovation because no one country could rely on the other to come and solve its problems, stressing that countries that would fail to come up with innovations to fight the pandemic would suffer grievous consequences.

    He said the implementation of the COVID-19 community support project goal was to strengthen the capacities of local and traditional authorities in the Lawra and Nandom Municipalities in the Upper West Region for them to provide effective leadership in addressing the COVID-19 pandemic in their respective Communities.

    Mr Banuoku noted that the project would among other things inaugurate community COVID-19 volunteers in eight communities to help enforce national protocols at the local level as well as distribute sanitation and hygiene materials to eight communities and traditional authorities.

    The 20,000.00 dollar project is being implemented by CIKOD and Groundswell International with funding from the 11th Hour Project.

    Source: GNA

  • Adaklu communities grapple with water challenges

    Communities in the Adaklu District of the Volta Region are grappling with water problems despite President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s directive for water to be supplied to all communities free of charge.

    The President, in his fifth address to the nation on containing the COVID-19 pandemic directed the Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL), Community Water Systems, and private water tankers to supply water free of charge to all communities.

    Except for communities in the Adaklu Kodzobi Electoral Area, which are being supplied with water by GWCL, about 70 communities in the District are relying on dams and rivers some, said to have dried up.

    Mr Moses Eworvor, Assemblyman for Hlihave Electoral Area told the Ghana News Agency that people from Davanya and Hekope in his area had to travel to Mafi Kumase, a distance of 15 kilometers daily to buy water for use.

    He described the situation as alarming and said it was having an adverse effect on their economic activities.

    Mr Nat-Lord Kofie, Assemblyman for Goefe said the situation was not different in his area as the dam they were relying on had dried up completely, making it difficult for them to have access to potable water.

    He said though there was a borehole at Goefe, it could not serve all the communities in the area.

    Mr Eli Keti, Assemblyman for Kpetsu said when he contacted GWCL for assistance, he was told that they only served their customers but could give them free water if they brought their water tanker.

    Mr. Phanuel Kudi Assemblyman for Waya said they were relying on River Tordzie as drinking water and for other domestic uses.

    Mr Eworvor said when he contacted the District Assembly for its water tanker to draw water from GWCL for his community, he was told the community would have to pay GH¢300.00 per trip and also allegedly give the driver GH¢ 50.00 because he was not an employee of the Assembly.

    Mr Phanuel Donkor Kadey, the District Chief Executive told the GNA that the tanker service by the Assembly was free and that, “the GH¢350.00 was only for fuel for the tanker.”

    The Assemblymen appealed to the Assembly to take a second look at the condition attached to the tanker and provide water to the communities to help stop the spread of COVID-19 as directed by the President.

    Source: GNA

  • Palestinian Ambassador galvanises support to fight COVID-19

    Mr Abdulfatah Alsattari, the Palestinian Ambassador to Ghana, has called on individuals and organisations around the world to help alleviate the ill effects of COVID-19 on the vulnerable.

    This is because the pandemic, besides its health implications, also had social, economic, and other effects on mankind, which required an all hands on deck approach.

    Mr Alsattari said this in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Thursday after he launched the “Special Food Sharing by the People of Palestine in Ghana” project.

    The project seeks to assist the less-privileged during the month of Ramadan to minimise the effects of the COVID-19 crisis.

    Mr Alsattari said the Embassy collaborated with a number of Palestinians within the country for the launch, which saw the distribution of assorted food items to over 50 families, chosen from a number of communities within Accra.

    He said the Palestinian Community in Ghana would continue to support the people and Government in every way possible to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic and its unpleasant effects.

    “The people of Palestine believe that the world is one big family, and in times like this, the greatest service we can offer each other is to help so far as we can,” he said.

    The Ambassador thanked the Government and people of Ghana for the long standing friendship and that the time had come for Palestine to show kindness to a good friend and neighbour.

    Source: GNA

  • Shortages of virus test materials ‘critical’ – UN lab chief

    Shortages of materials needed in tests for the novel coronavirus remain “critical”, according to the head of a UN lab, which is supplying countries with COVID-19 detection kits.

    In particular the chemical reagents for the tests are still in short supply, said Giovanni Cattoli, head of the Animal Production and Health Laboratory run jointly by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

    “There is indeed on the global market a shortage of some items, particularly reagents, because there are demands from all over the world,” Cattoli told AFP this week during a tour of the laboratory at Seibersdorf, 40 kilometres (25 miles) outside Vienna.

    “The situation is still critical,” he said. “We are working … to accelerate purchase and investigate if there are alternative reagents.”

    The tests the lab sends out use the nuclear-derived RT-PCR technology, which is now common for new coronavirus detection and can give results within hours.

    Cattoli said one of the lessons of the crisis was “that we need not to rely only on a single type of test but to have a portfolio of tests and a portfolio of reagents in order to be prepared to have a plan B and possibly a plan C in order to respond effectively and rapidly.”

    The IAEA has received requests from 119 member states for test equipment to supply more than 200 laboratories, Cattoli added.

    Of them, 18 have already received supplies with more on the way.

    The costs of each package of equipment – some 100,000 euros ($108,000) – are borne by the IAEA.

    “Some laboratories in some areas of the world don’t have the necessary equipment. They don’t have the necessary reagents and procedures to rapidly detect the virus,” Cattoli said.

    Those who have received equipment are Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burkina Faso, Iran, Kenya, Latvia, Lebanon, Lesotho, Malaysia, Montenegro, Morocco, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Peru, Philippines, Senegal, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Togo.

    The IAEA Laboratories in Seibersdorf are the only ones of their kind operated by the UN in the world.

    They cooperate with the FAO and others to monitor the evolution of the novel coronavirus and other viruses.

    They also work on improvements to RT-PCR technology, which may enable it to be used outside laboratories in the future, Cattoli said.

    Source: france24.com

  • Europe marks 75th anniversary of VE day in shadow of Covid-19

    A continent devastated by the coronavirus will on Friday mark the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe, known as Victory in Europe (VE) day, as the economic destruction of the current global crisis was laid bare.

    Large-scale parades that had been envisaged to commemorate victory over the Nazis have been downsized as the world grapples with a fearsome new enemy that has killed 277,000 people and sickened more than 3.7 million.

    While parts of Europe appeared to be over the hump of new infections, the United States’ death toll showed no signs of slowing, and Brazil warned of chaos with the pandemic running out of control.

    “Within about 30 days, there may start to be shortages on shelves and production may become disorganised, leading to a system of economic collapse, of social disorder,” Economy Minister Paulo Guedes said.

    Brazil is Latin America’s worst-affected nation, with more than 135,000 infections and 9,100 confirmed deaths, although experts say the true figures are far higher.

    But far-right President Jair Bolsonaro opposes stay-at-home measures to slow the spread, saying they are unnecessarily damaging the economy.

    US President Donald Trump is also pushing for lockdowns to be lifted, as he tries to steady the economy ahead of November polls.

    “This country can’t stay closed and locked down for years,” he said Thursday, as the US death toll topped 75,500.

    Another 3.2 million people filed unemployment claims in the United States last week, bringing the total who have lost their jobs in the lockdown to 33.5 million.

    Germany and France on Thursday reported major slumps in industrial production and Britain said its economic output would plummet by 14 percent this year.

    Across Europe, many countries are now easing restrictions, with some shops and schools re-opening, Italy allowing Catholics to soon attend mass, and Norway to open up pubs on June 1.

    Britain was on Thursday reviewing lockdown measures, with Prime Minister Boris Johnson expected to offer a roadmap on Sunday.

    The easing has already begun in Germany, while France is due on Monday to start emerging from its lockdown, though Paris will remain restricted.

    Wreaths

    Despite limitations, some ceremonies were to go ahead Friday in commemoration of the end of hostilities in World War II.

    The anniversary of Nazi Germany’s 1945 unconditional surrender after a war that cost 50 million lives is a holiday in Berlin this year.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Frank-Walter Steinmeier are due to lay wreaths at the country’s main memorial.

    Ceremonies across France have been drastically scaled down, although President Emmanuel Macron will still be attending an event on the Champs-Élysées.

    In Britain, street parades by veterans have been cancelled.

    Russia had originally planned a huge military display on its May 9 Victory Day, but now only a flypast will take place over Red Square.

    President Vladimir Putin will lay flowers at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier memorial, before making a TV address that will not only touch on the war, but is also expected to chart out the country’s next steps in battling the virus.

    Most of Europe has seen significant drops in new infections, but cases are on the rise in Russia, with another 11,000 reported Thursday.

    Moscow’s lockdown has been extended until May 31.

    Source: france24.com

  • Bangladesh opens mosques as lockdown eases

    Mass prayers at mosques are now allowed in Bangladesh, which has more than 12,000 COVID-19 cases and nearly 200 deaths.

    But a correspondent at The Dhaka Tribune newspaper found that many mosques in the capital, Dhaka, did not follow the required guidelines as they opened their doors for the first time on Thursday after a month.

    Most failed to arrange a hand sanitising station for visitors to use before entering and many people were not wearing masks, the newspaper reported.

    “There are some shortcomings in the arrangements according to the guidelines, as it is the first day,” Fazlul Haque, president of one of the mosques in the city, said while adding that they were “trying their hardest” to make sure the rules were enforced.

    In April, a Bangladeshi cleric tested positive for the virus after he led Ramadan prayers for a group of nearly two dozen, local media reported at the time. The incident prompted authorities to urge people to stay at home and restrict the congregation of people in mosques.

    In India, a mosque in the capital, Delhi, dominated news coverage last month after more than 1,000 cases were linked to a religious event held by a missionary group. The event spurred outrage as it sparked massive Covid-19 clusters in the country.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus contact-tracing: World split between two types of app

    Countries around the world are developing Covid-19 smartphone apps to limit the spread of coronavirus and relax lockdown restrictions.

    It’s hoped the information they gather can be used to alert people whether they pose a risk of spreading the contagion, and need to isolate. But, over recent weeks, a split has emerged between two different types of app – the so-called centralised and decentralised versions.

    Both types use Bluetooth signals to log when smartphone owners are close to each other – so if someone develops Covid-19 symptoms, an alert can be sent to other users they may have infected.

    Under the centralised model, the anonymised data gathered is uploaded to a remote server where matches are made with other contacts, should a person start to develop Covid-19 symptoms.

    This is the method the UK is pursuing.

    By contrast, the decentralised model gives users more control over their information by keeping it on the phone. It is there that matches are made with people who may have contracted the virus. This is the model promoted by Google, Apple and an international consortium.

    Both sides have their fans.

    Backers of the centralised model say it can give the authorities more insight into the spread of the virus and how well the app is performing. Supporters of the decentralised approach say it offers users a higher degree of privacy, protecting them from hackers or the state itself revealing their social contacts.

    Centralised v decentralised apps

    In truth, both are unproven at this stage. South Korea, seen as one of the most successful countries at tackling Covid-19, has done it without a contact-tracing app. It has however used other surveillance methods which would be seen as invasive by many.

    At the start, the centralised approach was seen pioneering. Singapore’s TraceTogether was widely viewed as the one to emulate. But that changed after it emerged the app was only being used by about 20% of the local population, and there had been a resurgence of Covid-19 cases.

    Part of the problem is that TraceTogether does not work properly when in the background on iPhones because of the way Apple restricts use of Bluetooth. The firm has promised to waive these curbs, but only if apps fall into line with its decentralised system. Singapore has since signalled it will do so as a result.

    “We are working with Apple and Google to make the app more effective, especially for iOS users,” a spokesman told the BBC.

    Australia, another early adopter of the centralised approach, launched its CovidSafe app based on TraceTogether, and faced similar issues as a consequence. It has said it plans to adopt the Apple-Google framework, citing a “big shift in performance of Bluetooth connectivity”. And on Wednesday, Colombia confirmed it too was considering a switch after having to turn off the contact-tracing feature in its CoronApp.

    “[We need to] minimise the risk of generating unnecessary alerts,” said presidential advisor Victor Munoz.

    ‘Apple not helping’ Others, though, are still forging ahead with the centralised approach. France’s digital minister has said it intends to launch its StopCovid app by 2 June, and is attempting to press Apple into a U-turn of its own.

    “Apple could have helped us make the application work even better on the iPhone,” said digital minister Cédric O on Tuesday. “They have wished not to do so. I regret this.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Cabinet holds 3-day retreat on #Covid-19 data, implications

    President Akufo-Addo is to lead a three-day meeting of Cabinet to examine data gathered so far on the impact of the #Covid-19 disease across all governance sectors in Ghana.

    The meeting, according to Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, starts Thursday and will expect sector ministers to report on the impact of the disease across their ministries and recommendations thereof.

    Oppong-Nkrumah announced the meeting at the usual #Covid-19 press updates in Accra.

    “It would be recalled that from the onset of the pandemic the Minister responsible for Finance, the Honourable Ken Ofori-Atta briefed the nation through parliament on the projected economic impact of the pandemic and measures that the government was projecting to take to mitigate the impact.

    “Since then, under the leadership of the President the government of Ghana has rolled out a number of measures in responding first, to the health crisis specifically, and second, to the socio-economic challenges that come with managing it. These measures as you would recall include free water for three months, free electricity for three months for lifeline consumers and 50% discount for non-lifeline consumers, among others…”.

    Credit: Graphic.com.gh

    Source: www.ghbase.com

  • Black and Pakistani people more likely to die from coronavirus – UK data

    Black people and those of Bangladeshi and Pakistani ethnicity have a significantly higher chance of dying from COVID-19 than white people, even when adjusting for deprivation, the British statistics office said on Thursday.

    Using models that adjusted for a range of socio-economic factors, the statistics office said it was clear that there were significant differences in the risk of COVID-19 among different ethnic groups.

    “The risk of death involving the coronavirus (COVID-19) among some ethnic groups is significantly higher than that of those of white ethnicity,” the Office for National Statistics said.

    “People of Bangladeshi and Pakistani, Indian, and Mixed ethnicities also had statistically significant raised risk of death involving COVID-19 compared with those of white ethnicity.”

    Scientists studying the novel coronavirus caution that there were vast holes in their knowledge and cite striking differences in the death rates based on age, sex and ethnicity.

    Genetics, they say, might hold many clues that could help eventually reveal a path to medicines or a vaccine that could treat the disease.

    Without adjusting for a variety of factors including deprivation, education and health, the ONS found that black males were 4.2 times more likely to die from a COVID-19-related death and black females were 4.3 times more likely than white ethnicity males and females.

    The adjusted model showed that black males and females were 1.9 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than the white ethnic group.

    Males of Bangladeshi and Pakistani ethnicity are 1.8 times more likely to die, according to the adjusted model. Individuals from the Chinese and mixed ethnic group have similar risks to those with white ethnicity, the ONS said.

    Data from the United States showed African Americans were more likely to die from COVID-19, highlighting longstanding disparities in health and inequalities in access to medical care.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Coronavirus mutations: Scientists puzzle over impact

    Researchers in the US and UK have identified hundreds of mutations to the virus which causes the disease Covid-19.

    But none has yet established what this will mean for virus spread in the population and for how effective a vaccine might be.

    Viruses mutate – it’s what they do.

    The question is: which of these mutations actually do anything to change the severity of infectiousness of the disease?

    Preliminary research from the US has suggested one particular mutation – D614G – is becoming dominant and could make the disease more infectious.

    It hasn’t yet been reviewed by other scientists and formally published.

    The researchers, from the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, have been tracking changes to the “spike” of the virus that gives it its distinctive shape, using a database called the Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data (GISAID).

    They noted there seems to be something about this particular mutation that makes it grow more quickly – but the consequences of this are not yet clear.

    The research team analysed UK data from coronavirus patients in Sheffield. Although they found people with that particular mutation of the virus seemed to have a larger amount of the virus in their samples, they didn’t find evidence that those people became sicker or stayed in hospital for longer.

    ‘Mutations not a bad thing’ Another study from University College London (UCL) identified 198 recurring mutations to the virus.

    One of its authors, Professor Francois Balloux, said: “Mutations in themselves are not a bad thing and there is nothing to suggest SARS-CoV-2 is mutating faster or slower than expected.

    “So far, we cannot say whether SARS-CoV-2 is becoming more or less lethal and contagious.”

    A study from the University of Glasgow, which also analysed mutations, said these changes did not amount to different strains of the virus. They concluded that only one type of the virus is currently circulating.

    Monitoring small changes to the structure of the virus is important in understanding the development of vaccines.

    Take the ‘flu virus: it mutates so fast that the vaccine has to be adjusted every year to deal with the specific strain in circulation.

    Drug development

    Many of the Covid-19 vaccines currently in development target the distinctive spikes of the virus – the idea is that getting your body to recognize a unique element of the spike will help it to fight off the whole virus. But if that spike is changing, a vaccine developed this way could become less effective.

    At the moment this is all theoretical. Scientists don’t yet have enough information to say what changes to the virus’s genome will mean.

    Dr Lucy van Dorp, UCL study co-author, said being able to analyze a large number of virus genomes could be “invaluable to drug development efforts”.

    However, she told the BBC: “I love genomes, but there is only so much they can say.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • COVID-19: Don’t use untested Madagascar remedy – WHO warns Africa

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has issued a warning against people using untested remedies for coronavirus.

    Africans deserve access to medicines that have gone through proper trials even if they are derived from traditional treatments, it said.

    Its statement comes as Madagascar’s president is promoting a herbal tonic for treating Covid-19 patients.

    The African Union (AU) said it wanted to see the scientific data on the “safety and efficacy” of the product.

    The tonic, known as COVID-Organics, was tested on fewer than 20 people over three weeks, a presidential aide told the BBC – which is not in line with WHO guidelines on clinical trials.

    This can be a lengthy process in which a potential drug is tested in four phases, scaling up from a trial on a small number of patients to using it on a population countrywide.

    Despite these reservations, several African countries, including Guinea-Bissau, Equatorial Guinea and Liberia, have already ordered COVID-Organics, which is produced from the artemisia plant – the source of an ingredient used in a malaria treatment – and other Malagasy plants.

    Last week, Madagascar’s President, Andry Rajoelina, spoke to an online meeting of African leaders about the tonic.

    Following that meeting the AU asked to see more details about COVID-Organics which could be reviewed by the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).

    In its statement, the WHO welcomed innovations based on traditional remedies and plants but said they “should be tested for efficacy and adverse side effects”.

    “Africans deserve to use medicines tested to the same standards as people in the rest of the world,” it added.

    On Monday, more than $8bn (£6.5bn) was pledged to help develop a coronavirus vaccine and fund research into the diagnosis and treatment of the disease.

    Dozens of research projects trying to find a vaccine are currently under way across the world.

    Most experts think it could take until mid-2021, about 12-18 months after the new virus first emerged, for a vaccine to become available.

    Several African countries acted swiftly in trying to prevent the spread of coronavirus by imposing lockdowns or curfews. But these are now beginning to be lifted as governments try to balance health and economic interests.

    The easing of the lockdowns has added urgency to the need to find treatments.

    Madagascar has recorded 151 cases of Covid-19 and no deaths, Africa CDC says.

    The president imposed a lockdown on the three major cities, but these have now been relaxed, the AFP news agency reports.

    Source: bbc.com

  • WHO warns against untested COVID-19 cures

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has urged people not to put their faith in local untested remedies for coronavirus.

    The advice comes at a time when at least three African heads of state have said they are importing large quantities of a herbal tonic which the president of Madagascar claims can cure the virus.

    But its efficacy has not been proven by scientific peer reviews, and even Madagascar’s own national medical academy has cast doubt on it.

    In a statement, the WHO says it welcomes the use of traditional medicines in the search for potential treatments but it warns that they must first be robustly tested.

    Madagascar’s President Andry Rajoelina launched a product based on the artemisia plant last month when it had been tested on fewer than 20 people.

    He says clinical trials will start next week.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Beyoncé joins virus testing initiative in Texas

    Pop star Beyoncé has teamed up with her mother, Tina Knowles Lawson, to support a mobile virus testing initiative in their hometown of Houston, Texas.

    The #IDIDMYPART campaign, taking place this weekend, aims to bring awareness of the daily testing available at a local medical centre.

    It will also provide free masks, gloves, household supplies and 1,000 free tests “administered under safe conditions,” according to a statement.

    “The virus is wreaking havoc on the Black community so we need a movement to prioritize our health,” Ms Knowles Lawson said.

    Data from the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention suggest that 33% of people who’ve been taken to hospital with the virus are African-American, yet only 13% of the US population is African-American.

    “Testing is crucial because it helps find hot spots and saves lives,” local Congresswoman Sheila Jackson-Lee said in the statement. “Texas has a very low COVID-19 test rate, second lowest in the nation.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Almost third of Australians have tracing app

    That’s five million people of the targeted 16 million mobile phone users in Australia, says Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

    He said this was a good response, but “we would like to see a bit more”. The government had previously said a 40% uptake is needed.

    The app, released just over a week ago, shares users’ codes with each other via a Bluetooth signal. It’s designed to speed up the contact-tracing process and quickly isolate at-risk people.

    “The first job of the COVIDSafe app is to keep you safe and that is its best reason why I would encourage people to continue to do that,” Mr Morrison said.

    “The more people we get, the better protection we all have as we go back to work.”

    Mr Morrison has stressed that wide usage is almost a prerequisite to the nation exiting lockdown. A review of freedoms is due this Friday. For over a month now, Australia has reported very low daily case numbers after success in containing the spread.

    Source: bbc.com