By Ekinneh Agbaw-Ebai, Boston, USA
A day after the IMF/World Bank announced a $50 billion aid
package to help poor countries contain the coronavirus outbreak; Cameroon
confirmed its first two cases of the deadly virus; a 58-year-old French
national and a Cameroonian who came in contact with him, after he arrived in
Yaoundé on Feb 24.
The
public health minister said in separate communiques that both patients were
isolated at the Yaoundé Central hospital where they are receiving “symptomatic
treatment” (whatever that means). The Health minister also ask those who had
contact with the index case to call a toll-free number to “receive appropriate
care” while assuring public opinion that “everything is being done to contain
this outbreak without undue delay, in conformity with the high instructions
from the President of the Republic, HE Mr. Paul Biya.”
The
feudal deference to Mr. President aside, the health minister’s belated effort
to calm frayed nerves cannot be taken to signify successful containment;
rather, it is an expression of a luxurious desire which signposts the absence
of an emergency healthcare plan that should have been activated to contain the
virus. This unpreparedness is most pathetic and tragic and Cameroonians deserve
better.
It is
indeed embarrassing to note that this epidemic has taken Cameroon unawares. How
can the government’s containment strategy be anchored on self-reporting using a
toll-free number? What happens if someone calls and reports that he/she is
witnessing symptoms of the coronavirus? Is there a team of trained health
personnel with the appropriate test-kits, including an ambulance ready to take
such a patient and all those who have been exposed to him to a quarantine
facility, assuming such a facility even exists?
Alternatively,
will such a patient be ordered to self-quarantine at home; and how will the
patient be monitored? Amid global warnings about the coronavirus that has
claimed over 3,000 plus lives and infected no fewer than 100,000 people, the
health minister’s verbal pugilism advertises in spectacular fashion, a certain
poverty of ideas on the part of those who govern Cameroon even in matters that
are supposedly routine; and is indicative of a failure of leadership in the
country. This is a public shame to a nation that should have outgrown primary
healthcare challenges.
As
official rhetoric and public grandstanding drives fear into the complex matrix
over the unfolding coronavirus crisis, the gravity of the epidemic demands an
urgent, robust and holistic national response, beyond laconic press statements
designed to aggrandize the president. Even more disheartening, there is still
no concerted effort by competent health workers to screen passengers arriving
at Cameroon airports to determine whether they are sick or exhibited any
symptoms of the coronavirus.
It is
shocking that a country like Cameroon does not even have one facility that such
patients can be isolated. The WHO representative in Cameroon told CRTV that the
test of the infected French national was done at Centre Pasteur in Yaoundé.
This begs the question: what is the capacity of Centre Pasteur to handle an
epidemic in which thousands of people get infected through community
transmission?
With a
shambolic healthcare system, decrepit health infrastructure, acerbic poverty
and political volatility, most hospitals lack isolation or quarantine units,
personal protection equipment (PPE) and trained personnel to carry out the
necessary care against the coronavirus. Does the Health Minister need any reminder
that laboratory confirmation of coronavirus diagnosis requires equipment, test
kits and trained personnel that most Cameroon hospitals don’t have?
It is
utterly ridiculous for the government to ask people who have had contact with
the index case to self-report or self-isolate or self-quarantine. There is no
beneficial value in government’s misplaced self-vindication, amid reports that
the government was struggling to contact the passengers who were exposed to the
Frenchman who brought the coronavirus to Cameroon. As an urgent public safety
imperative, the government should publish the flight manifest to enable the
public identify passengers on that plane who were exposed and might have been
infected by the Frenchman.
The
implications of the other passengers still roaming at large and interacting
with the public is the potential infection of hundreds, if not thousands of
other people, aggravating the risk of widespread infection given that every
infected person is said to infect at least two other people. Because for each
day a coronavirus patient stays at home, family and all contacts are
endangered, it is, therefore, better left to the imagination, the terrible
consequences, specifically on public health and on public psyche of what
evidently is a disaster waiting to happen!
Against
the backdrop of this doomsday scenario coupled with the dire indicators on the
state of official unpreparedness to handle the coronavirus crisis, the question
must be asked: what is this nation ever prepared for? The world is on red alert
over the deadly coronavirus, yet Cameroonians are left to the vagaries of life
while their leaders do nothing. Not even an emergency budgetary allocation has
been earmarked to contain the virus. This is unacceptable!
The
coronavirus is sufficiently serious a disease as to warrant the declaration of
a national emergency by the government, wherein all hospitals (public and
private), and health personnel across the country are put on red alert.
Unfortunately, corrupt Cameroonian government officials with their remarkable
genius for travesty seem more interested in transforming the coronavirus
epidemic into another cash cow to line their pockets; as some have done with
the ongoing armed insurgency in the Anglophone regions.
The
rumor mill has also spun beyond reason, misinforming the public with all manner
of unfounded cures and remedies with no scientific basis. It was claimed in
some quarters that drinking beer and eating bitter kola was a potent remedy and
Cameroonians promptly descended on beer and bitter kola, until the rumor was
debunked; saving them from the tragedy of their ignorance. Some Cameroonians
view the timing of the confirmed cases as inauspicious, believing it is just a
ploy by the regime to attract a share of the promised $50 billion IMF/World
Bank largesse to help poor countries contain the coronavirus outbreak. Be that
as it may.
The
coronavirus is a national crisis of monumental proportion as the World Health
Organization (WHO) has all but declared it a global pandemic. The deadly virus
can wipe out scores of people in a matter of days if unchecked. The disease is
contracted by direct contact with an infected person and the virus can remain
within an infected person for as long as three weeks after exposure before manifesting.
The symptoms progress from fever to nausea, headache, sore throat, tiredness,
muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhea, coughing and neck-stiffness.
So far,
there is no vaccine or known cure as scientists are still working on a number
of trial drugs that are expected to be ready not earlier than 18 months.
Therefore, the government must continue to take coronavirus seriously and
sustain public enlightenment through traditional as well as the now very
popular social media, on measures to prevent or contain it. Scrupulous personal
hygiene, avoidance of contact with suspected victims, and immediate report of
suspected cases to health authorities, are just some of the steps the public
should take.
The
outbreak of the coronavirus in Cameroon, once again, presents a challenge to
the authorities to address basic social amenities that make for improved living
conditions for the average Cameroonian. While the world struggles to develop a
potent cure, the best way out now is good hygiene. Keeping the living environment
clean is essential. All must be careful, people should as much as possible
avoid crowded areas, while churches, mosques and other religious houses should
control meetings that bring too many people into contact with one another.
The
same goes for CPDM rallies. Commercial cyclists (Bendskin riders) could also be
at risk of spreading the virus through body contacts. The times call for a
rapid holistic response, targeting short-term measures and long-term
improvement in human development indices, not slogans and empty bureaucratic
noises and public grandstanding because one thing is clear - the coronavirus
puts everybody at risk.
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