Cameroon confirmed the central African state’s first case of
COVID-19 on its territory Friday. Officials say it was discovered in a French
citizen who arrived in Cameroon on Feb. 24.
Two Coronavirus cases have been diagnosed in Cameroon |
He said
shortly after it was suspected the man was a carrier of the virus, he was
immediately confined to avoid contact with others. Malachie said health
officials started tracing the people the infected man contacted from the
airport of departure through the plane’s arrival in Cameroon, as well as taxis
or cars he used. They also disinfected places he visited.
Malachie
said this wasn’t the first case in which COVID-19 was suspected, but previous
cases were found to be negative after thorough investigations.
Malachie
called on citizens to be calm and vigilant, saying that medical staff in the
country has been advised on how to handle coronavirus cases.
But
news of the first coronavirus in Cameroon has scared people. Some rushed to
hospitals and pharmacies to ask for advice or buy medical facemasks.
Forty-three-year-old
Isaac Dufe, who bought three masks for his wife and two-year-old baby, said he
doesn’t have confidence that the Cameroon government will be able to control
the virus’s spread should many more people be found with it.
“Cases
of diseases have been recorded in this country, for instance, a case like
cholera,” he said. “When there is an outbreak of cholera, in many situations in
claims a lot of lives. But now we are talking about a very complicated disease
like Coronavirus, so I am so scared that if adequate health measures are not
taken, then the situation might be very difficult in Cameroon.”
Phanuel
Habimana, a World Health Organization representative for Cameroon, said it is
following up on the case. He says Cameroonians should not panic, but must make
sure they respect basic hygiene norms.
“Cameroonians
should remain calm,” Habimana said. “Cameroonians should not rush to pharmacies
to try to get masks. Cameroonians should abide to the measures that the
minister [of health] has been repeatedly mentioning. Personal hygiene, washing
hands several times a day, when someone is coughing, cover the mouth and nose
with handkerchiefs and also make sure that people do not get in contact closely
with people who are suspected to be sick.”
Last
January, Cameroon health officials announced they had improved checkpoints
around airports as they feared the virus could be brought into the country by
travelers from China and other countries.
Health
Minister Malachie said as part of epidemiological surveillance, measures had
been put in place to prevent any possible importation of the deadly virus,
which he said was an epidemic that causes diseases in mammals and birds and
that in humans, the virus causes respiratory infections, which are typically
mild but, in rare cases, can be lethal.
Symptoms
include running nose, headache, cough, sore throat, fever and the feeling of
being unwell. B There is no vaccine for this virus and the only way to protect
oneself is through prevention, health officials in Cameroon say.
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