Monday, November 25, 2024

What is Zambia’s COVID 19 Strategy Kanshi?

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By Parkie Mbozi

ON 23RD MARCH 2020, precisely five days after 18 March when Zambia reported a twin case of the Coronavirus (code-named COVID-19) “pandemic”, I authored a widely circulated article titled, What is the Science Behind Zambia’s COVID Half measures? It was a follow to a similar article I wrote on 27 February, way before the country was hit by the virus, titled, Is Zambia Ready to Cope with And Contain the Coronavirus Outbreak?

My second article was partly focused on a hastily assembled press conference the same day that the two cases of a couple of Greek origin that had traveled to Europe were announced (18th March). At that press conference a combined team of ministers from what are considered most critical and relevant ministries to the pandemic announced a range of measures to curb the spread of the virus. The measures ranged from operations of bars and churches to wearing of face masks and hand and market sanitation.
My first concern was on the leaders not demonstrating best practice on ‘social distancing’ during the press conferences, which was beamed live on TV. I wrote then that:

“To make matters worse, the leaders have not consistently demonstrated ‘social distance’ during their press conferences. For instance, during the press conference I watched on 18 March the ministers were literally sitting shoulder-to-shoulder, especially as they went to the single available mic one by one. The mic was sandwiched between Dora Siliya and Godfridah Sumaili. Is it a case of “do what I say not what I do”? Surely leaders ought to demonstrate best practices if they want to be believed.”

Within the said article I further questioned the efficacy of some of the measures the country had put in place to fight the pandemic. A few days after my article most neighbouring countries went into one form of lockdown or another. Zambia avoided a total shutdown despite numerous calls for it from political parties, religious organisations, etc. Our major concern seemed to have been business rather than the now known patterns of the spread of the pandemic. I warned then that, “Only time will tell whether our trajectory and/or model is a better one.”

Just to put things into perspective, on 23 March when I did the article Zambia only the two cases. For a considerable period during those early days of the pandemic, from 18 March and until early April, the country had among the lowest number of cases of both infections and mortality among its neighbours and the SADC region. However, a month after the first two cases were reported, on 18 April, a pattern began to emerge that depicted Zambia overtaking most of its neighbours in cumulative cases.

For instance, On 18 April Zambia had the third highest cumulative cases among our neighbours, with 52 cases, having reported first cases on 18 March; Zimbabwe had 24 cases, reported first case on 20 March; Angola had 19 cases, reported first case on 21 March; Namibia had 16 cases, reported first case on 14 March; Malawi had 17 cases, reported first cases on 2 April; and Mozambique had 34 cases, reported first case on 22 March. Only Tanzania (147) and DRC (287) had the higher cases than Zambia but were also the first to report first cases on 16 and 10 March respectively.

Fast-forward today 28 July, the pattern has continued. With the ‘official’ figure of 4481 cumulative cases as of today, Zambia is now only second to Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), which has a total of 8831. You can argue that with a population of 86,026,000, DRC’s per capital infection is obviously much lower. I write ‘official’ figures in our case because the recently growing numbers of BIDs (brought in dead) is evidence enough that the cases are a lot higher than captured in the database. Zimbabwe, for instance, has been in lockdown with a curfew and their cases are half of ours. Botswana and Angola have less than 1,000 cases each.

The big question is, what are our national strategies to contain, manage and ‘flatten the curve’? Who would have thought that four months on we would still questioning our strategies, with so much to learn from other countries and research? Yet from how we are going about it, one would be excused to think we have our own strain of COVID 19 that we are able to negotiate with; yet Anthony Fauchi, a famous of the global fight against the pandemic, always warns that, “You don’t set the timeline, the virus sets the timeline.”

One thing which is now universally known is that the spread of Covid 19 follows the same pattern; it always gets worse before it gets better. How soon it gets better depends on how much you invest in ‘putting off the flames’ before they become ‘wildfires’, in the analogy of Prof Salim Abdool Karim of South Africa. Prof is a world-renowned HIV scientist and infectious diseases epidemiologist and Chairperson of the Ministerial Advisory Committee on Covid 19. On the night of 14 April Prof Karim gave a wide-ranging and highly educative presentation on the pandemic in South Africa and globally that left many of us asking: 1. Where are the voices of the cream of Zambia’s public health specialists and epidemiologists? 2. What is Zambia’s model for ‘flattening the curve’?

The famous proverb, “You Reap What You Sow” (Galatians 6:7-8) applies to Covid 19. Similarly, with COVID 19 the saying that “you can’t bake your cake and eat” holds sway. In literal sense it means, there is no way we can have it both ways: live our lives normally but still manage to flatten the curve of infections. Ask Sweden what happened. ‘Flatten the curve’ is a buzz word and, more importantly, benchmark target for any country. For my readers who may not know, it means stopping new cases of infections and mortality from going up until the numbers stabilize, start dropping and eventually come back to ‘zero new infections, zero mortality”, to borrow from HIV and AIDS terminology. This a feat achieved by countries that have relaxed(‘unlocked’) their economies but ONLY AFTER massive investment in testing, contact tracing and treatment. New Zealand is a shining example in managing to rid itself of the virus.
For us the BATTLE HAS BEEN ON since early April when the first cases of ‘community spread’ the virus were reported. ‘Community spread’ means cases that could not be traced to a single person. At that point we began chasing and trying to put off one ‘flame’ after another in the communities to avoid ‘bushfires’ (in Prof Karim’s analogy). The best bet for any viral pandemic is prevention; avoiding community spread. Herein lies our challenge.

Some Zambian citizens, me included, have serious concerns about our strategies for containing the pandemic. Going by the increasing numbers of cases and, more gravely, growing numbers of BIDs, one would be excused to conclude that the measures are not working. In any case Dr Chilufya told Parliament on 21st July that “Zambia could suffer deaths of up to 1,000 daily by August”.
Below are what I consider policy gaps and inconsistencies with science.

Testing and Contact Tracing: while some countries are talking tens of thousands of tests daily, 55 – 60,000 for South Africa, for instance, we are still below 2,000 (for instance, Dr Chilufya announced 446 tests conducted on 24 July and 1,851 tests on 25 July, which I believe is the highest on a single day so far). Contact tracing and testing are buzz words in the containment of Covid 19. The more you test, the more you identify and quarantine carriers of the virus before they spread the ‘flame’. Many European countries, for instance, have managed to ‘flatten the curve’ and contain the virus because of their abilities to correctly approximate and positively identify the carriers.

Surprisingly, we are not hearing alarm bells from our authorities on the need for more testing or resources thereof, which can be construed as lack goals and targets for testing.

Total Lockdown: this has been the most confusing of our strategies. Lockdown is the most extreme of the wide range of measures and STANDARD DOSE to ‘flatten the curve’. It means shutting down the major economic and social activities. It is a necessary measure which facilitates for most, if not all, the other measures to take effect: testing, contact tracing, social distancing, etc. Here we have the most bizarre lockdown whereby, for instance, professionals in formal employment are asked to stay home or report in rotation and schools partially closed while life goes on ‘normally’ at Soweto and other markets country-wide, in buses, funerals, weddings, churches and other spheres of life, including (you won’t believe it) some bars.

Surely you cannot expect to put off a ‘bushfire’ by extinguishing one flame on one corner while 100s are burning in other parts of the bush. It doesn’t work.

Similarly, within a space of a week we have heard our leaders issue contradictory statements on this measure. On 21st July Finance Minister Bwalya said a lockdown was among “matters that are being considered”. Within days cabinet resolved to take other measures but again spared us from a lockdown. Typically, we have been progressively opening up as the cases have been going up.

Other measures have been announced but equally so relaxed or adhered to only at the pleasure of the individual and applying only to some parts of the country. They include; face coverings (masks), social distancing, hand sanitisers, etc. Their impact is highly questionable.

I will end with a quote (published in March) from anonymous based in Italy on the consequences of the business-as-usual trajectory. “The big mistake was that at the start of the first hit, people continued to lead their lives. As usual they took to the streets for work, entertainment and feeling like a vacation period. Gathering with friends and banquets abounds”….”About 200 people die here every day, not because medicine in Milan is not good (it is one of the best in the world), but rather because there are no places for everyone!”

We need to re-think what we want as a country: life or economy. What have in place to-date are a perfect fit for half measures.

The author is a media, governance and health communication researcher and scholar with the Institute of Economic and Social Research, University of Zambia. He is reachable on pmbozi5ATyahooDOTcom.

12 COMMENTS

  1. Chimbwi no plan(s).

    The PF government are clueless. No wonder Chinese nationals were freely entering Zambia from the sick China without being quarantined.

    What a bunch of….

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  2. Rant all you want….it’s politics in everything we do….no strategy and nothing will change not until we have technocrats to lead and guide this fight….you can’t have a surveyor taking lead in serious health matters as Covid and expect anything serious….to her its showing off have reached my peak of maslows hierarchy….not knowing it’s a matter of life and death to others….e I pray it hits the top leadership hard…so that they taste their developments in these hospitals they say they have built….kaili no going anywhere abroad…covid leaves no chance for such maneuvers…..let it hit hard we experience our developments in hospitals!

  3. As can be seen from your minister, there is no hope in the near future for Zambia to control the spread of Covid 19 (Corona Virus 2019) be he cannot even set an example of wearing a face mask. As can sadly be seen with most GRZ officials, the masks are either around the chin or only covering the mouth and not the nose. And that’s the minister for health for you.

  4. No one has time to read essays from insignificant frustrated constipated hippo like this mbuzi guy. Please give that advice to countries like USA and UK where thousands have perished. They need your help and views there more. Here we have qualified medical and scientific specialists we listen to and not a mere rifraff like you. Thanks but no thanks

  5. For Ministry of Health ‘tests’ means lab analyses on some samples and not the number of people swabbed or total samples collected.
    Today 02/08/2020 marks 9 days since the day I got tested and I’m still waiting for my results, and I’m not the only one. They are others who’ve been waiting for 14 days and more for results.

  6. The author obviously has enough money stashed up to survive a total lock down. He forgets that, unlike him, the majority in Zambia survive on daily earnings.

    A lockdown creates problems for the poor. Problems that the western-educated-author cannot comprehend.

  7. We know the strategy and plan for this plandemic….we just need to open our eyes chapwafye……we have our neibouring country… Tanzania,which has said it’s state is covid 19 free…what’s wrong to take their strategy….we all know this is fake,scam news…in Zambia people die every day…. those B.I.D.S happen everyday..but why considering it covid 19 ?? Brain washed people…we need to rethink more about it than hearing about it from those scammers on the news…

  8. Just like their long misguided incoherent approach to the Zambian economy ,the PF has no concrete well laid plans for Covid 19.

  9. IN FACT PART OF THE REASON IS THE UNNECESSARY ATTACKS ON THE LEADERSHIP. EVERYTHING IS BEING OPPOSED INCLUDING THE BILL 10. LETS HEED THE CALLS BY OUR LEADERS. TOTAL LOCK DOWN FOR 14 DAYS IS THE WAY TO GO. WE MAY STRUGGLE FOR 2 WEEKS, BUT WE WILL SURVIVE TO SEE ANOTHER DAY.

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  10. @Street kid, COVID 19 will not just disappear in the thin air just like that.Lock downs are necessary to flattent the curve also. It is a choice the Ministry of Health will have to make soon or layer.If not prepare for the waste.
    We in the disapora advised the Ministry to put measures to contain the virus. Wht followed were insults from kz.
    The Airports will soon open, the borders are wide open and I don’t know if trasting is being done at the Point of Entry.
    Fighting COVID 19 needs leadership and not thieves.

  11. Cant you write politics stuff without evangelism? Why do you wanna quote Galatians from some middle eastern book whose myths were forced on us by colonisers and slave traders? Why didn’t you quote the Koran or the Sutras? Trying to convert people under the guise of political analysis?

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