The virus has multiplied in Africa more slowly than in Asia or Europe, but 36 nations on the continent have now reported a total of more than 700 cases.
Worldwide, it has infected more than 227,000 people and killed more than 9,000.
Burundi and Uganda remain the two East African Community nations that have not reported the presence of the respiratory illness.
Africa will likely see higher numbers of coronavirus cases in coming weeks because of the likelihood some are slipping through the net, the head of a regional disease control body said on Thursday.
The virus has multiplied in Africa more slowly than in Asia or Europe, but 36 nations on the continent have now reported a total of more than 700 cases.Worldwide, it has infected more than 227,000 people and killed more than 9,000.
“We are picking (up) some people but we are also missing some people,” said John Nkengasong, head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) which is a branch of the African Union bloc.
“The situation will get worse before it gets better because the chances are clear that people have slipped through.”
Two more African countries, Chad and Niger, confirmed their first cases on Thursday, as governments across the continent announced aggressive measures in the past 24 hours to restrict travel and close public spaces.
Senegal and Sierra Leone said they would suspend all international commercial flights. Democratic Republic of Congo banned all flights from “at-risk” countries and ordered schools and restaurants closed. Mauritania decreed a nationwide curfew from 8 pm to 6 am.
Chad and Djibouti ordered schools closed, as did Zimbabwe, which has not yet confirmed any cases.
Travel bans
Nkengasong said the number of confirmed cases in Africa was expected to rise in coming days and such travel bans would delay but ultimately fail to contain the virus.
“Anyone who has followed pandemics over the years, you know that doesn’t work,” he told a news conference in the Ethiopian capital. “When you lock down countries, you should understand clearly how to unlock the country.”
Nkengasong said testing was going to increase as more kits became available. US company Abbott Laboratories, Swiss-based Roche Diagnostics and California-based Cepheid’s GeneXpert were all ramping up production, he said. The testing could be rolled out quickly through existing HIV infrastructure, he said.
Matshidiso Moeti, the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Africa head, was less concerned than the CDC head about missing cases.
“We actually don’t believe that there are large numbers of African people who are undetected and infected,” she said on a teleconference with the media.
Moeti said 40 African countries can now test for the virus, up from just South Africa and Senegal at the start of February.
WHO Africa is planning to help countries set up pop-up hospitals that could be equipped with ventilators and oxygen, she added. Moeti said countries should isolate suspected and confirmed cases but without cutting off other nations.
In Kenya, which has seven confirmed cases, the government will start doing random screenings for the coronavirus, Health Minister Mutahi Kagwe said.
Rwanda, with eleven confirmed cases, has instituted a mandatory 14-day quarantine of "any airline passenger exhibiting Covid-19 symptoms upon arrival."
"In addition, all other arriving passengers, including those who arrived within the past two weeks, are required to self-quarantine for 14 days from the date of arrival and follow all the Ministry of Health's self-isolation guidelines," the ministry said in a statement.
Tanzania has recorded six coronavirus cases.
Burundi and Uganda remain the two East African Community nations that have not reported the presence of the respiratory illness but have put in place measures to combat the outbreak by imposing suspensions on social gatherings, air travel and events.