APS SENEGAL-GOUVERNANCE / La protection des lanceurs d’alerte et la loi sur l’accès à l’information, gages de bonne gouvernance (société civile) APS SENEGAL-TRANSPORT-REACTIONS / Les facteurs humains responsables de 90% des accidents de la route (ministre) AIP Le PNUD réaffirme son soutien aux initiatives du ministère de l’Enseignement supérieur et de la Recherche scientifique AIP La Côte d’Ivoire veut saisir l’opportunité de la finance verte ACI Afrique/Football: La CAF déclare la défaite de l’Usm Alger par forfait ACI Monde/Santé: L’Oms salue l’efficacité du vaccin contre le paludisme, encourageant son déploiement en Afrique ACI Congo/Technologie: Canal+ Congo lance son nouveau décodeur hybride G11 pour une expérience télévisuelle révolutionnaire ANP 10ème Assemblée Générale Ordinaire des Scouts du Niger ANP Fin à Rabat du séminaire organisé par la FAAPA sur le Fact-Checking AIP Promotion d’emplois décents : des résultats tangibles enregistrés en 2023 avec deux projets du ministère de tutelle

Ghana likely to witness severe third wave if safety protocols continue to be ignored – GHS


  28 Juillet      55        Santé (15387),

 

Accra, July 28, GNA – Ghana risks a high and severe third wave of COVID-19 outbreak if the public continue to ignore the safety protocols.

Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, the Director-General of the Ghana Health Service (GHS), gave the warning in Accra on Wednesday during the COVID-19 media update.

He noted that Ghana had already entered into its third wave and indications pointed to the fact that much more would have to be done to avert a disaster of catastrophic magnitude.

« A lot more had to be done to ensure that we don’t get to the situation we recorded in February and March this year, » he said.

The GHS Boss said 248 persons were currently on admission of which 17 were in critical condition, 86 severe, and 143 mild to moderate.

Dr Kuma-Aboagye said there had been significant increase in the number of cases recorded over the past four weeks, with a number of them being in severe and critical conditions.

Dr Kuma-Aboagye noted that as at July 25, the country had recorded a cumulative case of 102,569 and 1,412,464 tests were conducted.

Out of that figure, he said, 97,213 had recovered with 4,983 still being active cases and 823 deaths.

Touching on international arrivals, he said, 2,249 persons had tested positive out of the 390,527 tests conducted.

Similarly, a total of 392 schools had recorded cases with a cumulative figure of 2,647.

However, 93.7 per cent of them had fully recovered with 166 of them still active.

The 166 students, Dr Kuma-Aboagye said, were 93 from schools in the Ashanti Region, 38 from the Oti Region 38, Greater Accra, 15, Eastern 12, Bono East seven, and Bono, one.

Dr Kuma-Aboagye said there was the need for all Ghanaians to take the situation seriously and act responsibly by adhering strictly to the preventive protocols.

He said quantities of vaccines were expected to arrive in the country by August and September, however, until then, obeying the protocols would be the way out.

Dans la même catégorie