Moses Ziyambi
‘One hundred and seventy-two
(tested positive for Covid-19 today. These include returnees from South Africa
(12), Botswana (8) and 52 local cases who are isolated. Ninety (90) of the
local cases are contacts of known confirmed cases. Investigations are underway
to establish the source of infections for the other 62 cases.’
The above insights form part of
the Ministry of Health and Child Care’s bulleted introductory statements to the
coronavirus prevalence report of July 24, 2020.
That had been government’s standard
reporting format for its daily Covid-19 national tally for several weeks before
it abruptly stopped.
The daily updates have always
come in tabulated format depicting many aspects of the pandemic including the
number of tests done, positive cases confirmed and new recoveries recorded,
with data disaggregated by province.
On July 25, however, those with a
discerning eye were taken aback to see that information on the contacts of new
local cases had been omitted, and so was the hitherto predictable statement on
investigations to establish the source of infections of the other cases with no
known contacts.
This could have always been mere empty
statements though; in a country where government stands accused of mishandling
the pandemic, such a statement could have been just but another of the
countless empty promises that people have become used to.
It could have simply been a
matter of trying to reassure an unconvinced population that contact tracing and
testing was indeed being done so as to create a sense of a job being done.
However, for authorities to
abandon all pretenses altogether and risk panicking the nation is an act of
sheer bravery.
Official statistics show that
much of the most of the new infections since July are a result of local
transmission and up until now, local cases have exceeded those returning from
the diaspora.
On July 07, the country recorded
98 new cases of coronavirus, its then highest figure per day; 47 being
locally-transmitted cases, 43 of which were contacts of known Covid-19 cases
while the other four were from unknown sources.
On August 03, the country
recorded 154 new cases, all of them local-transmitted but authorities did not
give information on whether or not their sources of infection were known.
Countries that have been praised
for their effective responses to the virus have achieved that partly through
rigourous contact tracing and testing as well as well-managed lockdowns.
On July 04, birthday party which
was reported to having been ‘wild’ was held at a lodge in the relatively
affluent Bulawayo suburb of Burnside and several people are said to have
contracted the virus there, with two of them dying of Covid-19 related
complications at three weeks later.
The party is said to have been a
source of many secondary cases due to poor contacts tracing.
In epidemiology, contact tracing
is the process of identifying who possibly came into contact with an infected
person and getting their details. By tracing these contacts, testing, treating
and isolating them; public health workers get into a better position to tell if
the contacts could possibly have been the source of the infection or if they
could have got infected by the positive case they know.
This helps to ‘flatten the curve’
of transmission or interrupting the continuous spread of ongoing secondary infections
among the population.
It is no question that Zimbabwe
does not have capacity to effectively do all these things, and many people
credit ‘the grace of God’ for the absence of a full-blown catastrophe whereby people
drop dead on the streets.
A health professional who spoke
to TellZim News on condition of anonymity as she was not allowed to give comments
to the media said there was no meaningful contacts tracing and testing happening.
“Pretensions have been abandoned
in view of the rising rate of new infections and there is no seeing how that
can be stopped with very little resources available.
“Contacts tracing used to be done
when locally-transmitted cases were low but things have changed drastically in
the past few weeks, making it harder to manage. That’s the reason why investigation
of infection sources for cases with no known Covid-19 positive contacts is no
longer being talked about that much,” he said.
In Chiredzi, Masvingo province, the results of the district’s first case were made available 10 days after samples were taken for testing, and chances are that the person had spread the virus among his/her many contacts in those 10 days.
In Manicaland, Provincial Medical Director (PMD) Dr Simon Nyadundu recently told the media that contact tracing in the province was inceasingly proving to be a logistical nightmare.
“The assumption had been that one case would have five contacts but unfortunately with local cases, we have had contacts as high as 34 for some. This is a reflection of the resources we would require to follow up all those 34 people because they are not in the same geographical area,” said Nyadundu.
Chido Dziva Chikwari, the study
coordinator at the Biomedical Research and Training Institute (BRTI) in Harare
said contacts tracing and testing required vast resources and time, with
Zimbabwe running out of both.
“What we have noticed in Zimbabwe
at the moment is that there are long testing delays. For example if a person is
symptomatic or had been in contact with someone who tests positive, they can
wait for up to seven days for a test and thereafter, the results take an
additional seven days to be processed and communicated.
“In such a situation, there is a
very high possibility that in addition to that person being positive, they have
been going about their life as normal while waiting for their results. Over 14
days, the number of additional contacts that person has would have increased significantly
which makes contact tracing extremely difficult and much more laborious,” said
Chikwari.
“If they are a highly-active
person or one who interacts with many different people daily, trying to trace
their contacts for the last 14 days or more is not easy in any setting. In
addition to that, if any of the contacts of that one person tests positive, we
then have an additional cascade of cases that need to be traced. It is a
process that needs you to be fast and proactive which isn’t happening at the moment.
With the rise in cases, it is also getting much harder to do. There are
definitely many more areas of improvement,” Chikwati said.
She called for an acceleration of
testing; saying access to testing had to be made easier for citizens.
“In addition to this, government,
civil society and media need to educate people on all these steps. We were very
aggressive when teaching about preventative measures but with rising cases, we
need to be aggressive about the steps to get a test, informing people about contact
tracing, what a positive diagnosis means and the requirements for isolation,”
she said.