The National Institute for Communicable Diseases confirmed that a
suspected case of COVID-19 has tested positive. The patient is a
38-year-old male who travelled to Italy with his wife. They were part of
a group of 10 people and they arrived back in South Africa on March 1,
2020.The patient consulted a private general
practitioner on March 3, with symptoms of fever, headache, malaise, a
sore throat and a cough. The practise nurse took swabs and delivered it
to the lab.
The patient has been self-isolating since March 3. The couple also has two children.
The
Emergency Operating Centre (EOC) has identified the contacts by
interviewing the patient and doctor. The tracer team has been deployed
to KwaZulu-Natal with epidemiologists and clinicians from NICD. The
doctor has been self-isolated as well.
This media briefing is to ensure that the public is immediately kept abreast.
It
has taken more than two months for the virus to reach South African
from mainland China, where it originated. Globally the number of
confirmed cases tops 96,000 with more than 3,300 people have died.
Other
African countries with confirmed cases include Nigeria, Senegal, Egypt
and Algeria. While countries like South Africa have prepared for the
arrival of the coronavirus, smaller African economies with poor
health-care systems may struggle to contain the outbreak.
The
spread of the new virus can remain “minimal and slow” if the outbreak is
fought at the source and countries cooperate, the World Health
Organization’s chief said. The WHO declared the outbreak of coronavirus
in China a global health emergency on Jan. 30.
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