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West Africa battling rising COVID-19 case counts

A resurgence of coronavirus cases in West Africa is hitting the region hard, inundating cemeteries where funeral numbers are rising and hospitals where beds are becoming scarce.

Climbing COVID-19 cases are prompting more people in the region to seek vaccinations

People lined up outside Dakar's Leopold Sedar Senghor stadium, this past Wednesday, as they awaited COVID-19 vaccinations. (Leo Correa/The Associated Press)

A resurgence of coronavirus cases in West Africa is hitting the region hard, inundating cemeteries where funeral numbers are rising and hospitals where beds are becoming scarce.

Those visible shifts are also pushing a reluctant population to seek out the vaccines in larger numbers at a time when shipments of doses are expected to arrive after nearly grinding to a halt in recent months.

Thousands of new COVID-19 cases have been reported in the region in the past few weeks amid low vaccination rates and the spread of the delta variant, with some countries seeing their highest numbers since the pandemic began.

Residents who were previously wary of getting shots as conspiracy theories spread online are now lining up by the thousands from Liberia to Nigeria, Ghana and Senegal.

"At the beginning, there were people who gave false information, but when people noticed an increase of contaminations and deaths, people understood that only vaccination can save them," said Bamba Fall, mayor of the Medina municipality in Senegal's capital, Dakar.

Dealing with vaccine delays and shortages

Shortages and delays have caused Africa's 54 countries to fall far behind wealthier nations in their COVID-19 vaccine rollouts.

Some 82 million doses have arrived on the continent to date, though that is just 10 per cent of the number needed to vaccinate 30 per cent of its population by the end of 2021, said Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, World Health Organization regional director for Africa.

More shipments are finally rolling in, steering the continent of 1.3 billion people into an "encouraging phase after a bleak June," Moeti said. 

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari shows his COVIID-19 vaccination certificate after receiving his first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine at the presidential villa in Abuja, on March 6, 2021. (Kola Sulaimon/AFP/Getty Images)

Nigeria, Africa's most populous country with more than 210 million people, next month will receive more than 29 million, government-purchased Johnson & Johnson vaccines.

It's also expecting 4 million Moderna doses and almost 700,000 AstraZeneca vaccines through the COVAX program and from U.S. and U.K. donations, according to Health Minister Osagie Ehanire.

Nigeria's virus cumulative case count recently topped 172,200, an increase of more than 4,500 cases since July 10. Its seven-day rolling average of daily new cases more than doubled over the past two weeks.

Isolation centres that were closed after a previous surge are being reopened in anticipation of a large number of patients, said Nigeria Centre for Disease Control director Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu.

Senegal sees cases climb in July

Meanwhile, confirmed cases in Senegal, which had been ahead in the fight against the virus, leapt from only 380 on July 10 to 1,700 on July 18, the highest number since the pandemic began, according to the Ministry of Health.

Dakar's main cemetery is also seeing large numbers of funerals, many that were likely due to COVID-19 but weren't recorded as such.

A health worker wearing personal protective gear is seen at the Idrissa Pouye de Grand Yoff Hospital in Dakar, Senegal, on July 28, 2021. (Seyl Lou/AFP/Getty Images)

Senegal is employing more community-focused campaigns as residents see people close to them — including those young and healthy — succumbing to the disease.

"Senegalese don't know where to turn," resident Khalifa Abbacar Diop said. "We are afraid."

The country received nearly 300,000 Johnson & Johnson doses and more than 330,000 of the Chinese Sinopharm vaccine in the past week. Tens of thousands of residents are waiting for a second dose of AstraZeneca, but it is out of stock.

More people seek vaccinations

An increase in hospitalizations and deaths is leading many residents across West Africa to get inoculated.

Two nurses are seen working in a COVID-19 ward at a hospital in the Liberian capital earlier this month. Less than 1 per cent of people living in Liberia have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. (Emmanuel Tobey/AFP/Getty Images)

"Initially, I was hesitant to take the vaccine because I saw many conspiracy theories and also the anti-vaccine media campaign appeared stronger," said Harris Fomba Tarnue, principal of the Booker Washington Institute, Liberia's oldest technical high school.

"But when I reflected a lot on taking vaccines in the '60s and '70s, and the (beneficial) impact vaccines now have on global health, I concluded it's a must for me and my family to take."

Liberia received 96,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine through the COVAX initiative, but the first consignment of about 27,000 had only a month lifespan and expired as people were reluctant to get the shots, Chief Medical Officer Dr. Francis Kateh said.

The country received more than 300,000 Johnson & Johnson doses on Sunday, about two weeks after it ran out of AstraZeneca.

Since its vaccine drive started in March, only 9,579 people in the nation of nearly 5 million have been fully vaccinated, according to the health minister.

Ghana to vaccinate 20M this year

In Ghana, President Nana Akufo-Addo raised the alarm as new confirmed infections tripled, stretching hospitals and ICU wards to their limit.

Ghana "cannot afford to allow the recklessness of a few to endanger the lives of the majority of persons in the country," he said, announcing masks are now mandatory in public places.

A health-care worker is seen preparing to vaccinate a nurse against COVID-19 at the Ridge Hospital in Accra, Ghana, back in March. Ghana is seeking to vaccinate 20 million people this year. (Nipah Dennis/AFP/Getty Imges)

Ghana is committed to vaccinating 20 million people, representing its entire adult population, by the end of this year, he said.

He pledged $25 million to start an institute that would allow Ghana to produce vaccines, and not be dependent on foreign manufacturers.

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