Audio By Carbonatix
An American-based Ghanaian specialist in infectious diseases says Ghana can successfully prevent a possible spread of the new coronavirus through strategic contact tracing.
According to Dr. Bertha Serwaa Aryee, health officials must deploy a good process to identify persons who may have come into contact with the infected persons and subsequently collect further information about these contacts.
Ghana on Thursday, confirmed its first two cases of the COVID-19. In a national address, Health Minister, Kwaku Agyeman-Manu, said both individuals returned to Ghana – one from Norway, the other from Turkey.
Sources say the Ghanaian came in from Turkey, having gone there for an assignment with an international agency while the Norwegian, appears to have returned to Ghana after helping organise President Akufo-Addo’s recent visit to the European country.
Ghana's West African neighbour, Nigeria, which was first to record a COVID-19 case in the subregion when an Italian flew into the country on Turkish Airline.
The country has been declared free of the disease after health officials successfully completed the followed period of all the contacts of the index case.
Speaking on Friday, March 13, 2020, on ‘Ghana Connect’ on Joy FM, Dr Bertha Serwaa Aryee, an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Medicine at Nebraska Medical Centre, USA, said Ghana can learn from Nigeria and also beat the new coronavirus.
However, her worry is that: “We have kind of a different problem because the people [confirmed cases] have been in the country for over a week [and] they sat on a plane and interacted with a lot of people.”
“We have potentially a lot of people who, maybe harbouring the infection right now. So our next strategy is to immediately try to make sure that we have an excellent contact tracing to locate everybody who could possibly have come into contact with the two patients,” she stressed.
By tracing the contacts of infected individuals, testing them for infection, treating the infected and tracing their contacts in turn, public health aims to reduce infections in the population, she stated.
COVID-19
Cases of the coronavirus that emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late December 2019 are being reported daily around the world.
Currently, more than 4,200 people have died globally from COVID-19.
Also, more than 118,000 infections have been confirmed in dozens of countries, according to the WHO.
Latest Stories
-
Son of Iran’s exiled late monarch urges supporters to replace embassy flags
28 seconds -
Gold Empire Resources applauds gov’t crackdown on illegal mining; calls for prosecution of financiers and sponsors
2 minutes -
Western North NPP raises alarm over cocoa sector neglect, cites lack of funds and jute sacks
18 minutes -
Government still owes IPPs over $700m in legacy debt — JoyNews Research
20 minutes -
Charge Ofori-Atta and stop the public commentary – Frank Davies tells AG
36 minutes -
NPP race: Massive turnout in Gushegu as delegates endorse Bawumia
41 minutes -
Ashaiman traders protest main market redevelopment, fear losing stalls and livelihoods
48 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: The CEO’s role in strengthening goal setting and OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) across the Organisation
49 minutes -
Protect it, fix inefficiencies: BoG Governor on Gold-for-Reserves
53 minutes -
Ghana to host 2026 Africa Aquatics Championships in May
1 hour -
IGP and Management Board tour police recruitment centres in Greater Accra to assess process
1 hour -
BoG pushes back on IMF claims, says FX reforms are fixing not creating problems
1 hour -
Stability came at a cost – BoG defends billions lost in Domestic Gold Purchase Programme
1 hour -
Ofori-Atta’s lawyer slams AG over public disclosure of ‘inconclusive’ offshore probe
1 hour -
Retribution and Karma: Amanda Clinton links Ofori-Atta’s woes to 2018 banking sector collapse
2 hours
