Audio By Carbonatix
A researcher with the Kumasi Centre for Collaborative Research has said the President's decision to lift the lockdown is based on economics rather than the data so far collected from testing and contact tracing.
On Sunday 19 April, 2020, Nana Akufo Addo lifted the ban on the partial lockdown imposed on identified hotspots for coronavirus in the country during a televised address to the nation.
Speaking on the Super Morning Show, Monday, Dr John Amuasi said, “there is an argument that the decision was based on science and data related to the infection and the risk of its spread.”
He said government may have other reasons because “we do not have data or the kind of data that we need to be able to measure anything we can call an infection rate. What we have really is what we refer to as a proportion of cases, which is essentially the number of positive cases out of the numbers that you have tested.”
“It is a big mistake to keep referring to this as an infectivity rate or infection rate or attack rate [because] it is not a rate.”
Dr Amuasi who is also with the Department of Global Public Health at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) added that what the health authorities and government is naming as ‘infection rate’ which is also known as ‘positivity rate’ is not right.
“If you look at the GHS website, what they call the positivity rate based on the different surveillance types that they have, you have the ‘routine surveillance’ being 2.27 and the ‘mandatory quarantined’ giving you maybe 5.69, this is not even a positive rate, it is the proportions of positives,” he said.
Therefore, bearing this in mind, Dr Amuasi said, “if you looked at what we had, we could not have possibly taken a decision based on risk of getting infected.”
He explained that infectivity or positivity rate is measured during a certain time component and that time component must be consistent. Meaning that testing must be consistent and the entire population must be represented.
“If you tell me the decision was based on a couple of other variables looking at the total impact of a continued lockdown or continuous restriction of movement on the economy then I'm not even in a position to cannot contest that.”
“What I want to make clear to the people of our nation is that we have to prepare for more cases of coronavirus [because] the decision will lead to an increase of cases.”
Latest Stories
-
Former deputy A-G says 1931 extradition treaty with US is outdated
3 minutes -
Any prosecutor who files 78 charges is not serious — Kofi Bentil on Ofori‑Atta Case
11 minutes -
CPP’s Ghanamannti slams L.I. revocation on illegal mining
19 minutes -
Prosecution strategy against Ofori-Atta likely to fail – Kofi Bentil
24 minutes -
It will be a small miracle to extradite Ken Ofori-Atta — Kofi Bentil
29 minutes -
Ofori-Atta could claim political bias in extradition proceedings — Prof. Appiagyei-Atua
46 minutes -
Supreme Court step in Kpandai case highlights procedural oversight — Tuah-Yeboah
57 minutes -
Alban Bagbin is my favourite Speaker in the fourth republic – Kofi Bentil
1 hour -
Kofi Bentil calls for special court to tackle election-related cases
1 hour -
Former deputy A-G alleges improper court process in Kpandai election matter
1 hour -
‘Aben Wo Ha News’ fanbase bond over year-end excursion to Buaben-Fiema and Kintampo falls
1 hour -
Clerk to parliament overstepped in triggering EC action on Kpandai seat- Tuah-Yeboah
2 hours -
Nyindam should remain an MP until appeals end – Prof Appiagyei-Atua
2 hours -
The idea that elections are won at the polling stations generates violence – Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
Parliament’s declaration Kpandai seat vacant was premature – Kofi Bentil
3 hours
