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Dr Mokeira J. Nyamache
Early days I was pre-occupied with quality supervisory visits in one of our sites when the Coronavirus disease drums started rolling mountains and seas away, begging for an ear. At this point, even the official name COVID-19 allocated by the World Health Organization did not come easily to mind. Back home, like was the case with many other African countries, all sorts of chaos drowned the sounds away and most paid little or no attention. The risk analysis by the World Health Organization rated it low after all; it was mainly a problem in China. Human to human transmission seemed not to be a concern at the time either. The disease had not qualified to be labelled a global pandemic. Four weeks later however;
the horror of infections and deaths from the virus was fast sweeping across Europe and America with massive strokes, taking lives with it. Many were caught off guard on this one.
Getting in the mix
As the drums grew louder, paranoia and multiple past experiences flooded my mind. Memories of being caught up with ebola, cholera, malaria, flooding and mass fire responses were all coming back. I instinctively switched to response mode: sanitisers, physical distancing, reduced unnecessary movement, obsessive reading, just about anything and everything that could be termed infection prevention and control. I knew it was time for immense uncertainty and planning. This time though, I would be leading from behind as opposed to the frontlines.
I had to frame the plan and it had to evolve with changing situations within available resources across seven different countries spread over two continents. It had to engage vertically and horizontally, within and without. How would such a plan be possible where health was not a priority given the little investment in quality of healthcare systems? Never mind the experience garnered from dealing with other equally deadly diseases in the past. Anyway, somehow the frontline teams and clients had to be catered for amidst the theories ranging from mythology to laboratory inventions. Information about the disease was scattered and scanty.
Rolling with it
The slow arrival of this disease in some of our countries should have bought precious time for preparation. I wondered if Africa should not have been leading the world in best responding to this new disease thanks to our many experiences with infectious disease outbreaks. Then also, the extensive western knowledge would probably still reign supreme. The thought of both maybe and perhaps none also crossed my mind. Many nations had no plan and many who had were mostly copy pasting from the various trending response plans. There should have been a context specific disaster contingency plan before the plan for faster effect across nations, especially with a history of outbreaks.
And so?
We have to make do with the usual capturing of moments through select experiences shared in various platforms. You see, the world that is currently dealing with Covid-19 is a different one from the one that dealt with SARS and H1N1, a lot has definitely changed, technology-wise at least. I still think based on this though that we should have been in a better position to deal with the scourge. Having spent decades fighting some of the world's deadliest diseases like HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, cholera, Ebola and malaria; we should be ahead of the pathogens. Trusting of course that we will live through this one, we do not need to wait for next time to use archived beautifully documented lessons that may have even been forgotten through the filing systems. The answer lies in the synergy between knowledge and experience applied in a timely manner. Harnessing that for our world’s well-being without caring who takes credit. It is time to grow.
Milestone support and wellness centre Family health options hospital-Nairobi west Mai mahiu road
Nyakongo Towers, 2 nd floor, Kisii
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