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Fact Checking: Are Nigeria’s 403,407 COVID-19 Tests Inadequate? By Bayo Onanuga
Even though Nigeria reported another 143 confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Monday, suggesting it is time to declare a flattening of the curve, health minister, Dr Osagie Ehanire said the authorities will not do so.
His reason was that testing for the virus has been grossly inadequate in a country of 200 million people.
Ehanire spoke at a briefing of the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 on Monday in Abuja.
He said that most laboratories across the country were operating below capacity, adding that efforts were ongoing to ensure provision of at least one laboratory in every state.
“Our target is to test two million Nigerians for COVID-19, of which we have achieved barely a quarter.( Actually a fifth)
Osagie Ehanire says COVID-19 testing inadequate
“However, plans have been concluded to set up and optimise laboratories in all states.”
According to the minister, there has been a significant drop in COVID-19 testing due to reduced sample collection across many states for reasons not clear in all cases.
“Lagos, for example, tested over 35, 000 in July and just under 20,000 in August, while Kano dropped from 23,000 in July to just under 4,000 in August.
“These are just examples that show that there is more work to do and many more challenges ahead.
“We shall commission a study group of the Ministerial Experts Advisory Committee to begin processes to examine this development, to bring up new knowledge which can guide response or may have an implication on government decision making.
“With a total of 1,013 deaths recorded so far, the case fatality rate has also dropped slightly to 1.88 percent, the gradual fall is possibly an indication of improvement in response and treatment strategies to contain COVID-19 and also a common global trend.
“As long as we still record deaths from this disease, there is no room for complacency,” he said
As at Monday, Nigeria had done 403, 407 tests, usually on people who stepped out to be tested.
Out of the tests carried out, Nigeria has 54,008 confirmed cases.
According to NCDC figures, 41,638 have been discharged. Only 11,357 are active.
But is the testing inadequate? Or does Ehanire and the NCDC just want to do testing for testing sake to justify the N10 billion recently released by President Buhari?
According to the World Health Organisation, countries that do very few tests per confirmed case are unlikely to be testing widely enough to find all cases.
The WHO has suggested a positive rate lower than 10% – but better lower than 3% – as a general benchmark of adequate testing.
Countries that do very few tests per confirmed case are unlikely to be testing widely enough to find all cases. The WHO has suggested around 10 – 30 tests per confirmed case as a general benchmark of adequate testing.
Surely, Nigeria is far from the WHO benchmark as it has a ratio of one positive case to about eight tests.
South Africa, with Africa’s worst COVID-19 record, has also failed to meet the benchmark.
South Africa so far has 625,056 cases out of 3,674,872 tests conducted, according to records posted by worldometers.info. The ratio will be one positive case to six tests.
Egypt is the worst violator. It has only carried out 135,000 tests, out of which 98,727 were positive. The ratio of is less than 1 to 2.
Madagascar has performed testing similar to Nigeria’s scale: 57,927 tests that revealed 14,863 confirmed cases.
However, some African countries have met the WHO benchmark for testing.
Morocco is one of the clear leaders. The North African country has carried out 1,890,964 tests.
Out of the tests have emerged 61,399 cases. The testing and confirmed cases work out in the ratio of 1 case to about 30 tests.
Rwanda is another country that has conformed with the WHO standard. It has done 404,944 tests and confirmed 4,020 cases. This is about one positive case to 100 tests.
Uganda is also another conformist. It has carried out 367,423 tests and fished out just 2,928 cases. Again, the ratio is like Rwanda’s.
Zimbabwe has done 149,748 and discovered 6412 cases; Zambia has done 115,570 tests for 12,097 cases.
Ethiopia has also done well to conform with WHO recommendation. So far, it has confirmed 51,122 cases out of 890,929 tests conducted. That is a ratio that approximates 1-19.
In West Africa, Ghana is on the borderline of the WHO recommendation: It has done 442,185 tests and has found 44,205 cases, about 1-10.
Senegal has also done 146,218 tests and has established 13,611 cases. It still falls within the WHO bracket, at least 10 tests for one case.
Benin has done 118,206 tests and got 2,145 cases. Cape Verde also did 76,576 tests to get 3,852 cases.
In East Africa, Kenya has also largely conformed with WHO recommendation, having accomplished 454,406 tests to get 34,201 cases.
Our Conclusion: Ehanire was right. Nigeria has not done adequate COVID-19 tests. It needs to expand the scope and in doing so, find quicker and cheaper methods of doing the test, as being done in other countries, for accelerated results.
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