Seeding COVID-19 across sub-Saharan Africa: an analysis of reported importation events across 48 countries
Abstract
Background
The first case of COVID-19 in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) was reported by Nigeria on February 27, 2020. While case counts in the entire region remain considerably less than those being reported by individual countries in Europe, Asia, and the Americas, SSA countries remain vulnerable to COVID morbidity and mortality due to systemic healthcare weaknesses, less financial resources and infrastructure to address the new crisis, and untreated comorbidities. Variation in preparedness and response capacity as well as in data availability has raised concerns about undetected transmission events.
Methods
Confirmed cases reported by SSA countries were line-listed to capture epidemiological details related to early transmission events into and within countries. Data were retrieved from publicly available sources, including institutional websites, situation reports, press releases, and social media accounts, with supplementary details obtained from news articles. A data availability score was calculated for each imported case in terms of how many indicators (sex, age, travel history, date of arrival in country, reporting date of confirmation, and how detected) could be identified. We assessed the relationship between time to first importation and overall Global Health Security Index (GHSI) using Cox regression. K-means clustering grouped countries according to healthcare capacity and health and demographic risk factors.
Results
A total of 13,201 confirmed cases of COVID-19 were reported by 48 countries in SSA during the 54 days following the first known introduction to the region. Out of the 2516 cases for which travel history information was publicly available, 1129 (44.9%) were considered importation events. At the regional level, imported cases tended to be male (65.0%), were a median 41.0 years old (Range: 6 weeks - 88 years), and most frequently had recent travel history from Europe (53.1%). The median time to reporting an introduction was 19 days; a country’s time to report its first importation was not related to GHSI, after controlling for air traffic. Countries that had, on average, the highest case fatality rates, lowest healthcare capacity, and highest probability of premature death due to non-communicable diseases were among the last to report any cases.
Conclusions
Countries with systemic, demographic, and pre-existing health vulnerabilities to severe COVID-related morbidity and mortality are less likely to report any cases or may be reporting with limited public availability of information. Reporting on COVID detection and response efforts, as well as on trends in non-COVID illness and care-seeking behavior, is critical to assessing direct and indirect consequences and capacity needs in resource-constrained settings. Such assessments aid in the ability to make data-driven decisions about interventions, country priorities, and risk assessment.
Key Messages
We line-listed epidemiological indicators for the initial cases reported by 48 countries in sub-Saharan Africa by reviewing and synthesizing information provided by official institutional outlets and news sources.
Our findings suggest that countries with the largest proportions of untreated comorbidities, as measured by probability of premature death due to non-communicable diseases, and the fewest healthcare resources tended to not be reporting any cases at one-month post-introduction into the region.
Using data availability as a measure of gaps in detection and reporting and relating them to COVID-specific parameters for morbidity and mortality provides a measure of vulnerability.
Accurate and available information on initial cases in seeding local outbreaks is key to projecting case counts and assessing the potential impact of intervention approaches, such that support for local data teams will be important as countries make decisions about control strategies.
Related articles
Related articles are currently not available for this article.