WHO Concerned Over Polio Outbreak in Southeastern Africa

The World Health Organization says authorities in Mozambique have declared an outbreak of wild poliovirus type 1 after confirming that a child in the country’s northeastern Tete province has contracted the disease. It becomes the second case of wild poliovirus confirmed in southern Africa this year, following a case in Malawi in mid-February.

In a statement, Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, WHO regional director for Africa, called the outbreak of poliovirus in Mozambique “greatly concerning.”

She added that efforts were underway to help strengthen disease surveillance in Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe, with plans to reach 23 million children ages five and below with the polio vaccine in the coming weeks.\

Dr. Ndoutabe Modjirom, the interim polio program coordinator for the WHO Africa Region, said that the first step is to carry out a quality vaccination campaign.

“The second measure is to reinforce the surveillance in all our countries so that they will be able to detect very, very quickly all poliovirus circulating in our region,” he said. “We have to extend to all other countries the measure of surveillance. So that measure we have to take very, very quickly to address this situation.”

Dr. Norman Matara, head of the Zimbabwe Association for Doctors for Human Rights, said the outbreaks of diseases may have resulted from the lockdowns that countries around the world instituted while fighting COVID-19.

“You know with the pandemic, the lockdowns and clinics shutting down, there is a probability some infants and children might have missed their immunizations schedule and thus we now have these emergency outbreaks; measles in Zimbabwe and polio in Mozambique,” he said. “So, we really urge the government that as they fight COVID-19, we should intensify immunization of children especially in those neglected areas so that every child gets immunized. We also urge the government to implement strong surveillance systems.”

Last week, Zimbabwe declared an outbreak of measles in a province on the border with Mozambique. President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government said it was working with the WHO to immunize children in the whole country.

Source: Voice of America

Health Officials Say Parts of US May Consider Calls for Mask Wearing

COVID-19 cases are increasing in the United States and could get even worse over the coming months, federal health officials warned Wednesday in urging areas hardest hit to consider reissuing calls for indoor masking.

Increasing numbers of COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations are putting more of the country under guidelines issued by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that call for masking and other infection precautions.

Right now, the increases are concentrated in the Northeast and Midwest. “(But) prior increases of infections, in different waves of infection, have demonstrated that this travels across the country,” said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the CDC director, at a White House briefing with reporters.

For an increasing number of areas, “we urge local leaders to encourage use of prevention strategies like masks in public indoor settings and increasing access to testing and treatment,” she said.

However, officials were cautious about making concrete predictions, saying how much worse the pandemic gets will depend on several factors, including to what degree previous infections will protect against new variants.

Last week, White House COVID-19 coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha warned in an interview with The Associated Press the U.S. will be increasingly vulnerable to the coronavirus this fall and winter if Congress doesn’t swiftly approve new funding for more vaccines and treatments.

Jha warned that a lack of funding from Congress to fight the virus could cause “unnecessary loss of life” in the fall and winter, when the U.S. runs out of treatments.

He added the U.S. was already falling behind other nations in securing supplies of the next generation of COVID-19 vaccines and said that the domestic manufacturing base of at-home tests is drying up as demand drops off.

Jha said domestic test manufacturers have started shuttering lines and laying off workers, and in the coming weeks will begin to sell off equipment and prepare to exit the business of producing tests entirely unless the U.S. government has money to purchase more tests, like the hundreds of millions it has sent out for free to requesting households this year.

That would leave the U.S. reliant on other countries for testing supplies, risking shortages during a surge, Jha warned. About 8.5 million households placed orders for the latest tranche of eight free tests since ordering opened on Monday, Jha added.

The pandemic is now 2½ years old. And the U.S. has seen — depending how you count them — five waves of COVID-19 during that time, with the later surges driven by mutated versions of the coronavirus. A fifth wave occurred mainly in December and January, caused by the omicron variant.

The omicron variant spread much more easily than earlier versions.

Some experts are worried the country now is seeing signs of a sixth wave, driven by an omicron subvariant. On Wednesday, Walensky noted a steady increase in COVID-19 cases in the past five weeks, including a 26% increase nationally in the last week.

Hospitalizations also are rising, up 19% in the past week, though they remain much lower than during the omicron wave, she said.

In late February, as that wave was ebbing, the CDC released a new set of measures for communities where COVID-19 was easing its grip, with less of a focus on positive test results and more on what’s happening at hospitals.

Walensky said more than 32% of the country currently live in an area with medium or high COVID-19 community levels, including more than 9% in the highest level, where CDC recommends that masks and other mitigation efforts be used.

In the last week, an additional 8% of Americans were living in a county in medium or high COVID-19 community levels.

Officials said they are concerned that waning immunity and relaxed mitigation measures across the country may contribute to a continued rise in infections and illnesses across the country. They encouraged people — particularly older adults — to get boosters.

Some health experts say the government should be taking clearer steps.

The CDC community level guidelines are confusing to the public, and don’t give a clear picture of how much virus transmission is occurring in a community, said Dr. Lakshmi Ganapathi, an infectious diseases specialist at Harvard University.

When the government officials make recommendations but do not set rules, “it ultimately rests on every single individual picking and choosing the public health that works for them. But that’s not what is effective. If you’re talking about stemming hospitalizations and even deaths, all of these interventions work better when people do it collectively,” she said.

Source: Voice of America

Experts: North Korea Likely to Dismiss International Anti-COVID Aid

Experts say North Korea is likely to dismiss almost all international anti-virus help, at least for now, despite its first acknowledged outbreak of suspected COVID-19 cases surging across the country.

The country is scrambling to deal with rapidly rising cases of COVID-19 symptoms as it announced 1.72 million patients with fevers and 62 deaths as of Tuesday via its official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

Pyongyang began monitoring North Koreans for the virus in late April. Last week, authorities reported a COVID-19 outbreak in the country. For more than two years prior to the admission, the regime insisted there were no cases in North Korea.

This came amid a global pandemic that began in early 2020 in China and as of Wednesday, has felled some 6.3 million people worldwide, more than 1 million of those deaths in the United States, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.

Bruce Klingner, former CIA deputy division chief for Korea and a current senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation, said the admission is “not yet” an outcry seeking help from the international community but a panic-stricken response to the uncontrollable spread.

“That final admission that they actually have cases now was because the situation became so dire that they can no longer ignore it or deny it,” said Klingner.

“Given the hundreds of thousands of cases that they’re announcing new each day, which may be just catching up from the first case apparently in late April, the situation was so bad they couldn’t deny it was happening,” Klingner said.

North Korea announced nearly 270,000 new cases on Tuesday and 232,880 additional cases on Wednesday.

Harry Kazianis, president of the newly developing think tank Rogue States Project, said, “What North Korea did was realize the news media was going to find out about the massive COVID outbreak and tried to get ahead of the story as opposed to looking like they were not acting with enough care or speed.”

Regardless of motives behind Pyongyang’s admission, Scott Snyder, director of the program on U.S.-Korea policy at the Council on Foreign Relations, said, “North Korea’s acknowledgement of COVID inside the country lays the groundwork for the first time in the crisis for North Korea to take outside help.”

He continued, “It is not yet a message to South Korea or the U.S., but it has clearly generated a response that North Korean leaders may now consider.”

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has not made a direct request from international humanitarian organizations for any help curbing the virus.

Pyongyang thus far has not responded to Seoul’s offer for dialogue on anti-virus aid. The South Korean Ministry of Unification reached out to North Korea on Monday delivering a message asking to hold working-level talks on supplying vaccines, masks, and test kits to affected area.

Pyongyang, however, reportedly asked Beijing for help with medical supplies and equipment shortly after the outbreak, according to South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency on Sunday.

Days after its first acknowledged outbreak, North Korea’s Air Koryo planes flew to the Chinese city of Shenyang and returned to Pyongyang with medical supplies.

Robert Manning, senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, said ignoring Seoul’s offer for help while accepting aid from Beijing “is, to some extent, a case of an authoritarian regime scared to show any weaknesses.” He added, “But as this pandemic spreads, Kim may have no choice” but to ask for any help he could get.

VOA’s Korean Service contacted North Korea’s mission to the United Nations, asking if it will accept international anti-virus aid but did not receive a reply.

Excluding Beijing’s help, North Korea has been trying to manage the spread of the virus on its own. It has mobilized masses in different sectors of the society including educational workers and soldiers, alongside public health officials, for a “brisk” prevention campaign to “swiftly curb” the spread.

Even before acknowledging the outbreak, North Korea resorted to its usual self-reliance or self-help to prevent the highly contagious virus from entering the country.

The regime maintained strict quarantine measures, sealing off its borders to fend off the virus. Any measures put in place, however, did not prevent the virus from spreading rapidly. The people of North Korea remain unvaccinated. Their leaders have rejected international offers of vaccines.

Klingner said, “If North Korea continues to remain isolationist, continues to not prioritize the health and safety of its citizens, that reflects poorly on the regime.”

‘Cry for help’

After two years of trying to shield the entire country from the world, Snyder said Pyongyang’s acknowledged cases of the virus is also “a tacit admission” of its “inability” to “cope with the virus on its own.”

Manning said, “It is in part a cry for help, but more profoundly, an acknowledgement of systemic failure and a situation spinning out of control.”

Pyongyang’s admission of the outbreak puts North Korea in a vulnerable state, according to Ken Gause, director of the Adversary Analytics Program at CNA. He said Pyongyang’s weakened state makes it hesitant to accept outside help.

Once it admitted to the outbreak, “North Korea is now in the weaker seat, and therefore, if it accepts outside assistance, then it potentially puts itself in a weaker negotiating position, at least from the way that it views it.”

Weapons testing

The international community may be asking if it could monitor aid deliveries and distributions, a move Pyongyang could consider as an intrusion.

To offset the perceived weakness, Gause said North Korea could resort to weapons tests.

“You often see North Korea, when it has to admit failure or show weakness in any way, will counterbalance it with a strong message, usually some sort of a test or something to say that ‘we’re still strong,’” said Gause.

Kazianis expects tests to come, especially a nuclear test that the U.S. and South Korea are expecting.

“The rise of COVID-19 cases makes certain a nuclear test will happen,” he said.

“Kim wants to show the regime can still kill millions of people in minutes — even if millions of its own citizens have COVID-19,” said Kazianis. “North Korea also needs to change the narrative to something more than a weak state that can’t contain COVID, and a nuclear weapons test will achieve that.”

Source: Voice of America

IFPRI Malawi Monthly Maize Market Report: April 2022

Highlights

• Retail prices of maize increased by 13 percent since last month.

• No ADMARC purchases were reported in any of the markets monitored by IFPRI.

• ADMARC sales were reported in 8 out of the 26 markets monitored by IFPRI.

• Retail prices in Malawi were lower than elsewhere in eastern Africa.

Source: World Food Programme

WFP partners with the Government to strengthen public health supply chains in Malawi

LILONGWE –Today, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and the Ministry of Health have launched a multi-year project to strengthen the country’s public health supply chain and prepare for future health emergencies in Malawi.

The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted supply chains in Malawi and made it difficult for medical commodities to reach the people that needed them. The project is funded by Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited as part of a five-year partnership with WFP for health systems supply chain strengthening.

“This partnership will helpimprove the availability of medicinesandhealthcommoditiesin Malawi and prepare for future health emergencies,” says WFP Country Director and Representative in Malawi, Paul Turnbull. “Ultimately this will improve the quality of life of vulnerable people and contribute to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.”

WFP will be supporting the Ministry of Health and the Central Medical Stores Trust with long-term capacity strengthening in core areas of supply chain management suchas supply chain analytics, and emergency preparedness.

‘’The Government of Malawi is currently laying out the Master Supply Chain Transformation plan (2021-2026) to strengthen supply chain operations and to make the public health sector more resilient. We look forward to collaborating with WFP and Takeda so that all Malawians can get access to medicines and supplies efficiently and rapidly.’’ says Godfrey Kadewere, Director of Health Technical Support Services at the Malawian Ministry of Health.

In collaboration with national health stakeholders, the project will leverage WFP’s experience in food logistics to promote best practices in health supply chain management and strengthen health supply chain

Source: World Food Programme

WFP Malawi Country Brief, April 2022

In Numbers

85,788 cumulative and 811 active cases of COVID-19 in Malawi (30 April 2022)

USD 1 million six-month (May – October 2022) net funding requirements

USD 29.4 million funding required for flood response under the flash appeal

Strategic Outcome 1

• Floods Response: Under tropical storm Ana flood response, WFP completed distribution of cash-based transfers to 32,000 households in Chikwawa District. WFP confirmed a contribution from the Government of Switzerland towards cash assistance and emergency school feeding in flood-affected schools. This contribution and other resources will be used to reach 27,500 households in two additional districts (Nsanje and Phalombe) in May.

• Refugees: In parallel to the ongoing cash operation targeting over 11,000 households in Dzaleka refugee camp, WFP is also promoting income generating activities, so refugees and host communities boost their self-reliance. A wide range of interventions are promoted, from soya and mushroom farming, eggs production, soap making and tailoring.

Strategic Outcome 2

• School feeding: WFP joined a joint monitoring technical team with representation from the European Union, Government ministries and members of the AFIKEPO programme to document lessons on programme implementation in Mulanje, Nsanje, Phalombe and Zomba. The mission included visits to seven schools under WFP supported school feeding of which four schools supported by the European Union TSOLATA school feeding intervention. A total of 137 schools were proposed for scale up of home-grown school feeding under WFP.

• Social protection: In collaboration with the Government and partners, an after-action review of the lean season response will be conducted in May. The review will include the use of the social protection system jointly supported by UNICEF and WFP for targeting and delivery of lean season assistance.

Strategic Outcome 3

• Malnutrition prevention: With the support of the Government of Ireland, the Neno Nutrition Investment Project (NNIP) has strengthened overall governance structures at district and community levels, it also delivered an integrated nutrition-focused multisectoral package in Neno District. This serves as a pilot to inform multi-year and nation-wide scale up of the approach across other districts.

Source: World Food Programme