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Confirmed Covid-19 cases in South Africa rise to 4546, deaths increase to 87

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As of Sunday, the total number of confirmed coronavirus (Covid-19) cases in South Africa stood at 4546 – an increase of 185 over the previous day’s figure, Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize said.

The total number of tests conducted to date was 168,643, of which 7639 were done in the past 24 hours, he said in a statement.

“We regrettably report another [one] Covid-19-related death in the Western Cape, which increases the total number of deaths to 87. We convey condolences to the family and appreciate our frontline workers who treated this patient,” he said.

The provincial breakdown is as follows: Gauteng (1331), the Western Cape (1608), KwaZulu-Natal (863), Eastern Cape (535), Free State (110), Limpopo (31), North West (28), Mpumalanga (23), and the Northern Cape (17).

“We are pleased to announce that in the early hours of tomorrow, 27 April 2020, a delegation of 217 Cuban Medical Brigade will arrive in South Africa. This is in response to the government of the Republic of South Africa’s request to the government of Cuba to offer us assistance and medical personnel support comprising of infectious diseases specialists, to support South Africa in its efforts to deal with Covid-19,” Mkhize said.

The strong social and political solidarity and support that existed between the two countries had been seen in various development programmes.

“As the department of health, we have continuously enjoyed this support through the ongoing medical training programme of South African students in Cuba. As Cuba did in the difficult times of apartheid, it has once again lent its hand by sending health workers who are specialised in the areas of family medicine, infection prevention control, case management, regulatory authority, epidemiology and surveillance, health technology, and biostatistics,” Mkhize said.

Cuba was known for its disaster preparedness and its consistent deployment of medical brigades for disaster relief wherever required, which continued to earn Havana goodwill worldwide. Some of these highly skilled health professionals were in the frontline of fighting other outbreaks in the world, such as Cholera in Haiti in 2010, and Ebola in West Africa in 2013.

Before departure from Cuba, the medical brigade had been placed in quarantine to ensure that they minimised any form of exposure prior to coming to South Africa. This was despite the fact that Cuba was one of the countries where the reported Covid-19 infection rate remained minimal, he said.

“As South Africa, we have taken an additional step which is in line with our lockdown regulations. This team will be put in precautionary quarantine as they await their test results. We will also use this period to fully induct them into the South African situational analysis and the various provinces they will be deployed to.”

Source: ANA


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