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SENEGAL – First cases of the Omicron variant detected

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Senegal registered its first three cases of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus on Friday, 3 December 2021. According to a statement released on Saturday evening by the Institute for Health Research, Epidemiological Surveillance and Training (Iressef), the first case of the Omicron variant was detected in a 58-year-old man who arrived in Senegal on 22 November by a flight from a country in the sub-region. A first case that already sets psychosis in populations that think of the burden of a return of restrictive measures such as the compulsory wearing of masks, the prohibition of gatherings and the freezing of economic activities.

The Omicron variant of the coronavirus has entered Senegal. This is the information provided by the Institute for Health Research, Epidemiological Surveillance and Training (Iressef) on Friday, November 3, 2021. The man in question, the first carrier of the new virus in the country, “stayed in Dakar in a hotel and participated in a demonstration that brought together nearly 300 people of several nationalities. The event took place from 24 to 25 November,’ said the institute’s statement. 

The research institute has taken all necessary measures by quarantining the man carrying the variant called Omicron. It was followed and treated until healing in less than 48 hours. “As of Saturday, December 4, it has no symptoms,” the institute added.

However, the Institut Pasteur in Dakar announced on Sunday, December 6, 2021, that it had identified two other cases of infection with the Omicron variant. This is exactly a “28-year-old man taken on 23 November in Dakar and leaving for a country in West Africa. The other is a 29-year-old woman who was staying at a hotel in Dakar and travelling to southern Africa,” the statement says.

The health authorities have expressed their concern about this new discovery, especially since the Senegalese have not responded to the call for vaccination launched by the Ministry of Health and Social Action (MSAS) since February 2021. Out of an estimated total population of about 17 million, only 1,328,633 people have been vaccinated.

Senegal joins Nigeria, Ghana, Botswana and South Africa, where this variant was discovered at the end of November 2021.

Senegal has recorded a total of 74,024 cases of Covid-19 and 1,186 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic.

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HEALTH

COVID 19 – A new variant we discovered

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According to a senior official at the World Health Organization, a new highly mutated variant of COVID called BA.2.86 has been discovered in several countries including Switzerland, South Africa, as well as Israel, Denmark, the United States and the United Kingdom.

According to “Reuters”, the variant was first spotted in Denmark on 24 July after sequencing of the virus infecting a patient at risk of becoming seriously ill”. And so it was detected “in other symptomatic patients, during routine checks at airports and in wastewater samples in a handful of countries”.

Thus, scientists have indicated that “although it was important to monitor BA.2.86, it was unlikely to cause a devastating wave of serious illness and death given the immune defenses developed worldwide as a result of vaccination and previous infection”.

WHO COVID-19 technical officer Maria Van Kerkhove said, “The numbers are still low”. But the reduction in global surveillance could lead to rapid circulation of the virus…

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HEALTH

TOBACCO CONTROL: Seven out of 10 people protected by anti-smoking measures

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A new report from the World Health Organization (WHO) highlights that 5.6 billion people, or 71% of the world’s population, are now protected by at least one good practice policy to save lives from deadly smoking, five times more than in 2007.

Over the past 15 years, since WHO’s MPOWER measures were introduced globally, smoking rates have fallen. Without this reduction, the UN World Health Agency estimates that there are now 300 million more smokers worldwide. This new WHO report on the global tobacco epidemic focuses on protecting the public from passive smoking, noting that nearly 40% of countries now have fully non-smoking indoor public places. The report assesses the progress made by countries in tobacco control and shows that two other countries, Mauritius and the Netherlands, have reached the level of best practices for all MPOWER measures, a feat that only Brazil and Turkey have achieved so far. These data show that, slowly but surely, more and more people are protected from the harms of tobacco by WHO policies based on evidence and best practices.”said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of WHO, congratulating Mauritius on becoming the first country in Africa and the Netherlands on becoming the first country in the European Union to implement WHO’s comprehensive tobacco control policies at the highest level. Eight countries are only one policy away from joining the leaders of tobacco control: Ethiopia, Iran, Ireland, Jordan, Madagascar, Mexico, New Zealand and Spain. However, much remains to be done: 44 countries are not protected by any of WHO’s MPOWER measures. At the same time, 53 countries have still not adopted a total ban on smoking in health facilities. In addition, only half of the countries have smoke-free private workplaces and restaurants.

Passive smoking
“WHO urges all countries to implement all MPOWER measures at the level of best practices to fight the tobacco epidemic, which kills 8.7 million people worldwide, and to oppose the tobacco and nicotine industries, who are lobbying against these public health measures,” said Dr Ruediger Krech, Director of Health Promotion at WHO. About 1.3 million people die each year from second-hand smoke. All of these deaths could be prevented. People exposed to second-hand smoke are at risk of dying from heart disease, stroke, respiratory disease, type 2 diabetes and cancer. In this fight against tobacco, the ban on smoking in public spaces is only one of the measures of the Effective Tobacco Control Package, MPOWER, designed to help countries implement the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and stem the tobacco epidemic. The paper shows that all countries, regardless of income level, can lower the demand for deadly tobacco, achieve major public health victories and save billions of dollars in health care and production costs.

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HEALTH

SENEGAL – 400 cases of measles recorded

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Measles is back in force, with more than “400 cases recorded nationally”. It is a revelation of Doctor Boly Diop, responsible for epidemiological and post-vaccination surveillance at the Ministry of Health and Social Action, on Thursday, July 13, 2023.

“Performance in the first half of the year revealed the existence of a measles epidemic,” said Dr. Boly Diop, noting that Fatick is the only one of the country’s 14 regions that has yet to register a confirmed case of measles.

Outside of Fatick, all regions have confirmed cases of measles and there are districts that have become epidemic. This means that today, measles is back in force, there are confirmed cases and epidemics that are recorded throughout the regions,’ he said, on the sidelines of a quarterly coordination meeting for epidemiological surveillance.

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