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General News of Wednesday, 22 April 2020

Source: dailymailgh.com

It’s a WHO hypothesis – Nsiah-Asare clarifies ‘3m Covid-19’ projection

Dr. Anthony Nsiah Asare, special advisor to the President on Health Dr. Anthony Nsiah Asare, special advisor to the President on Health

The special advisor to the President on Health, Dr. Anthony Nsiah Asare, has provided clarity following claims attributed to him that three million Ghanaians will contract the deadly Coronavirus.

Dr Nsiah-Asare said on Wednesday that such claims attributed to him are false and has been misreported.

“It’s not true that Ghana will have three million people infected before we’ll reach the peak. It’s not true. We’ll never see that. Because as we speak now, the number of deaths in the country is nine. If you calculate it according to the percentage of the number of people who are infected, it’s 0.7%. So it’s nowhere near 5%,” the former Director General of the Ghana Health Service explained.

He further clarified that: “If you look at the number of tests we have done so far, we have 1,154 positives which is about 1.5% positivity of people that have been tested. And even if you look at the negative range, it’s about 98.5%. So we will never get near the WHO hypothesis.”

Dr. Asare is reported to have said that 10% of the population of Ghana is likely to test positive. According to reports attributed to him, he said out of the 10% projected infections, majority of the cases are likely to be asymptomatic.

“We expect that about 10% of the population may be infected and out of the 10% of the population 80% may not show signs or symptoms at all and 5% of them will be very ill, that is the projection,” he said.

But speaking at the Special Covid-19 press briefing in Accra on Wednesday, April 22, Dr. Asare said his assertion was taken out of context.



“I gave a hypothesis that WHO put out which is based on the population of the country. And I said that if Ghana stays without doing anything at all, that is what will happen to us as a country; 10% of the population being infected and 20% getting sick and about 5% getting very seriously ill. But I said that that is not the case in Africa. Based on the facts and data that we have, we have realized that our actual figures are far below what WHO has quoted. And it’s because we’ve put a lot of things in place to prevent the spread,” he noted.

Ghana has so far recorded 1,154 Covid-19 cases with nine deaths and 120 recoveries, according to the Ghana Health Service at the press briefing.

The development means that 112 new cases have been confirmed with 21 more people recovering since Sunday, April 19 when President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo addressed the country.



The Director-General of the Ghana Health Service, Dr. Patrick Aboagye at the press conference indicated that except for the 115 travellers who tested positive on mandatory quarantine, new cases were recorded in the category of enhanced contact tracing and the general surveillance.