4.5 Article

Main modulators of COVID-19 epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e12727

Keywords

COVID-19; Sub-Saharan Africa; Countries; Risk factors; Mortality

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A study on the correlation between COVID-19 data and various factors in 47 sub-Saharan African countries found that COVID-19 mortality in the region is positively correlated with medical, socioeconomic, and health system factors, but negatively correlated with population age structure and malaria index. Economically developed regions show higher COVID-19 mortality rates.
Background: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is responsible for an important global death toll from which sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) seems mostly protected. The reasons explaining this situation are still poorly understood.Methods: We analyzed the correlation between reported COVID-19 data between February 14, 2020 and May 18, 2021, and demographic, socioeconomic, climatic, diagnostic data, and comorbidities in 47 SSA countries. Different databases including the WHO data center, Our World in Data, and the World Bank were used.Findings: As of May 17, 2021, SSA reported 2% of COVID-19 cases and 2.9% of deaths, with the southern region being the most affected with 56.4% of cases and 75.0% of deaths. COVID-19 mortality was positively correlated with medical variables (national obesity rate, diabetes prev-alence, cancer incidence, and cardiovascular disease mortality rate), socioeconomic characteris-tics (international tourism, per capita health expenditure, human development index, HDI, and years of schooling), and health system variables (nurse density, number of COVID-19 tests per capita), but negatively correlated with the population under 15 years of age and the malaria index.Interpretation: Our study suggests that higher economic status fits with high COVID-19 mortality in SSA. In this regard, it represents primarily a disease of modern and wealthy societies, and can therefore be considered as an exception among infectious diseases that historically affected more severely underserved populations living in low-and middle-income countries. However, it should be made clear that observed correlations do not imply inevitably causation and that additional studies are necessary to confirm our observations.

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