Cape Town, South Africa: Before the pandemic, when tourists flocked to Cape Town,
they often ignored Khayelitsha township.
Crammed with more
than half a million people -- somewhere between the winelands and beaches of
this international destination -- it's now the center of attention.
High-density areas
like Khayelitsha are being closely watched because doctors say that places like
this are where the battle against Covid-19 on the African continent will be won
or lost.
South Africa is, by
far and away, the hardest-hit country on
the continent. Its confirmed case count is approaching
200,000, and rising fast.
Western Cape is now
in the middle of the peak of its coronavirus surge. With more than 69,000
Covid-19 cases and 2,066 deaths, according to July 5 government figures, it is
the country's worst-affected province.
"Nobody knew
what the Covid epidemic would mean for South Africa. We had seen Covid rip
through Europe, we saw what it was doing in the United States and everyone was
terrified of what that would mean in South Africa," says Dr. Claire Keene,
a medical coordinator for the NGO Doctors Without Borders.
"We are being
faced with so much failure with Covid. We have used the time well, but we were
always going to question whether we used it enough," she says.
In Khayelitsha,
Doctors Without Borders, in partnership with the country's health department,
converted a basketball arena into a field hospital to prepare for this surge.
Workers in scrubs walk out the back door and wheel in tanks from the forest of
oxygen cylinders outside.
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Doctors without Borders, in partnership with the Department of Health, converted this basketball arena in Khayelitsha into a field hospital. |
There are 70 beds and
just a handful of empty spaces. The patients, most of them elderly, come from
the immediate surrounding area, key to gaining trust in the local community.
Some walk out after just a few days of oxygen and steroid treatment, while
others are not so fortunate.
Keene says their
field hospital is a level under ICU care, but it is much more than just a
recovery ward. It has become a critical way to lessen the burden on local
hospitals as the surge peaks.
Many predicted a
catastrophe in South Africa by
now, particularly with its high burden of HIV and tuberculosis cases, and its
overburdened health system.
But public health
officials and doctors here concede that their earlier models -- even those that
factored in the aggressive lockdown -- were too pessimistic.
Worst-case scenario
"We have less patients than we have predicted, we have
less hospital admissions that we had predicted. And up until now, we have had
slightly less deaths than we predicted," says Professor Lee Wallis, Head
of Emergency Medicine for the Western Cape Government.
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Khayelitsha township, seen here in March, is a high-density area that is being closely watched in the battle against Covid-19. |
Yet Wallis and his
team plan to have 1,400 extra beds ready for the worst-case scenario. He sits
overlooking a still-empty ward in the massive repurposed convention center near
Cape Town's waterfront. They expect the facility to be near capacity by the end
of July.
Wallis says that HIV
burden hasn't had the impact that some feared. Far more critical, he says, are
the co-morbidities like hypertension, obesity and diabetes that have also
worsened outcomes for Covid-19 globally.
The pandemic struck
South Africa later than Europe and North America and experts here have had the
benefit of learning from both the mistakes and innovations from earlier
hotspots.
Wallis says a move
away from putting patients on ventilators to giving them high-volume oxygen
made an almost overnight difference in the Western Cape's main hospitals.
Now, instead of being
placed in a medically induced coma and breathing through a machine, many of the
same type of patients are taking in huge volumes of oxygen through masks or
cannulas.
"We look at what
is done in higher income countries and we adapt that to a lower income setting
and make it work," he says.
While the peak in
Cape Town is not as high as they expected, he believes that the surge could
last longer than predicted by their earlier models -- even for many months -- a
situation that will strain both the health system and a population desperate to
get back to some kind of normal.
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Undertakers carry coffins after funerals for Covid-19 victims at a Cape Town mosque in June. The Western Cape province is now in the middle of the peak of its coronavirus surge. |
The doctors and
nurses in Cape Town are still focusing one day and one patient at a time.
"Every death is
heavy on the healthcare workers, but when patients come here gasping for breath
and they walk out, it is a massive achievement for everyone," says Keene.
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