Only a quarter of health workers in Africa are fully vaccinated against Covid-19, the World Health Organization said Thursday warning that the majority of the continent's frontline medical workforce were dangerously exposed.
By contrast, a recent study of 22 predominantly high-income countries revealed that more than 80 per cent of healthcare workers there were fully vaccinated against coronavirus, according to the WHO.
"The majority of Africa's health workers are still missing out on vaccines and remain dangerously exposed to severe Covid-19 infection," WHO's Africa director Matshidiso Moeti said after revealing just 27 per cent of health workers on the continent were jabbed.
"It is important to have high vaccine coverage among health workers not only for their own protection but also for their patients and to ensure health care systems keep operating during a time of extreme need," the WHO said.
Only one country in Africa had the necessary number of health workers -- 10.9 per 1,000 population -- while 16 countries had fewer than one per 1,000, according to the WHO.
"Any loss of these essential workers to Covid-19 due to illness or death therefore heavily impacts on service provision capacity," the WHO said.
The WHO intervention came as scientists in South Africa revealed that they had detected a new Covid-19 variant with "a very high number of mutations", blamed for an "exponential" surge in infections there.
For the first time since the third wave peak in August, cases in Southern Africa have increased, jumping 48 per cent to November 21, compared with the previous week.
"With a new surge in cases looming over Africa following the end-of-year festive season, countries must urgently speed up the rollout of vaccines to health care workers," said Moeti
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