The Daily - A Covid Mystery in Africa
Episode Date: April 7, 2022As countries have struggled with disease and death throughout the coronavirus pandemic, one part of the world seems to have been mostly spared: central and western Africa.South Africa was deeply affec...ted by waves of the coronavirus, as were countries in East Africa like Kenya and Uganda. But nations in the center and west of the continent appear to have been largely spared.What is behind these low case and death rates — and what does that tell us about the future of the pandemic?Guest: Stephanie Nolen, a global health reporter for The New York Times.Want more from The Daily? For one big idea on the news each week from our team, subscribe to our newsletter. Background reading: The coronavirus was expected to devastate Africa, but higher-income and better-prepared countries appear to have fared far worse.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.Â
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
This is The Daily.
Throughout the pandemic, as countries have struggled with disease and death, one part
of the world seems to have been mysteriously spared, Central and Western Africa.
spared. Central and Western Africa. My colleague, Stephanie Nolan, traveled to Sierra Leone to investigate why that is and what it tells us about the future of the pandemic.
It's Thursday, April 7th.
So, Stephanie, you're a global health reporter at The Times.
Tell me about the kind of reporting that you've been doing during the pandemic.
So, generally, a global health reporter looks at the big health problems that cut across regions of the world, things like
infectious disease, malaria, tuberculosis, HIV. But of course, in the COVID era, that's mostly
meant reporting on COVID. And I've been doing a lot of reporting in particular on vaccination and
on the efforts to try to vaccinate the world. And in February, I took a trip in Sierra Leone,
where I was hoping to figure out what was happening in some of the least vaccinated countries and also to do some reporting on some of the other issues we haven't paid as much attention to in the pandemic.
So I arrived in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, at what was the height of the Omicron wave. And I was coming
from Canada, which was, you know, a country really in the grip of another wave of the pandemic.
And I hired a vehicle with a driver and I kitted it out with masks and hand sanitizer and rapid
tests. And we headed up to the northwest of the country the first day I was there.
northwest of the country the first day I was there. And it was really startling. We saw there was a big rock concert in the town where we were staying. There was a big football tournament with
people packed in to watch it. Nobody had a mask on. And it really seemed like COVID was just not
a thing people were thinking or talking about at all. When I would ask people, you know, are you worried about COVID?
I mean, they knew what I was talking about, but they couldn't fathom why I would be concerned.
It was like time travel back to 2019.
Like I had landed in a place before COVID somehow.
And right away, I thought, I need to understand what's happening here. Is it that COVID for some
reason is just not here? Or it is here, but it's not making people sick? It's not killing people?
And, you know, I had been reading debate about this in journals for months, this question of
what was happening with COVID in Africa. But until I saw it,
I really didn't understand just how puzzling this was. And I very quickly decided to put aside
some of what I had come to Sierra Leone to report on to try to really dig into this mystery.
Stephanie, to that point, what's the big picture here? I mean, tell me what's been happening in different parts of Africa during the pandemic. Catch me up on how it's played out.
So I'll start with South Africa because that's the country in sub-Saharan Africa that we know the most about. So South Africa, of course, has had a pretty rough time. The beta variant was first identified there. The Omicron variant was first identified there.
They've caused bad waves. We know that there have been probably 300,000 deaths caused by COVID in
South Africa. As you move through the continent, it gets murkier. East Africa has reported some
bad waves in countries such as Kenya, Uganda. There have been reports of people
having to leave bodies outside hospitals because the morgues were full, but they're rare stories.
And as you move into Central and then Western Africa, there've been even fewer reports like
this, right? Much, much lower reports of death. Sierra Leone is a country of 8 million people, and they've reported a total of
7,700 COVID cases and just 125 deaths. That seems incredibly low. It really is.
So how did you start to answer that question, Stephanie? The question of
why Sierra Leone seemed less affected by COVID? What did you do first?
So the first thing I wanted to try and understand
was what was happening with cases.
And the town that I was in, Kalmanquee,
happened to have the regional COVID coordinator's office there.
So I went across town and walked into the office
and it was completely empty
except for the district coordinator, the COVID coordinator, who I found sitting behind his desk all alone in an otherwise completely empty office.
He had a shiny new laptop in front of him, but no internet connection and indeed no power.
and indeed no power. And when I asked him what he knew about cases, he told me really proudly that they'd only had 11 since the start of the pandemic. Oh, wow. 11 for roughly what kind of
population? Oh, it's about 125,000 people in this district. Wow. So that was kind of shocking.
But then the question was, well, how do you know? So I asked him what was happening with testing. And he said the testing was happening over at the hospital. So I went from there a couple miles away to the hospital thinking, OK, maybe somebody else can tell me more about testing.
This is the hospital of the same region. It's the district hospital serving those 125,000 people.
And there's a lab and there were three busy technicians in that lab.
And when I said, you know, what are you doing in terms of COVID testing?
They were pretty blunt.
There's not a lot of resources in this hospital.
So what they do when people come in is they triage.
They test first for malaria.
And if you don't have malaria, they'll test you for typhoid. And if you don't have typhoid,
then they'll test you for COVID. And so they never really need to test anyone for COVID because
before they get to that point, they figured out what they have.
So Stephanie, it sounds like from your reporting, what you're finding is that
number one, the regional coordinator is not doing the testing. And number two, at the hospital,
they have so many other urgent diseases, malaria, for example, that COVID is just
really the last thing on their list. Exactly. There was no way talking
to these regional authorities that I was going to be able to get a good sense of the actual scale of
COVID infection in the country. So I went back down south to Freetown, to the capital, and I went to
see Dr. Austin Demby, who is the health minister of Sierra Leone. And I went into his office in the ministry.
So I cover global health for The Times,
and I am meant to travel the world,
although obviously in the last couple of years
that has not been a thing particularly.
And told him, you know, why I was in Sierra Leone.
I would love to hear from you how it's been going
and what the challenges are.
So thank you very much, by the way.
And he told me about how he used to work for the CDC in the United States,
and he came home just a year ago to take up the job of minister.
I was appointed on the 10th of February last year.
And, you know, that was peak pandemic.
So no vaccination had happened in Sierra Leone at that point. But also. And on the 14th, Guinea declared an Ebola outbreak.
Just a couple of days after Dr. Demby came back to take up this job, an Ebola outbreak was declared.
Oh, wow. So, you know, this is a guy who really knows a thing or two about pandemics.
The lessons learned from Ebola were extremely helpful.
And we started off by talking a little bit about 2014, 15, 16,
when that last really terrible Ebola outbreak, you might remember, went through this region.
You know, 11,000 people died.
It was really devastating for Sierra Leone. When we had Ebola here, people knew what hand sanitizing was.
People knew about not getting in crowds or whether social distancing. People knew about care.
And so they had all that to draw on when they first got the news about COVID.
So that gave us a head start.
And what that meant was Sierra Leone was the last country in Africa to report a case.
And Sierra Leone has constantly reported very, very low numbers throughout all of this outbreak.
Do you worry that that just reflects... And when I started asking Dr. Demby about COVID,
he attributed some of their low case numbers
to the fact that they'd been able to
very quickly mount a strong response.
But then how does Dr. Demby explain the things
that you were seeing in your reporting, Stephanie?
I mean, in the regional coordinator's office,
in the hospital,
this fact that people didn't seem
to be doing any testing.
Right, so I asked him about that.
Can I ask you about that?
Because it's quite extraordinary for me
to come, I live in Canada,
and to travel from a place
where people are pandemic-obsessed,
right, to a place where it's
clearly not on people's minds.
How confident are you in your surveillance?
I said, you know, what do we actually know about how much COVID there is here?
How much are you testing?
How much are you looking?
So that's a really interesting point.
Again, I've got to be careful with this, you know, but I think most of the testing that's
occurring, it's occurring at the airport, you know, which is more entry with this, you know, but I think most of the testing that's occurring, it's occurring at the airport, which is more entry and exit.
And he acknowledged freely that there's very little testing happening.
And so when we say we have silent districts, you know, they're silent either because there are no cases or because we're not testing them. Yeah. But I have a feeling that there's a lot of transmission going on in here.
So it sounds like the health minister of Sierra Leone
is confirming the theory that cases are being severely undercounted.
Yeah, definitely.
There was a survey that was done a while back that indicated
close to 50% of people have been exposed.
Do you believe it?
Oh, yeah. I mean, this is a study that was done by Tulane.
And in fact, he told me about some recent research
that had looked for antibody levels in the population
and had found that probably half the people in Sierra Leone
when that study was done had already been exposed to COVID.
I think we're looking at doing another survey now
to look at the antibody levels in the country,
but I would not be surprised if it's very, very high.
And Stephanie, is there other data to back that up?
Well, there is actually.
There's really interesting data from
the World Health Organization that just came out that shows that two-thirds of people across
sub-Saharan Africa have COVID antibodies. There's other data sources looking particularly at West
Africa that show that 75% of people have got COVID antibodies. And remember, when these studies were done,
only three, four, five percent of people had had access to vaccination.
So if you've got antibodies, it's because you had an infection.
So that kind of answers your original question, right? Clearly, a lot of people in Sierra Leone
did have COVID.
Yeah, absolutely. And in fact, Dr. Demby said this to me pretty much point blank in our conversation. They know lots of people have been infected. However, I'm bored by the fact that
no matter what there is, there's no evident excess deaths that are occurring that's very visible.
But he also talked about something else they're seeing, or actually what they're not seeing.
He was just totally adamant that they're not seeing the death rates that we've seen in other parts of the world.
Everybody else, there are multiple waves in Italy now, in Germany, everywhere else.
People are still dying in the U.S.
In Germany, everywhere else, people are still dying in the U.S.
But when you look here, you see that people are still getting sick.
We're still getting cases, but you don't get the kind of enormity that others are seeing.
And, you know, remember, Sierra Leone has this surveillance system that's a legacy of that terrible Ebola outbreak.
The thing is, we also have a very active surveillance that's going on. Every week,
we've got reports of all of the deaths around.
And he says, look, if there was a spike in deaths in one region of this country
anywhere, we would know about it. And it's just not happening.
We haven't seen any excess mortality that could alert us that there's something going on.
Interesting.
So it sounds like, Stephanie, from what you're saying,
Sierra Leone and a lot of sub-Saharan Africa reported really low case counts during the pandemic.
But data suggests that a lot of people actually have the antibodies, had COVID.
And if we follow what happened in the U.S.,
they should have a lot of deaths, right?
But what the health minister is telling you
is that very few people in Sierra Leone died.
Well, so there I am with a whole new mystery, right?
If lots of people have COVID,
but they don't have deaths to report,
what's going on.
We'll be right back. So, Stephanie, how did you go about digging into this other part of the mystery, which had to do with how many people in Sierra Leone actually died of COVID?
So I started calling up epidemiologists in all different parts of sub-Saharan Africa, people I've known for a long while.
And I started asking them this question of, what do you think is happening?
this question of what do you think is happening?
And after a lot of conversations,
I kind of was left with two really different theories that would explain how,
even though we know there are lots of COVID infections
in Sierra Leone and other countries in the region,
how it could be that people don't seem to be dying.
And what are those theories? Lay those out for me.
Well, the first one is that there is no mystery. There's just lousy data on deaths.
There's not some miraculous thing happening in West and Central Africa or in regions that
report lower COVID deaths. The reason that they would be reporting fewer people dying of COVID
is just that we do a really bad job of counting them.
And the second theory is that, in fact,
there's no way that thousands and millions of deaths have been missed.
Something else is protecting people.
Something else is going on that means people are getting
infected with COVID, but they don't get sick or they don't die at the same rates.
Okay, so let's start with the first theory, because that one seems pretty logical to me. I mean,
if it's clear that cases were being undercounted, then probably deaths were being undercounted,
right? Yeah, I think this is a really strong argument.
We know that death registration in much of sub-Saharan Africa is really, really poorly done.
There are a lot of countries where only 5% or 6% of deaths are ever registered with a civil authority.
Oh, wow.
People don't typically die in medical facilities or hospitals.
They most often will die at home and they get
buried in a small village graveyard. And so that death never gets reported. An excellent Zambian
public health researcher I spoke to told me about a study he's been doing that found that nearly 90%
of the bodies in the main morgue in Zambia were positive for COVID. This was at the height of the Delta wave.
And he said, look, there's just no reason to think
that fewer Zambians would be dying
or Ethiopians or Sierra Leoneans, right?
There's no inherent reason
why there would be fewer deaths here.
Just the record keeping is really weak.
And, you know, there's a model that draws together
lots and lots of different
data sets that The Economist has been running that says there could be up to 3 million COVID
excess deaths in sub-Saharan Africa. Oh, wow. So 3 million deaths that basically have been uncounted.
That's the argument. Now, look, to be clear, that model says the deaths have been undercounted
all over the world. We know that that's true. But according to this clear, that model says the deaths have been undercounted all over the world.
We know that that's true.
But according to this model, the problem of undercounting is the most severe in Africa.
And does that hold water?
Well, you know, a lot of people that I spoke to say there's no question some deaths have been missed, but they're really not buying it.
And that includes the chief of the COVID response for the WHO, the World Health Organization in sub-Saharan Africa.
He said to me, there's just no way. There's just no way that we have missed millions of deaths.
You know, models are useful to a point, but there are lots of other ways of seeing deaths, right? You know, when Zambia had
a bad Delta wave, there were bodies stacked outside the morgue. I mean, a place like Sierra
Leone holds really, really big funerals. People say there's just no way that there could be
hundreds of thousands or even millions of deaths and that we've just missed them.
of thousands or even millions of deaths and that we've just missed them.
And Stephanie, if it were true that there were high case numbers, but low deaths from COVID in Sierra Leone, what would explain that?
Well, that is an excellent question. So again, there are lots of theories. The leading one,
are lots of theories. The leading one, and I think that whatever else is true, this is a part of it,
is age, right? Sub-Saharan Africa has a median age of 19, right? Sierra Leone is right around that as well. And that compares with 43 in Europe, 38 in the United States. And so, you know, we know
that COVID is much more deadly for older people who have lived long enough to have developed the comorbidities such as diabetes that makes COVID really deadly.
The virus is far less likely to kill young people and they're often asymptomatic altogether.
Another argument that I heard quite a bit had to do with temperature.
The fact that it's obviously really quite warm in all of these countries and people mostly live their life outdoors.
Obviously, if you're talking about people who are like in Sierra Leone, primarily subsistence farmers spending the day in their fields, they're not getting exposed to COVID the way they would on a crowded subway train.
Although, of course, now we know that huge numbers of people actually have been
infected. So that theory is a bit questionable. And then finally, the last argument that I heard
quite a bit had to do with other pathogens that people have either been exposed to so many other
coronaviruses that they had protection against COVID or just that, you know, if you make it
into adulthood in a place like Sierra Leone, you've had repeated bouts of malaria, you've been
exposed to lots of other infectious disease, that maybe people just have a level of immunity that
has helped blunt the effect of COVID. That's interesting. And how do these three factors hold up when you compare Sierra Leone to another similar country that had a really bad time with COVID?
million people who've died of the virus. So India also has a young population, right? There,
the median age is about 28. It's also a really warm place where much of life is lived outdoors.
And there's regions of India that have very high rates of infection with malaria. There are lots of other pathogens in circulation. So people would have had prior exposure to lots of things. So we know that those factors were not protective in India.
On the other hand, India is a much more dense place.
It's much more connected.
It has much better transportation.
So it's not a straight comparison to Sierra Leone, but it's enough to suggest that those three things alone don't cover it as an explanation.
suggest that those three things alone don't cover it as an explanation.
So it sounds like what India is showing us is that these factors you're talking about,
they're all playing something of a role, but there's not a single one of them that solves the mystery entirely.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
So I'm wondering, Stephanie, in all the reporting you've done,
how do you even begin to figure out what's true? I mean, is it that COVID deaths in Africa are really being undercounted?
Or that Africans have this really unique immunity to COVID?
You know, where I wound up is that the truth is probably somewhere in the middle.
If you're in a place like Sierra Leone that has incredibly high infant mortality,
it has the highest maternal mortality in the world. Thousands of people die of malaria.
There's all kinds of other infectious diseases that people are prey to.
It is possible that COVID could cause a rise in the number of deaths that wouldn't necessarily
show up the way it would in a
country with overall lower mortality figures. On the other hand, I believe people in Sierra Leone
when they say to me, there have been no extra deaths in my village this year. One person died,
two people died. It's just like all the other years. Nothing unusual has happened here.
died. It's just like all the other years. Nothing unusual has happened here. What I can also tell you is that I was able to sit down and read all of the serious research on the topic in a single
morning. It's not getting anywhere near the level of attention that I feel like it should because
it really matters, right? Like it matters for Sierra Leone, for Sub-Saharan Africa,
but it also matters to everybody else. What are the stakes, Stephanie? Like it matters for Sierra Leone, for Sub-Saharan Africa, but it also matters to everybody else.
What are the stakes, Stephanie? Why does it matter?
sick with COVID or aren't dying from COVID at the same rate in West and Central Africa,
in Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole, understanding where that protection, where that immunity is coming from, that could help us in lots of ways. It could help develop better treatment. It could
help with another generation of vaccines. So it matters for protecting the world, but it also
matters for Sub-Saharan Africa, for Sierra Leone.
There is a goal from the World Health Organization
and the African Union to vaccinate 70% of people,
and Sierra Leone is scrambling to do that.
What you have now is a situation where COVAX came through.
The World Bank came through with funding
that allowed us to buy about $4 million
worth of vaccines. You know, when I spoke to the health minister, Dr. Demby, he was talking about
how there's a lot of resources coming into the country right now to do COVID vaccination, but...
At the same time, we had the Ebola vaccination going on.
There was a polio outbreak. So all of this was going on at the same time.
The same staff was doing all of this.
That is an enormous challenge in a place like Sierra Leone with a health system
that was already really struggling to respond to what people needed.
already really struggling to respond to what people needed.
And not only that, you had to raise awareness, bring people in and vaccinate them. And then trying to convince young, healthy people to get a shot for a disease that,
as we've just been talking about, they really don't think is a risk to them.
It becomes a real burden when people are not sick.
So it sounds like there's this tension here, right?
I mean, public health authorities have been trying to vaccinate 70% of Africa.
But Dr. Demby is finding that that's a really complicated thing to do.
And especially complicated when it's not even clear how much of a threat COVID is to
his country. I think there's a growing, you know, it started as a whisper and then a mutter, and now
it's a kind of out loud conversation about whether getting to 70% in Sub-Saharan Africa makes sense,
whether, you know, pouring resources into vaccination in a place like Sierra Leone
really is the best use of those resources.
My responsibility is how do I utilize the services that I intended for COVID to address COVID,
but at the same time be a resource for rebuilding health systems?
at the same time be a resource for rebuilding health systems.
You know, I think all things being equal, Dr. Demby would really like for his people to be protected from COVID.
Because even if the virus isn't killing people now, the next variant might be deadly.
But...
The other diseases are not going to wait for you to resolve these issues, you know, for
too long.
for you to resolve these issues, you know, for too long.
He also has hospital wards that are full of people with malaria and the highest maternal mortality rate in the world.
And because Sierra Leone gets nowhere near the amount of support
that it needs to try to build a really functional health system,
he's facing these trade-offs.
I would say they're artificial trade-offs
between addressing one disease or another. And so he's in this position where he's having to
really ask himself, what should he do with the limited resources that he has?
Stephanie, thank you. It's a pleasure
We'll be right back
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At least three other men, believed to be Russian soldiers,
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one with his hands tied behind his back. contains original music by Marion Lozano, and was engineered by Chris Wood.
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I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.