Covid-19: Hospitals Run Out Of ICU Beds As Kenya Battles With Third Wave

Covid-19: Hospitals Run Out Of ICU Beds As Kenya Battles With Third Wave

By Spy Uganda Correspondent 

Kenya: Health experts in Kenya are reporting an instant increase in cases of COVID-19, with hospitals struggling to find enough beds for patients needing treatment.

READ ALSO: COVID-19: Uganda Finally Launches COVID-19 Rapid Test Kit

Kenya has so far recorded more than 14,000 COVID-19 positive cases since March 1, including more than 1,100 cases and 25 deaths on Tuesday.

This number accounts for 14% of all infections since authorities announced the first case just over a year ago.

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According to a 34year-old Gaston Wabomba whose mother tested positive for COVID-19 last week, It took him 12 hours to secure a bed for his mother, who was short of breath and had to part with $1,000 before she was admitted to a hospital in Kenya’s capital Nairobi.

READ ALSO: Furious MPs Grill Minister Aceng Over Safety Of Controversial AstraZeneca Vaccine, Mgt Of COVID Funds

“We are on a 24/7 oxygen supply every single day. We are supposed to pay 24,000 for oxygen alone, they charge 1,000 shillings every hour and other medical bills. So our total comes to about 100,000-115,000 on average every single day since Tuesday last week. So she is not stable as yet. Today she’s been moved to a ventilator, but you can only hope for the best, we can only hope,” Wabomba said.

Speaking to journalists in Nairobi, Chief Administrative Secretary at the health ministry Rashid Aman called out health centers charging a lot of money to treat COVID-19 patients.

“This is not only unethical and callous but also unacceptable. I wish to remind our healthcare providers, both private and public, that we are in a pandemic and this being the case it’s not the time to punish our people through some self-seeking money-minting opportunistic escapade,” Aman said.

Some Kenyan medical workers spoke of being overwhelmed with people seeking treatment in their facilities and urged people to follow health protocols to limit the virus’s spread.

Kenya recently began vaccinating the population. The country has received 1.1 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine but only 40,000 people have received jabs.

Chibanzi Mwachonda is the secretary-general of the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists, and Dentists Union. He worries the vaccination drive is going too slow.

“There has been vaccine hesitancy and low uptake, and this is because there was no involvement of the health workers union associations before the rollout and also lack adequate communication sensitization and awareness on the COVID vaccine, In as much as healthcare workers understand the vaccine, let us also remember that we have had a long period of vaccine misconception, so it’s important that we engage the health workers even as we continue with the vaccination,” Mwachonda said.

Meanwhile, Kenya has eased COVID-19 restrictions, schools are open, businesses are open, and worshipers are allowed in the places of worship.

Dr. David Sang, an epidemiologist, says people returning to normalcy are to blame for the increased cases.

“And also because of the numbers, the numbers also matter because you expect some increased mortality,” he said.

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