The rising spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) on the African continent is gravely concerning. In recent weeks, there has been a large rise in documented coronavirus disease (COVID-19) cases, with over 1 million current cases and 23 000 deaths. 1 The United Nations estimates the disease will cause at least 300 000 deaths in Africa and shift another 30 million people into poverty. 2
During the current pandemic, emergency departments have been highlighted as mission critical locations to screen for syndromic disease, isolate and protect patients and health care workers, triage, and provide immediate care for emergency conditions associated with COVID-19, such as respiratory failure and shock. While emergency care systems are necessary for a successful health sector response, they remain inadequately supported in low- and middle-income countries. A review of 59 countries highlighted the major limitations of emergency care delivery: markedly higher mortality rates than high-income countries and inadequate training across all cadres of health care providers. Reference Obermeyer, Abujaber and Maker3
During epidemics, weak emergency care systems can become overwhelmed by increased demand or directly compromised by the impact of the outbreak. When service delivery is undermined, both direct disease mortality and preventable mortality from everyday emergency conditions can increase dramatically. This is especially true of emergent health conditions that rely on skilled health personnel, medicine, and equipment for treatment. During the 2014 Ebola outbreak, strains on the overall health system led to excess mortality from non-Ebola-related conditions, including malaria and emergency obstetric conditions. Reference Sochas, Channon and Nam4
Targeted capacity augmentation for emergency departments is necessary now to avoid excess mortality from the expected surge in COVID-19 cases in Africa. Table 1 recommends targeted interventions, based on guidance provided in the 2019 World Health Assembly Resolution 72.16, “Emergency care systems for universal health coverage: ensuring timely care for the acutely ill and injured,” that can have far reaching implications for health outcomes. 5
As Africa braces for a possible explosion of COVID-19 cases in the coming months, excess mortality is not inevitable. Timely, strategic implementation of targeted emergency care solutions in African countries can help avoid needless human suffering and death.
Conflict of Interest Statement
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.