Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

COVID-19 hits migrants hard

COVID-19 hits migrants hard

ANASTASIA MOLONEY FROM Australia to Egypt, migrants and refugees have been especially hard hit by job losses and economic pain during the coronavirus pandemic, with many struggling to access healthcare and state aid, a survey showed on Tuesday. The survey, published in a report by the Red Cross Red Crescent (RCRC) Global Migration Lab, included 3,250 interviews with migrants in eight countries - Australia, Colombia, Egypt, Ethiopia, the Philippines, Sudan, Sweden and Britain. Migrant workers are over-represented in hard-hit sectors such as food production and hospitality, meaning they have been disproportionately affected by layoffs and wage losses linked to COVID-19, the…
Read More
Syria’s President and his wife test positive for COVID-19

Syria’s President and his wife test positive for COVID-19

SYRIA’S President Bashar al-Assad and his wife Asma have tested positive for COVID-19 after showing minor symptoms, according to his office. FILE PHOTO: Asma al-Assad, wife of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, reacts during the graduation ceremony of professors from Damascus University, who will work at the Syrian Organisation for Persons with Disabilities, in Damascus, Syria December 3, 2018. REUTERS/Omar Sanadiki/File Photo The Syrian leader and his spouse, who announced her recovery from breast cancer in 2019, were in good health and would keep working in isolation at home, the statement said. Syria has seen a sharp rise in infections since…
Read More
Latest on the spread of COVID-19

Latest on the spread of COVID-19

MILLIONS of English children and teenagers headed back to school on Monday for the first time in two months, while New York City high school students are expected to return to the classroom on March 22. DEATHS AND INFECTIONS * Eikon users, see COVID-19: MacroVitals for a case tracker and summary of news. EUROPE * Greece plans to lift restrictions in the retail sector and open schools before the end of March and begin to re-open the tourism sector in May ahead of the vital summer season. * The European Union's executive criticised Belgium for extending its blanket ban on…
Read More
‘Expect post vaccinations side effect’

‘Expect post vaccinations side effect’

THE benefit-risk balance of the COVID-19 vaccines remains favourable after reviewing reports of influenza-like illness in healthcare workers who got vaccinated, a World Health Organisation has concluded. The Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety concluded that the symptoms of an influenza-like illness may be expected as immune responses following vaccinations in general and the reports of COVID-19 vaccines are consistent with the expected side-effects of vaccines, the WHO said.
Read More
South Africa needs to change direction on maternal health to solve child malnutrition

South Africa needs to change direction on maternal health to solve child malnutrition

WHEN we think about nurturing healthy children, we need to adopt a life course approach to maternal nutrition. In other words, a women’s health for the benefit of herself and her child must be prioritised early in life. CHANTELL WITTEN, Lecturer, University of the Free State SHANE NORRIS, Director, DSI-NRF Centre of Excellence in Human Development, University of the Witwatersrand We know that poor nutrition during pregnancy and infancy has long-term consequences for that generation of infants – malnourished mothers, birth malnourished infants. Health and nutrition during this critical window has far-reaching consequences and casts a long shadow of the…
Read More
Follow my vaccine lead –  Buhari

Follow my vaccine lead – Buhari

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari has had his first COVID-19 vaccine shot, part of a bid to boost public confidence as Nigeria attempts to inoculate 80 million people this year. Vaccinating Nigeria's 200 million people, and those in other developing countries, is seen as key to stemming the spread of the coronavirus, but getting doses across the vast nation, with its pot-holed roads and lawless areas, is a huge challenge. Not all Nigeria's states have functioning airports, rail networks are limited, and authorities also have to overcome public distrust around the vaccines. "As a demonstration of leadership and faith in the safety…
Read More
Mozambique’s vaccination plans

Mozambique’s vaccination plans

MOZAMBIQUE expects to inoculate 16 million high-risk people against the coronavirus by 2022, according to a top government health official. Mozambique will begin COVID-19 vaccinations next tomorrow after receiving a donation of 200,000 doses from the China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm) last week. The government initially aims to inoculate about 60,000 health workers in the country of about 30 million. Mozambique’s Deputy National Director of Public Health, Benigna Matsinhe "We will do everything so that the entire eligible population is vaccinated by 2022," said Deputy National Director of Health, Benigna Matsinhe, who acknowledged it will take time given Mozambique's financial…
Read More
Now is not time to relax, warns  WHO

Now is not time to relax, warns WHO

THE arrival of COVID-19 vaccines should not tempt countries to relax efforts to fight the coronavirus pandemic, top World Health Organization officials has warned, citing particular concern about the situation in Brazil. "We think we're through this. We're not," Mike Ryan, WHO's top emergency expert, told an online briefing. "Countries are going to lurch into third and fourth surges if we're not careful."
Read More
COVID-19 disproportionately affects women

COVID-19 disproportionately affects women

GABRIELA BACZYNSKA WOMEN in European Union countries have been disproportionately affected by the coronavirus pandemic because they make up the vast majority of workers in health and other frontline jobs, according to an EU report. The pandemic has also brought a rise in domestic violence against women, the EU's annual report on gender equality said. "The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected women's lives," it read. "There is already ample evidence that the hard-won achievements of past years have been 'rolled back'...progress on women's rights is hard won but easily lost." Health risks to women had increased as had their workload…
Read More