Rwanda: COVID 19 Success Story

I left Rwanda suddenly and unexpectedly on November 11, 2019, a day after my grandson was born very prematurely at a whopping 1 lb. 6 oz. and was immediately whisked to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit in an Austin, TX hospital, where he received amazing care and remained until March 24, 2020, when he came home.   He is now doing as well as any baby: smiling, laughing, talking nonstop babytalk, grabbing at every nearby object and even eating baby food.

Despite having been transported to the other side of the world, I continued to follow news in Rwanda. Now, in Rwanda, as here, the big news is the Coronavirus. In mid-March 2020, because of the Coronavirus, the Peace Corps evacuated all volunteers in Rwanda, as they did world-wide, and returned them to their U.S. homes.

Like everywhere in our world that grows smaller and more inter-connected everyday, Rwanda has been hit by the Coronavirus.  However, it has done a remarkable job of keeping its numbers low.  It’s achieved its success using robots and something called “pool testing,” which just means testing pools or groups of people at once.  Its use of robots is no surprise because Rwanda’s government embraces technology.  (You may remember my blog post on Rwanda being the first country in the world to use drones to send medical supplies such as blood to rural hospitals and clinics.)  Its  technique of pool testing combines samples from multiple people in one test to more quickly track new infections. The US FDA only approved pool testing in the US on July 18, 2020, when it gave emergency approval to Quest Diagnotistics to combine test samples of up to four people.

Below is a recent NPR article on Rwanda’s handling of COVID-19.  The article explains how Rwanda has been using pool testing and robots.  Let’s hope Rwanda’s numbers stay down and that our numbers drop soon.  Stay healthy!

A COVID-19 Success Story In Rwanda: Free Testing, Robot Caregivers

A robot introduces itself to patients in Kigali, Rwanda. The robots, used in Rwanda’s treatment centers, can screen people for COVID-19 and deliver food and medication, among other tasks. The robots were donated by the United Nations Development Program and the Rwanda Ministry of ICT and Innovation.

Cyril Ndegeya/Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images

 

 

In some places in the world right now, getting tested for COVID-19 remains difficult or nearly impossible. In Rwanda, you might just get tested randomly as you’re going down the street.

“So whenever someone is driving a vehicle, bicycle, motorcycle or even walking, everyone is asked if you wish to get tested,” says Sabin Nsanzimana, director general of the Rwanda Biomedical Center, which is the arm of the ministry of health that’s in charge of tackling COVID-19. Health officials in personal protective equipment administer the test. Nsanzimana says the testing is voluntary, although some others say refusal is frowned upon.

The sample collection — from a swab up the nose — and filling out the contact information paperwork takes about five minutes.

“All these samples are sent that day to the lab,” Nsanzimana says. “We have a big lab here in Kigali. We have also six other labs in the other provinces.”

Despite being classified by the World Bank as a low-income country, and despite its limited resources, Rwanda has vowed to identify every coronavirus case. Anyone who tests positive is immediately quarantined at a dedicated COVID-19 clinic. Any contacts of that case who are deemed at high risk are also quarantined, either at a clinic or at home, until they can be tested.

Nsanzimana says health workers call or visit every potential contact of someone who tests positive.

“We really believe that doing so is important to make sure we detect and trace where the virus could be,” he says.

Comprehensive contact tracing is a task that has overwhelmed countries with far more resources than Rwanda. Rwanda’s per capita income is roughly $2,000 per year. Yet all testing and treatment for the virus is provided for free.

It costs the government between $50 and $100 to run a single coronavirus test, Nsanzimana says. In order to test thousands a day, Rwanda has started using a process called “pool testing.” Material from 20-25 nasal swabs are all put into one vial and run through the machine. This allows them to test far more samples at once. If they get a positive result, then all the swabs that went into that initial vial are tested individually to pinpoint the person who’s infected.

Nsanzimana says Rwanda’s experience dealing with other infectious disease outbreaks is helping it now during the pandemic.

The country is using systems and equipment it already had in place to address HIV.

“The main machines we are using for COVID testing are the HIV machines that were (already) there,” he says. “We are using the same structure, same people, same infrastructure and laboratory diagnostics, but applying it to COVID testing.”

Since recording its first case in mid-March, the country of 12 million has recorded just over 1,200 cases. Ohio has a similar size population and has recently been reporting roughly 1,200 cases a day.

“Rwanda did a few things that are quite smart,” says Sema Sgaier, the head of the Surgo Foundation, which has just launched a new data tool to analyze trends around COVID-19 across Africa. “One is they responded really early. They put some of the most stringent lockdowns in place compared to every other African country. In fact, we’ve been monitoring physical distancing data across the continent and Rwanda fares, I think, second; they’ve physical distanced the second most across Africa” — a conclusion based on mobile phone movement data. South Africa is No. 1.

Rwanda mobilized community health care workers and police and college students to work as contact tracers. It set up national and regional command posts to track cases. It’s even using human-size robots in the COVID-19 clinics to take patients’ temperatures and deliver supplies.

Tolbert Nyenswah, who ran the Liberian ministry of health’s response to Ebola in 2014, gives Rwanda high marks for how it has been handling COVID-19, even if at times it’s heavy-handed.

Whether the people trust or fear the government, Rwandans listen to their government and have been following the orders regarding masks, washing hands and staying home.

Nyenswah worries that the worst is yet to come in Africa with this pandemic.

“No country is out of the woods yet,” he says. However, he adds that Rwanda is an example to other low-income countries that even with limited resources, this virus can be contained. “So what needs to be done is to follow the (prevention and containment) measures. Political leadership is very, very crucial. Rwanda should continue what it is doing now. And other countries should emulate Rwanda.”

 

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