One more person has died of COVID-19 taking Ghana’s death toll to 1,157 , the latest update from the Ghana Health Service (GHS) said.
The country’s active cases have also dropped marginally to 3,052 after 228 new coronavirus cases were confirmed at the laboratories.
As at 29 September April 2021, the GHS reports that the country’s total confirmed cases increased to 127, 878, out of which 123, 669 have recovered.
So far, 122 cases have been classified as severe while 44 remain critical, according to GHS. Cases detected at the Kotoka International Airport (KIA) are 2,816 with 2,704 recoveries so far.
Vaccination
So far 2,025,183 persons have been vaccinated across the country as at 4 October 2021, the Ghana Health Service said.
Breakdown of regional cases:
Greater Accra Region – 68,864
Ashanti Region – 20,673
Western Region – 7,321
Eastern Region – 6,481
Volta Region – 5,141
Central Region – 4,609
Bono East Region – 2,540
Bono Region – 2,101
Northern Region – 1,722
Upper East Region – 1,454
Ahafo Region – 1,057
Western North Region – 1,003
Oti Region – 837
Upper West Region – 727
North East Region – 270
Savannah Region – 262
Vaccination making difference in declining COVID-19 infections, says GHS
Meanwhile The Ghana Health Service (GHS) said evidence locally and internationally shows that vaccination against the Covid-19 accounts for the steady decline in positive cases.
Additionally, improving adherence to COVID-19 safety and enforcement protocols also contributed significantly to the decline.
Ghana has recorded 128 positive cases of COVID-19 this September, 273 in August and 500 in July, this year.
The GHS said as of 23 September 2021, there were 3,578 active cases, 1,147 deaths, 122,000 recoveries and 126,803 cumulative positive cases after 1.7 million tests.
At a media briefing in Accra on Sunday to update the public on COVID-19 cases, Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, the Director-General of GHS, said the Service had so far inoculated 1.6 million Ghanaians, with 89 per cent of the vaccines coming from AstraZeneca, 10 per cent from Johnson & Johnson, and one per cent from Sputnik V.
He called for the aggressive deployment of COVID-19 vaccines across the 16 regions, especially in marketplaces, lorry parks, churches and mosques.
Dr Kuma-Aboagye said the country had received nearly five million doses of the AstraZeneca Covishield from India, 21,000 doses of Sputnik V, 450,000 doses of Johnson & Johnson, and 1.2 million of Moderna vaccines.
Achieving herd immunity against the COVID-19 had been the government’s primary goal to halt the spread of the disease, he said.
President Akufo-Addo, in February this year, announced that although his administration sought to vaccinate the entire population, he aimed to vaccinate 20 million of the populace by the end of the year.
Fred Dzakpata
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