AAS Open Research (Mar 2021)

Kenya’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic: a balance between minimising morbidity and adverse economic impact [version 2; peer review: 1 approved, 3 approved with reservations]

  • Edwin N. Wangari,
  • Peter Gichuki,
  • Angelyne A. Abuor,
  • Jacqueline Wambui,
  • Stephen O. Okeyo,
  • Henry T.N. Oyatsi,
  • Shadrack Odikara,
  • Benard W. Kulohoma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12688/aasopenres.13156.2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has ravaged the world’s socioeconomic systems forcing many governments across the globe to implement unprecedented stringent mitigation measures to restrain its rapid spread and adverse effects. A disproportionate number of COVID-19 related morbidities and mortalities were predicted to occur in Africa. However, Africa still has a lower than predicted number of cases, 4% of the global pandemic burden. In this open letter, we highlight some of the early stringent countermeasures implemented in Kenya, a sub-Saharan African country, to avert the severe effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. These mitigation measures strike a balance between minimising COVID-19 associated morbidity and fatalities and its adverse economic impact, and taken together have significantly dampened the pandemic’s impact on Kenya’s populace.