Nurses work on the Covid-19 ward in a hospital in South African township Thembisa, northeast of Johannesburg. Coronavirus infections here have been dropping, but Africa's hardest-hit country has passed 50,000 recorded deaths.
Salome Mkoana is the Covid-19 ward manager at Thembisa Hospital. "Every day when I go home I pray" she says.
"I ask God 'Please God, can you please help me to go through this?' That is why I am like this now, but I am exhausted. I need leave. Now I am exhausted, but anyway, by the grace of the Lord that is why I am here right now." Mkoana stressed.
On Monday South Africa's Health minister Dr Zweli Mkhize raised concern over a third wave of Covid-19 infections post-Easter. The likelihood comes as the country continues to roll out its vaccinations strategy.
“We are all concerned about the possibility of a third wave, or resurgence after Easter (April),” Mkhize said in a Wits panel discussion on Covid-19 vaccine.
"You know our fear is we are just imagining how worse it's going to be, how bad is it going to be? It is going to be the same as the first or second wave or is it going to be worse?
"But the good thing is we understand it more. So, we will be much wiser when we approach the third wave. So, we can't say we are not ready for it, we are ready." Phuti Kobo, Covid-19 ward manager at Thembisa Hospital
#COVID19 UPDATE: A total of 12 794 tests were conducted in the last 24 hrs, with 566 new cases, which represents a 4% positivity rate. A further 84 #COVID19 related deaths have been reported, bringing total fatalities to 50 077 to date. Read more here https://t.co/Hdz1mHyFQr pic.twitter.com/EHaPDE5igg
— NICD (@nicd_sa) March 1, 2021