COVID-19 pandemic in Tunisia

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COVID-19 pandemic in Tunisia
COVID-19 Outbreak Cases in Tunisia.svg
Governorates of Tunisia with confirmed cases
  Confirmed 1~9
  Confirmed 10~99
  Confirmed 100~499
As of 15 January 2021
DiseaseCOVID-19
Virus strainSARS-CoV-2
LocationTunisia
First outbreakWuhan, Hubei, China.
Index caseGafsa[1]
Arrival date2 March 2020
(1 year, 6 months, 2 weeks and 1 day)
Confirmed cases668,051 (as of 2 September)[2]
Active cases22,051 (as of 2 September)[2]
Recovered622,353 (as of 2 September)[3][2]
Deaths
23,647 (as of 2 September)[2]
Fatality rate3.53% (as of 2 September)
Government website
covid-19.tn

The COVID-19 pandemic in Tunisia is part of the ongoing pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The disease was confirmed to have reached Tunisia on 2 March 2020.

Background[]

On 12 January 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) confirmed that a novel coronavirus was the cause of a respiratory illness in a cluster of people in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China, which was reported to the WHO on 31 December 2019.[4][5]

The case fatality ratio for COVID-19 has been much lower than SARS of 2003,[6][7] but the transmission has been significantly greater, with a significant total death toll.[8][6] Model-based simulations for Tunisia indicate that the 95% confidence interval for the time-varying reproduction number R t was higher than 1.0 from July to October 2020.[9]

Timeline[]

COVID-19 cases in Tunisia  ()
     Deaths        Recoveries        Active cases
20202021
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAug
Last 15 days
Date
# of cases
# of deaths
2021-08-05
602,757(+0.53%) 20,550(+0.69%)
2021-08-06
605,205(+0.41%) 20,679(+0.63%)
2021-08-07
608,114(+0.48%) 20,809(+0.63%)
2021-08-08
610,660(+0.42%) 20,931(+0.59%)
2021-08-09
613,628(+0.49%) 21,089(+0.75%)
2021-08-10
616,764(+0.51%) 21,220(+0.62%)
2021-08-11
618,124(+0.22%) 21,310(+0.42%)
2021-08-12
620,212(+0.34%) 21,600(+1.4%)
2021-08-13
622,262(+0.33%) 21,745(+0.67%)
2021-08-14
623,940(+0.27%) 21,827(+0.38%)
2021-08-15
625,688(+0.28%) 21,905(+0.36%)
2021-08-16
626,750(+0.17%) 22,025(+0.55%)
2021-08-17
629,702(+0.47%) 22,148(+0.56%)
2021-08-18
632,328(+0.42%) 22,304(+0.7%)
2021-08-19
632,328(=) 22,304(=)

Sources:

March 2020[]

Tunisia confirmed its first case on 2 March 2020, with the victim being a 40-year-old Tunisian man from Gafsa returning from Italy.[1][11]

In addition, 74 suspected cases in Gafsa have been placed under home confinement.[11] Two of the suspected cases violated the confinement measures, and the local health directorate decided to take legal action against them.[11]

In March there were 394 confirmed cases, 10 deaths and 3 recovered patients. The number of active cases at the end of the month was 381.[12]

April 2020[]

There were 600 new cases in April, raising the total number of confirmed cases to 994. The death toll increased to 41. The number of recovered patients grew to 305. There were 648 active cases at the end of the month.[13]

May 2020[]

On 10 May 2020, Tunisia recorded zero new coronavirus cases for the first time since early March.[14]

During May the number of confirmed cases grew by 83 to 1077. There were seven more fatalities, bringing the death toll to 48. The number of recovered patients rose to 960, leaving 69 active cases at the end of the month.[15]

June 2020[]

In June there were 97 new cases, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 1174. Two more patients died, raising the death toll to 50. The number of recovered patients grew to 1031, leaving 93 active cases at the end of the month.[16]

July 2020[]

On 17 July, the Ministry of Public Health announced that 9 new cases tested positive as of 16 July, including 4 cases of local contamination, raising the total to 1336 confirmed cases.[17]

By the end of the month, the number of confirmed cases had risen to 1535, an increase by 361 in July. The death toll remained unchanged. The number of recovered patients grew to 1195, leaving 290 active cases by the end of the month.[18]

August 2020[]

There were 2,268 new cases in August, raising the total number of confirmed cases to 3,803. The death toll rose to 77. There were 2,153 active cases at the end of the month.[19]

September 2020[]

There were 13,602 new cases in September, raising the total number of confirmed cases to 17,405. The death toll more than tripled to 246.[20]

October 2020[]

There were 42,408 new cases in October, raising the total number of confirmed cases to 59,813. The death toll more than quadrupled to 1,317. There were 53,464 active cases at the end of the month.[21]

November 2020[]

There were 36,956 new cases in November, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 96,769. The death toll more than doubled to 3,260. The number of recovered patients increased to 70,851, leaving 22,658 active cases at the end of the month.[22]

December 2020[]

Health Minister Faouzi Madhi extended the curfew until January 15 to cover the New Year's holiday and urging people not to hold end-of-year festivities or travel around the country. The country has seen about 50 COVID deaths per day over the last few months. Although Tunisia has not registered any cases of the new virus variant identified in the U.K., the country has suspended all flights with Britain, South Africa, and Australia.[23]

There were 42,371 new cases in December, raising the total number of confirmed cases to 139,140. The death toll rose to 4,676. The number of recovered patients increased to 105,364, leaving 29,100 active cases at the end of the month.[24]

January 2021[]

The government extended its health curfew and banned demonstrations on 23 January. Tunisia reported 103 virus-related deaths on 21 January, the highest figure to date in the country, among the highest rates in Africa. Travel between regions was banned, bars and restaurants were closed except for take-out food, and university classes were transferred online. About 1,000 people have been arrested since the 2021 Tunisian protests began a week ago.[25]

There were 70,905 new cases in January, raising the total number of confirmed cases to 210,045. The death toll rose to 6,802. The number of recovered patients increased to 162,223, leaving 41,020 active cases at the end of the month.[26]

February 2021[]

There were 23,624 new cases in February, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 233,669. The death toll rose to 8,001. The number of recovered patients increased to 198,398, leaving 27,270 active cases at the end of the month.[27]

March 2021[]

On 2 March, the first cases of lineage B.1.1.7 (the 'UK variant') were reported in Tunisia.[28]

On 17 March, Tunisia received 93,600 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine through COVAX.[29]

There were 20,349 new cases in March, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 254,018. The death toll rose to 8,812. The number of recovered patients increased to 217,293, leaving 27,913 active cases at the end of the month.[30]

April 2021[]

In April 2021, Tunisia extended a curfew from April 9 to April 30 from 7pm to 5 am and banned all public and private gatherings.[31]

There were 55,101 new cases in April, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 309,119. The death toll rose to 10,722. The number of recovered patients increased to 259,957, leaving 38,440 active cases at the end of the month.[32]

May 2021[]

There were 36,355 new cases in May, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 345,474. The death toll rose to 12,654. The number of recovered patients increased to 303,467, leaving 29,353 active cases at the end of the month.[33]

June 2021[]

There were 74,629 new cases in June, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 420,103. The death toll rose to 14,959. The number of recovered patients increased to 354,441, leaving 50,703 active cases at the end of the month. From 13 March to 29 June, 1,821,431 vaccine doses had been administered and 548,997 persons fully vaccinated.[34]

July 2021[]

On 21 July, Tunisian Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi fired Faouzi Mehdi as its health minister and appointed Mohamed Trabelsi as caretaker health minister amid a collapse of the healthcare system due to the increase of COVID-19 cases.[35] There were 175,429 new cases in July, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 595,532. The death toll rose to 20,067. The number of recovered patients increased to 516,831, leaving 58,634 active cases at the end of the month.[36]

August 2021[]

On 6 August, Romania announced that it will begin to deliver for free 1.3 million COVID-19 vaccines to four countries to help tackle the pandemic. The donation to Tunisia consists of 425,000 doses.[37]

There were 68,502 new cases in August, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 664,034. The death toll rose to 23,451. The number of recovered patients increased to 612,150, leaving 26,433 active cases at the end of the month.[38]

Economic consequences[]

On 18 March 2020, the President of the Tunis Stock Exchange (BVMT) noted a 14.2% drop in the stock market index in Tunisia.[39] On 21 March 2020, the flagship index of the Tunis Stock Exchange finished falling by 7.3% to 6,138.82 points.[40]

Statistics[]

Charts[]

Confirmed new cases per day[]

Confirmed deaths per day[]

Total no. of cases (cumulative)[]















Cases identified by Governorate
Governorate Cases Deaths Recoveries
Tunis 883 14 267
Ben Arous 864 7 133
Kébili 190 2 121
Sousse 601 15 136
Ariana 395 9 139
Médenine 270 7 160
Gafsa 83 1 66
Monastir 442 3 71
Sfax 284 7 87
Manouba 116 6 52
Kasserine 73 0 49
Tataouine 130 4 79
Bizerte 118 2 40
Gabès 1044 16 196
Mahdia 90 2 52
Nabeul 213 1 48
Kairouan 190 4 76
Sidi Bouzid 82 3 22
Le Kef 340 2 129
Béja 28 0 17
Tozeur 14 0 13
Siliana 59 0 11
Jendouba 110 2 19
Zaghouan 16 0 8
Total 6635 107 1991
Source: Ministry of Public Health[41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51][3]

As of 15 January 2021

See also[]

  • COVID-19 pandemic in Africa
  • COVID-19 pandemic by country and territory

References[]

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  4. ^ Elsevier. "Novel Coronavirus Information Center". Elsevier Connect. Archived from the original on 30 January 2020. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
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External links[]

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