There is evidence that the death rate for those infected with Covid-19 in Africa is on the increase.
And although the overall number of new cases has fallen in some countries, it remains persistently high in others, with many of these cases possibly linked to new variants of the virus.
What's happening to case numbers?
At least 40 countries have now seen a second wave of the pandemic, including all countries in the southern Africa region, says the Africa Centres for Disease Control (CDC).
"This new wave of infections is thought to be associated with the emergence of variants that are more transmissible."
A new variant of the virus - known as 501.V2 - emerged in South Africa last year, and has contributed to record case numbers in the southern African region, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
"Initial analysis indicates that the variant... may spread more readily between people," according to the WHO.
However, it doesn't appear to cause more serious illness.
In South Africa itself, daily new case numbers have started to fall significantly after a second peak.
And because there are many more cases in South Africa than anywhere else on the continent, this has resulted in an overall fall of 17% in cases across the continent, according to the CDC.
In Nigeria, scientists have also identified a new variant of the virus, although they say there is currently no evidence to indicate it is contributing to increased transmission.
However, cases in Nigeria have been on the rise since early December, and are only just starting to trend downwards.
mapped
Show
26,900,000
2,690,000
Circles show number of confirmed coronavirus cases per country.
Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies
Figures last updated 8 February 2021,09:40 GMT
Death rates have been rising
The WHO says twice as many people died of Covid-19 in the four weeks between 29 December 2020 and 25 January compared with the previous four weeks.
However, the numbers have started to level off (the WHO data excludes Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Sudan, Djibouti and Somalia).
During the first stage of the pandemic, Africa's overall fatality rates -the proportion of those with Covid who then die - were lower than those elsewhere in the world.
There were a number of theories put forward as to why that might be the case, such as the relatively younger population, and possible cross-immunity from other coronaviruses.
But the Africa CDC has now warned about rising fatality rates in the continent, saying that of the 55 countries they monitor, 21 are now reporting fatality rates above the current global average of 2.2%.
The fatality rate for Africa has crept up since July last year when it was 2.1% - to 2.5% currently.
It's worth pointing out that the global fatality rate has also come down since the start of the pandemic, which in itself would put more African countries above the global average.
And fatality rates are affected by how much testing is done - a country with low levels of testing will show a higher death rate because many non-fatal Covid cases are going undetected.
data in detail
Scroll table to see more data
*Deaths per 100,000 people
South Africa
46,290
80.1
1,476,135
27 JAN
06 FEB
Egypt
9,651
9.8
169,640
Morocco
8,394
23.3
475,355
Tunisia
7,214
62.4
217,086
Algeria
2,914
6.9
109,088
Ethiopia
2,148
2.0
142,338
Libya
1,953
29.2
124,026
Sudan
1,835
4.4
29,634
Kenya
1,779
3.5
101,819
Nigeria
1,667
0.9
139,748
Zimbabwe
1,326
9.2
34,552
Malawi
856
4.7
27,195
Zambia
853
4.9
62,633
Senegal
682
4.3
28,760
DR Congo
681
0.8
23,599
Eswatini
604
53.2
16,204
Angola
475
1.5
20,086
Cameroon
474
1.9
31,394
Mozambique
460
1.6
44,600
Ghana
457
1.5
70,768
Mauritania
426
9.7
16,807
Namibia
375
15.3
34,973
Mali
338
1.8
8,176
Uganda
327
0.8
39,848
Madagascar
285
1.1
19,360
Rwanda
220
1.8
16,451
Lesotho
183
8.7
9,380
Niger
165
0.7
4,612
Botswana
163
7.2
23,503
Ivory Coast
162
0.6
29,825
Cape Verde
135
24.8
14,423
Burkina Faso
134
0.7
11,285
Somalia
134
0.9
4,862
Gambia
134
5.9
4,237
Chad
125
0.8
3,497
Congo
122
2.3
8,060
Comoros
108
13.0
3,086
Equatorial Guinea
86
6.6
5,578
Guinea
84
0.7
14,687
Liberia
84
1.7
1,956
Togo
80
1.0
5,483
Sierra Leone
79
1.0
3,785
Gabon
71
3.4
11,457
South Sudan
66
0.6
4,355
Mayotte
64
24.7
10,755
Djibouti
63
6.6
5,947
Central African Republic
63
1.4
4,989
Benin
55
0.5
4,193
Réunion
47
5.3
10,487
Guinea-Bissau
46
2.5
2,780
Tanzania
21
0.0
509
Sao Tome and Principe
18
8.5
1,351
Mauritius
10
0.8
584
Eritrea
7
0.2
2,326
Seychelles
7
7.2
1,513
Burundi
3
0.0
1,723
This information is regularly updated but may not reflect the latest totals for each country.
** The past data for new cases is a three day rolling average. Due to revisions in the number of cases, an average cannot be calculated for this date.
Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies and UN population data
Figures last updated: 8 February 2021, 09:40 GMT
More importantly, data for deaths should be treated with caution, given the wide variations in how countries record them.
In South Africa, research into excess deaths - that's the number of deaths in a certain period above what would normally be expected - shows that there were 83,918 between 6 May last year and 5 January this year.
The official death toll from Covid-19 since the start of the pandemic is currently at just under 45,000 deaths.
And South Africa was just one of eight countries on the continent that the BBC found in a recent investigation had adequate death registration systems.
So coronavirus deaths across Africa as a whole are likely to be under-recorded.
How much testing is done in Africa?
The WHO says testing in Africa is still low compared to other regions, and there's also concern that irregular levels of testing over time may be masking the true spread of the virus.
There are wide variations in testing rates and while some countries have reduced testing, others have maintained or even increased it at different points during the pandemic.
However, in some countries there are insufficient or no data available on testing to know how much is being done.
The King's Global Health Institute, which tracks the pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa, says that testing activity in some countries also fell back after the first wave of the virus had subsided.
"Those countries that cut back on testing after the first wave will...have had less extensive and timely intelligence from surveillance," it says.
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