On 12 January 2020, theWorld Health Organization (WHO) confirmed that anovel 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.[2][3]
On 13 March, the first case was confirmed, with the case being placed in isolation.[8]
The case is an expatriate from a yet to be disclosed country, in the Mauritanian capital ofNouakchott.[9]
On 18 March, the Mauritanian Minister of Health announced the discovery of a second positive coronavirus case on a foreign female employee, working at a house of a couple of expatriates, the woman arrived 10 days prior the discovery.[10]
A third coronavirus case was declared on 26 March for a 74-year-old man, a Mauritanian citizen who had arrived in Mauritania on 15 March from France viaAir France.[11]
The country recorded its first death on 30 March 2020.[12] By the end of March there had been six confirmed cases, one death and two recoveries, leaving three active cases.[13]
On 18 April, the last remaining active case recovered. On that date, there had been 7 confirmed cases in the country, 6 of whom had recovered, and one of whom had died, making Mauritania temporarily one of few affected countries in the world to become free of COVID-19.[14]
On 29 April, aSenegalese citizen tested positive. The case is a 68-year woman living in the state ofNouakchott.[15]
There were two new cases in April, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 8. The death toll remained unchanged. Between 18 and 29 April there were no active cases; at the end of April the woman having tested positive on 29 April was the only active case.[16]
On 6 May, with only one active case, restrictions were partially eased.[17] By the end of May, the number confirmed active cases had increased to 480 while the death toll had increased to 23. The total number of confirmed cases grew to 530 in May, 27 of whom recovered.[18]
There were 3707 new cases in June, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 4237. The death toll rose to 128. There were 2612 active cases at the end of June.[19]
There were 27,109 confirmed cases in 2021, bringing the total number of cases to 41,473. 27,497 patients recovered in 2021 while 517 persons died, bringing the total death toll to 866. At the end of 2021 there were 1,432 active cases.[22]
Modelling by WHO's Regional Office for Africa suggests that due to under-reporting, the true number of infections by the end of 2021 was around 2.1 million while the true number of COVID-19 deaths was around 1083.[23]
2022 cases
On 4 January, it was confirmed that PresidentMohamed Ould Ghazouani had tested positive for COVID-19.[24]
There were 21,952 confirmed cases in 2022, bringing the total number of cases to 63,425. 131 persons died, bringing the total death toll to 997.[25]
2023 cases
There were 373 new cases in 2023, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 63,798. The death toll remained unchanged.