FG confirms fresh Lassa fever cases in Edo, Ondo, Bauchi
- Federal Government has confirmed fresh Lassa fever cases in Edo, Ondo and Bauci states
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The government also said that 44 cases of Lassa fever had been
confirmed since December 2016 in nine states including Ogun, Plateau,
Bauchi, Taraba, Edo, Nasarawa, Rivers, Ebonyi and Ondo
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A Director at the NCDC, a parastatal of the Federal Ministry of Health,
Mrs Elsie Ilori, said there should be proper sensitisation at all
levels based on the evidence that Lassa fever was seasonal and could be
endemic
The Federal
Government on Wednesday 8th February said that 44 cases of Lassa fever
have been confirmed since December 2016 in nine states including Ogun,
Plateau, Bauchi, Taraba, Edo, Nasarawa, Rivers, Ebonyi and Ondo, with
some of the cases reported as probable.
The
Punch reports that the government also announced that seven new cases
of Lassa fever had been reported and confirmed in Edo, Ondo, and Bauchi
states.
While
four of the seven new cases were reported in Edo state, two was
reported in Ondo while Bauchi had one case reported in the weekly report
collated by the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control.
A
Director at the NCDC, a parastatal of the Federal Ministry of Health,
Mrs Elsie Ilori, stated this during a Lassa fever advocacy meeting with
the theme: “What is the situation out there on Lassa fever?”
She
called for proper sensitisation at all levels based on the evidence
that Lassa fever was seasonal and could be endemic with the rationale
that it would occur but should not be the cause of death.
She
said that states as well as local governments were expected to get
their own supplies of drug as the Federal Government had given them
supplies already.
Ilori said: “The first case
last year was reported on December 19 and so far, there have been
reported cases in nine states and the states are Ogun, Plateau, Bauchi,
Taraba, Edo, Nasarawa, Rivers, Ebonyi and Ondo. In some of these states,
Lassa fever is endemic.
"We
have had 44 confirmed cases since December and seven of them were
laboratory-confirmed while seven were probable. Probable cases are cases
that we were not able to collect the laboratory samples and those cases
died.
“The fatality rate is
high because people are not sensitised enough. We have 54.5 per cent
fertility rate. So far, we have reported seven laboratory-confirmed
cases and they are Edo which reported four, Ondo which reported two and
Bauchi which had one.”
The Chief
Executive Officer of NCDC, Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, said to stem the
scourge of Lassa fever in the country, healthcare workers must always
apply universal precautions stipulating that medical personnel and
patients must insist on having a test before treatment as malaria and
Lassa fever have very similar symptoms.
While
encouraging patients not to embark on self treatment, he said it was
proper that heaps of refuse were properly collected and disposed in
order to end the challenge posed by Lassa fever.
To
achieve this, he said individuals and organisations must be held
accountable as rodents, the primary vectors for Lassa fever, would
always abound in dirty environments.
It was learnt that the Federal
Government had recently raised the alarm over an increasing number of
Lassa fever cases since December 2016 and advised that attention should
be focused on prevention.
The government had specifically confirmed the death of six persons out of the 19 confirmed cases of Lassa fever in seven states.
Already, Lassa fever working groups has been set up at the NCDC to ensure no state was left behind.
“When
diagnosis and treatment is late, it reduces the likelihood of recovery.
Lassa fever is curable when there is rapid laboratory testing to
confirm the disease, leading to early commencement of treatment.
Critically, Lassa fever transmission in healthcare settings can be
prevented by strict adherence to universal precautions. Doctors and
nurses are advised to hold each other accountable to insist on these
precautions,” the NCDC said.
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