The death toll from the Lassa fever outbreak in Nigeria has increased to 93, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has disclosed.
NCDC, in its weekly situation update, stated that 1,374 suspected cases and 93 deaths were reported across 21 states including FCT as of March 3.
In the reporting week 09 (February 25 to March 3), 39 new confirmed cases were reported from six states with eight new deaths: in Edo 5, Ondo 2 and Kogi 1.
There has been a spike in the number of new confirmed cases in this reporting week as compared to the last four consecutive weeks.
The reported spike is coming a week after the Director-General, NCDC, Chikwe Ihekweazu, said there has been a steady decline compared to the 2018 outbreak.
Mr Ihekweazu had said in the last four weeks there has been a consistent pattern with the number of confirmed cases and deaths reported across the country.
However, this week has one of the highest confirmed cases, he said.
Specifics
From January 1 to March 3, 1,374 suspected cases have been reported from states that have recorded at least one confirmed case.
Of these, 420 were confirmed positive, 15 probable and 939 negatives (not a case).
Overall, 33 states including FCT have reported 1447 suspected cases.
Since the onset of the 2019 outbreak, there have been 93 deaths in confirmed cases. This makes the case fatality ratio in confirmed cases to 22.1 per cent.
The 21 states which have recorded at least one confirmed case across 66 local government areas are: Edo, Ondo, Bauchi, Nasarawa, Ebonyi, Plateau, Taraba, FCT, Adamawa, Gombe, Kaduna, Kwara, Benue, Rivers, Kogi, Enugu, Imo, Delta, Oyo, Kebbi and Cross River.
'No new infected health worker'
There is, however, no new case of infected health worker in the reporting week.
Since the onset of the outbreak, 15 healthcare workers have been infected in seven states- Edo (7), Ondo (3), Ebonyi (1), Enugu (1), Rivers (1), Bauchi (1) and Benue (1) with one death in Enugu.
The World Health Organisation has also pledged to intensify its response activities to the ongoing outbreak.
WHO said notwithstanding the overall decrease, available records indicate that several states have reported more cases in 2019 than in previous outbreaks.
As at February24, Bauchi, Gombe and Taraba have notably reported more cases (31, 26 and 03 cases respectively) than in 2018 during the worst Lassa fever outbreak to date.
WHO response
Speaking on the reduction in new cases, Clement Peter, the WHO Officer-in-Charge (OiC) for Nigeria welcomed the recent "evolution of the outbreak and the decrease in the number of new cases reported.".
He said WHO continues to help affected states by strengthening their capacity to conduct disease surveillance, treat patients, implement infection prevention and control measures, laboratory diagnostics and engaging with communities?
"WHO has mobilised US$ 400,000 to support response activities and deployed experts to Nigeria and affected states to assist with coordination, active surveillance, case management, laboratory investigation, provision of supplies and research," he said.
Backstory
Nigeria has been combating an outbreak of Lassa fever since the beginning of the year. This has become a yearly occurrence with hundreds of people infected and dozens of deaths recorded. At present, there is no known vaccine for the prevention of the disease.
The disease is often transmitted through rodent and human to human transmission.
In curtailing the spread of the disease, contact tracing has become very crucial.
About 4902 contacts have been identified from 19 states.
Of these, 1926 are currently being followed up, 2923 have completed the 21-day follow up, while four were lost to follow up. Eighty symptomatic contacts have been identified, of which 49 have tested positive
Currently, 69 patients are being managed at various treatment centres across the country: Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital (ISTH) treatment centre -34; Federal Medical Centre Owo - 16; Federal Teaching Hospital Abakiliki - 2; Bauchi -2; Plateau 5; Taraba 7; Gombe 1, Kaduna 1 and Kebbi 1.
According to NCDC, the multi-sectoral one health national rapid response teams (from the NCDC, NFELTP, Federal Ministry of Agricultural and Federal Ministry of Environment) have been deployed to Ondo, Edo, Ebonyi and Taraba
Also, the National Lassa Fever Multi-Partner, Multi-Sectoral Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) continues to coordinate the response activities at all levels
Culled from: All Africa
In the reporting week 09 (February 25 to March 3), 39 new confirmed cases were reported from six states with eight new deaths: in Edo 5, Ondo 2 and Kogi 1.
There has been a spike in the number of new confirmed cases in this reporting week as compared to the last four consecutive weeks.
The reported spike is coming a week after the Director-General, NCDC, Chikwe Ihekweazu, said there has been a steady decline compared to the 2018 outbreak.
Mr Ihekweazu had said in the last four weeks there has been a consistent pattern with the number of confirmed cases and deaths reported across the country.
However, this week has one of the highest confirmed cases, he said.
Specifics
From January 1 to March 3, 1,374 suspected cases have been reported from states that have recorded at least one confirmed case.
Of these, 420 were confirmed positive, 15 probable and 939 negatives (not a case).
Overall, 33 states including FCT have reported 1447 suspected cases.
Since the onset of the 2019 outbreak, there have been 93 deaths in confirmed cases. This makes the case fatality ratio in confirmed cases to 22.1 per cent.
The 21 states which have recorded at least one confirmed case across 66 local government areas are: Edo, Ondo, Bauchi, Nasarawa, Ebonyi, Plateau, Taraba, FCT, Adamawa, Gombe, Kaduna, Kwara, Benue, Rivers, Kogi, Enugu, Imo, Delta, Oyo, Kebbi and Cross River.
'No new infected health worker'
There is, however, no new case of infected health worker in the reporting week.
Since the onset of the outbreak, 15 healthcare workers have been infected in seven states- Edo (7), Ondo (3), Ebonyi (1), Enugu (1), Rivers (1), Bauchi (1) and Benue (1) with one death in Enugu.
The World Health Organisation has also pledged to intensify its response activities to the ongoing outbreak.
WHO said notwithstanding the overall decrease, available records indicate that several states have reported more cases in 2019 than in previous outbreaks.
As at February24, Bauchi, Gombe and Taraba have notably reported more cases (31, 26 and 03 cases respectively) than in 2018 during the worst Lassa fever outbreak to date.
WHO response
Speaking on the reduction in new cases, Clement Peter, the WHO Officer-in-Charge (OiC) for Nigeria welcomed the recent "evolution of the outbreak and the decrease in the number of new cases reported.".
He said WHO continues to help affected states by strengthening their capacity to conduct disease surveillance, treat patients, implement infection prevention and control measures, laboratory diagnostics and engaging with communities?
"WHO has mobilised US$ 400,000 to support response activities and deployed experts to Nigeria and affected states to assist with coordination, active surveillance, case management, laboratory investigation, provision of supplies and research," he said.
Backstory
Nigeria has been combating an outbreak of Lassa fever since the beginning of the year. This has become a yearly occurrence with hundreds of people infected and dozens of deaths recorded. At present, there is no known vaccine for the prevention of the disease.
The disease is often transmitted through rodent and human to human transmission.
In curtailing the spread of the disease, contact tracing has become very crucial.
About 4902 contacts have been identified from 19 states.
Of these, 1926 are currently being followed up, 2923 have completed the 21-day follow up, while four were lost to follow up. Eighty symptomatic contacts have been identified, of which 49 have tested positive
Currently, 69 patients are being managed at various treatment centres across the country: Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital (ISTH) treatment centre -34; Federal Medical Centre Owo - 16; Federal Teaching Hospital Abakiliki - 2; Bauchi -2; Plateau 5; Taraba 7; Gombe 1, Kaduna 1 and Kebbi 1.
According to NCDC, the multi-sectoral one health national rapid response teams (from the NCDC, NFELTP, Federal Ministry of Agricultural and Federal Ministry of Environment) have been deployed to Ondo, Edo, Ebonyi and Taraba
Also, the National Lassa Fever Multi-Partner, Multi-Sectoral Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) continues to coordinate the response activities at all levels
Culled from: All Africa
93 dead as Lassa fever
rages
On March 10, 201912:38 amIn Health, NewsComments
How a poorly understood disease kills 5, 000 people annually
By Chioma Obinna
50 years after Lassa fever was discovered in a Nigeria village called
Lassa, the disease has continued to wreak havoc in communities across
the country.
Statistics show that about 300,000 people across West Africa are
affected and about 5,000 lose their lives annually due to the deadly
disease caused by multimammate rats.
Sunday Vanguard investigation shows that only a few laboratories in the
world can diagnose Lassa virus which often leads to delays in commencing
treatment
While the disease has been adjudged to be endemic in Nigeria following
its occurrence throughout the year, experts say Lassa fever remains a
poorly understood disease that is challenging to diagnose and treat. For
them, to stop the raging outbreaks and improve patients’ survival,
there is need to better understand the mechanics of the disease, develop
better tools to diagnose cases early, evaluate vaccine candidates to
prevent future outbreaks as well as improve treatment molecules.
Largest cases
One event that will remain evergreen in the minds of health-conscious
Nigerians and stakeholders in 2018 will be Lassa fever outbreak. This
is a year adjudged to have recorded the largest Lassa fever cases both
in affected and the number of deaths.
In 2018, statistics from the 23 states of the country reported 3,498
suspected cases of Lassa fever with 45 healthcare workers among the 633
confirmed cases. Since then, the disease has continued to wreak havoc
despite efforts of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) and
other stakeholders.
Sadly, the deadly outbreak took a new twist in January which led the
NCDC to officially declare, on January 22, 2019, another outbreak. Many
Nigerians have been admitted in hospital due to Lassa fever. And these
patients arrive in advanced stages of the disease, which require more
specialised care. At the Federal Medical Centre Owo alone, reports say
more than 50 suspected patients have been admitted in the Lassa ward
recently.
Currently, in the country, the high number of cases has stretched the
treatment capacity while the NCDC and other health workers continue to
do their best to care for patients.
Health facilities are now in need of continued support, especially human
resources, medical supplies and drugs.
For instance, at the Federal Medical Centre Owo, where a medical
Non-Governmental Organisation, Alliance for International Medical
Action, ALIMA, is offering support for victims, Dr Marie Jaspard, in a
report, called for urgent support for more resources following the
increase in cases. According to Jaspard in that report, if the
caseload continues to increase, without further funding, the support
they are providing to the Owo hospital will stop within a month.
Meanwhile the NCDC says although the country is recording a slight drop
in cases when compared with the cases recorded in January when the
outbreak hit the rooftop, in the week ending March 3, 2019, 39 new
confirmed cases were reported from six states of Edo, Ondo, Ebonyi,
Bauchi, Taraba, and Kogi, with eight new deaths in Edo, Ondo, and Kogi.
Overall, 33 states and the FCT have reported a total of 1,447 suspected
cases since the onset of the 2019 outbreak with 93 deaths in confirmed
cases. At least, 21 states have recorded one confirmed case across 66
local government areas.
According to the NCDC situation report, in the reporting week 09, no new
health care worker was affected but a total of 15 health care workers
have been infected since the onset of the outbreak in seven states with
one death in Enugu, 69 patients are currently being managed at various
treatment centres across the country. A total of 4,902 contacts have
been identified from 19 states.
However, many Nigerians keep wondering why it is so hard to terminate
this outbreak despite huge resources being deployed by government and
other partners.
They worry that the disease used to be seasonal but recent outbreaks has
taken a new twist as it has continued unabated.
They ask if there no end to Lassa fever outbreak.
However, Sunday Vanguard investigation shows that the fever, a viral
haemorrhagic fever that spreads through humans contact with infected
multimammate rats, continues to pose a big challenge due to the nature
of the disease and the source of infection.
Also, managing Lassa fever entails a lot. But, unfortunately, 50 years
after the discovery, Nigeria lacks the necessary equipment to diagnose
and treat the disease.
Why outbreak persists
In an interview with Sunday Vanguard during a workshop organised by the
Lagos State branch of Nigeria Medical Association, NMA, Ogun State
Commissioner for Health, Dr Babatunde Ipaye, explained that the primary
source of infection, which is through rat that usually comes in contact
with humans during planting season, has made it impossible to eradicate
or prevent the outbreak.
Ipaye, who noted that Lassa fever has become a consistent epidemic in
Nigeria, said Nigeria will continue to experience the epidemic unless
the country is able to establish the multimammate rats in their natural
hood.
“Lassa fever is no longer new in Nigeria and we should be able to manage
Lassa communications in a very effective well”, he said.
“So what we should be focusing on is to be prepared to prevent the
multimammate rat during Lassa epidemic season. We understand the
epidemiology of Lassa and because the source is not man it would be
difficult to eradicate.”
According to him, the virus does not traditionally affect the
multimammate rat which carries them even if they live with it. So as
long as there is man-animal contact, there will be an epidemic.
Ipaye identified preparedness as one of the strategies to respond to the
epidemic response, stressing the need for Nigeria to start early
communication and information provision for people, particularly farmers
in rural communities who displace these multimammate rats when they
clear bushes which serve as their natural habitation.
“When these rats are displaced from their natural habitations, they will
come close to man and live. And when they come close to man, they
contaminate our food items and, when the food items are contaminated, we
consume them and get infected. Through education, we can enlighten our
people. What we should do is to start early education more than we do
before the epidemic started.
“And after every rainy season, we should try to educate our farmers on
how to dry their foods to make sure that foods in our kitchens are well
covered to make sure that the foods and drinks are not contaminated.
We must maintain good environmental hygiene. Stop putting dirt around
our homes because it attracts rats,” he stated.
“Every fever that exceeds three days after treating malaria should be
investigated. Healthcare providers must maintain a high level of caution
and ensure that universal precaution is adopted as they manage every
patient. Once we do all of these, we will be able to limit the impact of
Lassa fever but to say Lassa will not come that is not possible. Until
we vaccinate everyone and make sure that their immunity is very high. At
the national response level, what we need to do is to commence early
education of our people and also expect that Lassa will come and when it
comes we should be prepared to manage it”.
Stating that government had been offering free dry season vaccination in
epidemic-prone areas, he noted that until the country develops level
health immunity for people, Lassa will continue to live with the people.
Reasons patients die
Sunday Vanguard investigation shows that only a few laboratories in the
world can diagnose Lassa virus which often leads to delays in commencing
treatment.
According to Dr Hilde De Clerck, who spoke during the first-ever
international conference on Lassa fever, held in Abuja in January,
despite half a century since the fever was discovered in Nigeria,
healthcare workers in West Africa still urgently need appropriate
equipment and training to safely manage patients of all ages affected by
the disease.
While the NCDC recently announced the review of its Lassa fever outbreak
response which, it claimed, was yielding positive results, health
watchers are of the view that to effectively tackle outbreak, Nigeria
needs not only better understanding of the mechanics of the disease but
also needs to develop better tools to diagnose cases early, evaluate
vaccine candidates to prevent future outbreaks and improve treatment
molecules, in order improve patients’ chances of survival.
Ebonyi State Commissioner for Health, Dr Umezurike Daniel, pointed out
that one of the major challenges of treating Lassa fever is the nature
of the disease itself because, at the onset, it mimics ailments like
malaria
He explained that a lot of time is wasted before the patient actually
presents for treatment, and the prognosis gets very bad if treatment is
not commenced within six days from the onset of symptoms.
Also, treating Lassa fever requires appropriate use of personal
protective equipment and other infection prevention and control
measures, to protect healthcare workers and relatives of patients.
Efforts to curb disease
The Nigerian government, through the NCDC, may not have relented in its
efforts to tackle Lassa outbreaks. Only last week in a report, the NCDC
Director General, Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu, said the body had launched an
intensive response to the latest outbreak.
According to him, in the last three weeks, there has been a downward
trend in new cases.
Ihekweazu said the number of new cases being reported has become lower
compared to the same period during the 2018 outbreak.
He added that despite the reduction in new cases, response activities
were being intensified at the national and state levels. “Rapid
Response Teams (RRTs), which include officials from the Federal
Ministries of Agriculture and Rural Development and Environment, are
supporting the response in high burden states like Edo, Ondo, Ebonyi,
Plateau and Bauchi”, he said.
Ihekweazu noted that NCDC was also supporting states in ensuring full
availability of drugs, personal protective equipment, reagents and other
supplies required for case management and diagnosis of Lassa fever.
The Centre has also attributed improvements to various factors including
the early deployment of One-Health national RRTs, strengthening of
Lassa fever treatment centres, enforcement of environmental sanitation,
the introduction of the Infection Prevention and Control among others.
NCDC further noted that the surveillance data from previous outbreaks
indicate that the typical peak transmission season for Lassa fever has
not passed, calling on Nigerians to practice preventive measures to
avoid infection.
“Prevention of Lassa fever relies on promoting good community hygiene to
discourage rodents from entering home”, he said.
Prevention and control
According to WHO, prevention of Lassa fever relies on promoting good
‘community hygiene’ to discourage rodents from entering homes. Effective
measures include storing grain and other foodstuffs in rodent-proof
containers, disposing of garbage far from the home, maintaining clean
households and keeping cats. In health-care settings, staff should
always apply standard infection prevention and control precautions when
caring for patients, regardless of their presumed diagnosis.
Health-care workers caring for patients with suspected or confirmed
Lassa fever should apply extra infection control measures to prevent
contact with the patient’s blood and body fluids and contaminated
surfaces or materials such as clothing and bedding.
Laboratory workers are also at risk. Samples taken from humans and
animals for investigation of Lassa virus infection should be handled by
trained staff and processed in suitably equipped laboratories under
maximum biological containment conditions.
Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2019/03/93-dead-as-lassa-fever-rages/
Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2019/03/93-dead-as-lassa-fever-rages/
93 dead as Lassa fever
rages
On March 10, 201912:38 amIn Health, NewsComments
How a poorly understood disease kills 5, 000 people annually
By Chioma Obinna
50 years after Lassa fever was discovered in a Nigeria village called
Lassa, the disease has continued to wreak havoc in communities across
the country.
Statistics show that about 300,000 people across West Africa are
affected and about 5,000 lose their lives annually due to the deadly
disease caused by multimammate rats.
Sunday Vanguard investigation shows that only a few laboratories in the
world can diagnose Lassa virus which often leads to delays in commencing
treatment
While the disease has been adjudged to be endemic in Nigeria following
its occurrence throughout the year, experts say Lassa fever remains a
poorly understood disease that is challenging to diagnose and treat. For
them, to stop the raging outbreaks and improve patients’ survival,
there is need to better understand the mechanics of the disease, develop
better tools to diagnose cases early, evaluate vaccine candidates to
prevent future outbreaks as well as improve treatment molecules.
Largest cases
One event that will remain evergreen in the minds of health-conscious
Nigerians and stakeholders in 2018 will be Lassa fever outbreak. This
is a year adjudged to have recorded the largest Lassa fever cases both
in affected and the number of deaths.
In 2018, statistics from the 23 states of the country reported 3,498
suspected cases of Lassa fever with 45 healthcare workers among the 633
confirmed cases. Since then, the disease has continued to wreak havoc
despite efforts of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) and
other stakeholders.
Sadly, the deadly outbreak took a new twist in January which led the
NCDC to officially declare, on January 22, 2019, another outbreak. Many
Nigerians have been admitted in hospital due to Lassa fever. And these
patients arrive in advanced stages of the disease, which require more
specialised care. At the Federal Medical Centre Owo alone, reports say
more than 50 suspected patients have been admitted in the Lassa ward
recently.
Currently, in the country, the high number of cases has stretched the
treatment capacity while the NCDC and other health workers continue to
do their best to care for patients.
Health facilities are now in need of continued support, especially human
resources, medical supplies and drugs.
For instance, at the Federal Medical Centre Owo, where a medical
Non-Governmental Organisation, Alliance for International Medical
Action, ALIMA, is offering support for victims, Dr Marie Jaspard, in a
report, called for urgent support for more resources following the
increase in cases. According to Jaspard in that report, if the
caseload continues to increase, without further funding, the support
they are providing to the Owo hospital will stop within a month.
Meanwhile the NCDC says although the country is recording a slight drop
in cases when compared with the cases recorded in January when the
outbreak hit the rooftop, in the week ending March 3, 2019, 39 new
confirmed cases were reported from six states of Edo, Ondo, Ebonyi,
Bauchi, Taraba, and Kogi, with eight new deaths in Edo, Ondo, and Kogi.
Overall, 33 states and the FCT have reported a total of 1,447 suspected
cases since the onset of the 2019 outbreak with 93 deaths in confirmed
cases. At least, 21 states have recorded one confirmed case across 66
local government areas.
According to the NCDC situation report, in the reporting week 09, no new
health care worker was affected but a total of 15 health care workers
have been infected since the onset of the outbreak in seven states with
one death in Enugu, 69 patients are currently being managed at various
treatment centres across the country. A total of 4,902 contacts have
been identified from 19 states.
However, many Nigerians keep wondering why it is so hard to terminate
this outbreak despite huge resources being deployed by government and
other partners.
They worry that the disease used to be seasonal but recent outbreaks has
taken a new twist as it has continued unabated.
They ask if there no end to Lassa fever outbreak.
However, Sunday Vanguard investigation shows that the fever, a viral
haemorrhagic fever that spreads through humans contact with infected
multimammate rats, continues to pose a big challenge due to the nature
of the disease and the source of infection.
Also, managing Lassa fever entails a lot. But, unfortunately, 50 years
after the discovery, Nigeria lacks the necessary equipment to diagnose
and treat the disease.
Why outbreak persists
In an interview with Sunday Vanguard during a workshop organised by the
Lagos State branch of Nigeria Medical Association, NMA, Ogun State
Commissioner for Health, Dr Babatunde Ipaye, explained that the primary
source of infection, which is through rat that usually comes in contact
with humans during planting season, has made it impossible to eradicate
or prevent the outbreak.
Ipaye, who noted that Lassa fever has become a consistent epidemic in
Nigeria, said Nigeria will continue to experience the epidemic unless
the country is able to establish the multimammate rats in their natural
hood.
“Lassa fever is no longer new in Nigeria and we should be able to manage
Lassa communications in a very effective well”, he said.
“So what we should be focusing on is to be prepared to prevent the
multimammate rat during Lassa epidemic season. We understand the
epidemiology of Lassa and because the source is not man it would be
difficult to eradicate.”
According to him, the virus does not traditionally affect the
multimammate rat which carries them even if they live with it. So as
long as there is man-animal contact, there will be an epidemic.
Ipaye identified preparedness as one of the strategies to respond to the
epidemic response, stressing the need for Nigeria to start early
communication and information provision for people, particularly farmers
in rural communities who displace these multimammate rats when they
clear bushes which serve as their natural habitation.
“When these rats are displaced from their natural habitations, they will
come close to man and live. And when they come close to man, they
contaminate our food items and, when the food items are contaminated, we
consume them and get infected. Through education, we can enlighten our
people. What we should do is to start early education more than we do
before the epidemic started.
“And after every rainy season, we should try to educate our farmers on
how to dry their foods to make sure that foods in our kitchens are well
covered to make sure that the foods and drinks are not contaminated.
We must maintain good environmental hygiene. Stop putting dirt around
our homes because it attracts rats,” he stated.
“Every fever that exceeds three days after treating malaria should be
investigated. Healthcare providers must maintain a high level of caution
and ensure that universal precaution is adopted as they manage every
patient. Once we do all of these, we will be able to limit the impact of
Lassa fever but to say Lassa will not come that is not possible. Until
we vaccinate everyone and make sure that their immunity is very high. At
the national response level, what we need to do is to commence early
education of our people and also expect that Lassa will come and when it
comes we should be prepared to manage it”.
Stating that government had been offering free dry season vaccination in
epidemic-prone areas, he noted that until the country develops level
health immunity for people, Lassa will continue to live with the people.
Reasons patients die
Sunday Vanguard investigation shows that only a few laboratories in the
world can diagnose Lassa virus which often leads to delays in commencing
treatment.
According to Dr Hilde De Clerck, who spoke during the first-ever
international conference on Lassa fever, held in Abuja in January,
despite half a century since the fever was discovered in Nigeria,
healthcare workers in West Africa still urgently need appropriate
equipment and training to safely manage patients of all ages affected by
the disease.
While the NCDC recently announced the review of its Lassa fever outbreak
response which, it claimed, was yielding positive results, health
watchers are of the view that to effectively tackle outbreak, Nigeria
needs not only better understanding of the mechanics of the disease but
also needs to develop better tools to diagnose cases early, evaluate
vaccine candidates to prevent future outbreaks and improve treatment
molecules, in order improve patients’ chances of survival.
Ebonyi State Commissioner for Health, Dr Umezurike Daniel, pointed out
that one of the major challenges of treating Lassa fever is the nature
of the disease itself because, at the onset, it mimics ailments like
malaria
He explained that a lot of time is wasted before the patient actually
presents for treatment, and the prognosis gets very bad if treatment is
not commenced within six days from the onset of symptoms.
Also, treating Lassa fever requires appropriate use of personal
protective equipment and other infection prevention and control
measures, to protect healthcare workers and relatives of patients.
Efforts to curb disease
The Nigerian government, through the NCDC, may not have relented in its
efforts to tackle Lassa outbreaks. Only last week in a report, the NCDC
Director General, Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu, said the body had launched an
intensive response to the latest outbreak.
According to him, in the last three weeks, there has been a downward
trend in new cases.
Ihekweazu said the number of new cases being reported has become lower
compared to the same period during the 2018 outbreak.
He added that despite the reduction in new cases, response activities
were being intensified at the national and state levels. “Rapid
Response Teams (RRTs), which include officials from the Federal
Ministries of Agriculture and Rural Development and Environment, are
supporting the response in high burden states like Edo, Ondo, Ebonyi,
Plateau and Bauchi”, he said.
Ihekweazu noted that NCDC was also supporting states in ensuring full
availability of drugs, personal protective equipment, reagents and other
supplies required for case management and diagnosis of Lassa fever.
The Centre has also attributed improvements to various factors including
the early deployment of One-Health national RRTs, strengthening of
Lassa fever treatment centres, enforcement of environmental sanitation,
the introduction of the Infection Prevention and Control among others.
NCDC further noted that the surveillance data from previous outbreaks
indicate that the typical peak transmission season for Lassa fever has
not passed, calling on Nigerians to practice preventive measures to
avoid infection.
“Prevention of Lassa fever relies on promoting good community hygiene to
discourage rodents from entering home”, he said.
Prevention and control
According to WHO, prevention of Lassa fever relies on promoting good
‘community hygiene’ to discourage rodents from entering homes. Effective
measures include storing grain and other foodstuffs in rodent-proof
containers, disposing of garbage far from the home, maintaining clean
households and keeping cats. In health-care settings, staff should
always apply standard infection prevention and control precautions when
caring for patients, regardless of their presumed diagnosis.
Health-care workers caring for patients with suspected or confirmed
Lassa fever should apply extra infection control measures to prevent
contact with the patient’s blood and body fluids and contaminated
surfaces or materials such as clothing and bedding.
Laboratory workers are also at risk. Samples taken from humans and
animals for investigation of Lassa virus infection should be handled by
trained staff and processed in suitably equipped laboratories under
maximum biological containment conditions.
Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2019/03/93-dead-as-lassa-fever-rages/
Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2019/03/93-dead-as-lassa-fever-rages/
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