Tag: CDC

  • AFI surveillance key to outbreak response, says U.S. CDC

    AFI surveillance key to outbreak response, says U.S. CDC

    …calls for sustained reforms

    The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S. CDC) has called for sustaining and strengthening Acute Febrile Illness (AFI) surveillance in Nigeria by addressing persistent challenges that continue to limit its impact.

    These include the absence of a clear policy, limited geographical coverage of testing facilities, poor diagnostic capacity, delays in transporting samples, difficulties maintaining sample integrity, staff attrition, and slow turnaround times for results.

    The agency said closing these gaps is critical to improving AFI surveillance, which is vital in protecting public health.

    It, however, commended the Nigerian government and the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) for taking greater ownership of the AFI programme, with the integration of AFI into Nigeria’s national disease control structures already underway to help ensure sustainability.

    Speaking at a media roundtable in Abuja, the Senior Public Health Specialist for Epidemiology and Surveillance at the U.S. CDC Nigeria, Dr. Oladipupo Ipadeola, explained that limited laboratory diagnostic capacity for AFI often leads to misdiagnosis or underdiagnosis of diseases, resulting in inappropriate treatment and poor patient management.

    He noted that the U.S. CDC support for AFI surveillance in Nigeria, delivered in collaboration with the NCDC, Institute of Human Virology, Nigeria (IHVN), and other partners, has become indispensable because of the widespread and complex nature of AFI.

    “Acute febrile illnesses are among the most common reasons why people seek healthcare. Yet, they are often misunderstood, presenting with similar symptoms that make it difficult to identify the exact cause.

    “That is why we need robust surveillance systems”, Ipadeola said.

    He said AFI surveillance helps determine the prevalence and burden of diseases, their causes, and how they spread.

    “The overall intent of this system is to help improve early detection, enhance capacity, and strengthen data, ultimately helping us respond better and faster to outbreaks,” he added, stressing that the goal is to safeguard the health of Nigerians.

    Read Also: NCDC assures states in North Central region of fair sharing of projects

    According to him, the U.S. CDC, in partnership with the NCDC, IHVN, and other stakeholders, has already established sentinel surveillance sites across Nigeria’s six geopolitical zones.

    This, he said, has resulted in more than 11,000 samples being tested for priority diseases such as malaria, dengue, yellow fever, Lassa fever, and COVID-19.

    In addition, he said laboratory capacity has also been strengthened through upgraded equipment, with the introduction of multiplex PCR testing, and the training of staff in selected facilities.

    Dr. Ipadeola highlighted that AFI surveillance is a core part of the U.S. CDC’s efforts to advance global health security, noting that in Nigeria, it is helping to identify disease patterns, detect co-infections, and build stronger diagnostic systems.

    While coordination of the programme was handed over to the NCDC in August 2024, the U.S. CDC continues to provide technical support, rapid diagnostic kits, and laboratory reagents to improve testing at sentinel sites, he revealed.

    He acknowledged Nigerian government initiatives, such as health education campaigns, malaria control programmes, vaccination drives, and integrated disease surveillance, as important contributions to improving outcomes.

    However, he noted that challenges remain, with delays in transporting samples from sentinel sites to the National Reference Laboratory sometimes compromising sample integrity, while staff attrition at some sites has weakened consistency.

    “In terms of sample turnaround time, patients want to quickly know their results. But it is important to emphasize that AFI testing is for surveillance purposes, not direct treatment,” he explained.

    Looking ahead, Dr. Ipadeola stressed that with sustained support from the U.S. CDC and its partners, lessons from Nigeria’s AFI surveillance programme will not only strengthen outbreak response locally but also contribute significantly to global health security.

    In her remarks, Dr. Farah Husain, Programme Director at the U.S. CDC Nigeria, highlighted the need to strengthen surveillance for Acute Febrile Illnesses (AFI), stressing that robust systems will aid in identifying causes, burden, and spread, enabling faster outbreak responses.

    She said the U.S. CDC, in collaboration with the NCDC, is working to establish a sustainable AFI surveillance system to improve early detection, laboratory capacity, and data.

    NCDC Director of Surveillance, Dr. Fatima Saleh, added that stronger advocacy and wider inclusion are vital for sustained impact.

    The Executive Director of the International Centre of Excellence, Prof. Alash’le Abimiku, said the institute has continued to support Nigeria’s effort at ensuring expansion in surveillance and accurate testing for all forms of AFIs.

    Ifeyinwa Ejinkeonye, AFI Sentinel Site Focal Person at Kubwa General Hospital, Abuja (for the North Central zone), said the centre had effectively handled AFI data reporting since the ownership transition and under the new hospital management, but recent challenges with staff attrition and power supply have forced real-time transfer of samples to the National Reference Laboratory.

  • CDC executives get certificates

    CDC executives get certificates

    Alimosho Local Government Chairman Jelili Sulaimon has presented certificates of return to the newly-elected Community Development Committee (CDC) members in the council.

    This is sequel to the directive by the Governor of Lagos State, Babajide Sanwo-Olu. to dissolve all Community Development Committee (CDC) in the state and elect new members.

    The members were presented with the certificates at the Alimosho Local Government Multi-purpose Hall, Akowonjo.

     The presentation was done by the Supervisor for Agriculture and Social services, Adegoke Sosanyan, who represented the Sulaimon.

     The new members are Venerable Adewuyi as Special Adviser Chairman, Alhaji Kassim Kayode as first Vice-Chairman, Elder Z.A Toki as second Vice-Chairman, Abiodun Ashimiu Adegoke as General Secretary, Pastor Rogho as Assistant Secretary, Barrister Adeeko as Treasurer, Jubril Ibrahim as Financial Secretary, Alhaji Mumeen A.O Yusuf as Auditor, Anifowoshe Olaide as Publicity, Kabiru Kasali as Social Secretary, Mrs M.O Popoola as Welfare l, Fakoyede Dupe-Welfare ll, Alhaji Sola Ogunyombo as first Ex- Officio, Alhaji Ishola Adeyemi as Ex-Officio and others.

  • Afreximbank, CDC Group sign $100m Master Risk Participation pact

    The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) and CDC Group Plc have signed a $100-million master risk participation agreement to support Afreximbank’s Trade Facilitation Programme.

    Under the terms signed in Casablanca, Morocco, CDC will provide unfunded risk participation to Afreximbank as the Bank provides trade finance products that include trade confirmation services; trade confirmation guarantee; and irrevocable reimbursement undertakings.

    Speaking during the signing ceremony, Amr Kamel, Afreximbank’s Executive Vice President for Business Development and Corporate Banking, said that agreement will support Afreximbank’s trade confirmation services under which the Bank provides confirmation lines to African financial institutions to support their trade businesses and increase capacity to undertake trade finance transactions.

    It will also support the Afreximbank Trade Confirmation Guarantee Programme, which offers full guarantee to international banks on behalf of African financial institutions, with the aim of resolving the issue of lack of credit limit by international/confirming banks for the African counterparts or situations of limited credit limit due to capacity constraints, among others.

    Also speaking, Admir Imami, Director, Supply Chain Finance and Trade Finance of CDC, who signed on behalf of his company, said CDC was excited at the opportunity to work with Afreximbank and looked forward to many more joint projects and deals in the future.

    Also speaking at the just concluded Afreximbank structured trade finance in Casablanca, Kamel said structured trade finance offers Africa a vital pathway to boosting intra-African trade and increasing the continent’s global exports.

    Addressing the opening of the Fundamentals of Structured Trade Finance Seminar and Workshops, he regretted that Africa still suffered from a deficit of expertise in structured finance even though it was widely acknowledged as a highly effective trade financing tool.

    He said Afreximbank remained committed to equipping African financiers with the knowledge required to structure bankable trade and trade related project finance transactions.

    “This 18th Structured Trade Finance Seminar progresses Afreximbank’s goal of strengthening the capacity of its partners and clients in understanding trade and trade-related project financing issues as they affect Africa and is driven by the widening trade financing gap and the challenge of increasing the continent’s share of global trade,” he said.

    Kamel added that Africa had much to learn from the economic transformation of Morocco, noting that “Many years of modernising and expanding its infrastructure has successfully transformed Morocco into a commercial crossroads between Africa and the West.”

    In her address on behalf of the Government of the Kingdom of Morocco,  Zaaboul thanked Afreximbank for having chosen Morocco to host the seminar which represents a platform for learning and exchange on an important theme relating to structured trade finance

    Zaaboul stressed the role that intra-African trade can play in structuring development, especially as a vector of regional integration

    The Structured Trade Finance seminar and workshop is being attended by more than 200 participants and experts from across the globe, including executives of banks, law firms and other financial institutions, senior government officials and financial regulators as well as corporates actively engaged in the promotion and financing of African trade and trade-related projects.

  • Lagos council  presents bus to CDC

    Lagos council presents bus to CDC

    The Sole Administrator Ejigbo Local Council  Development Area (LCDA), Lagos Ibrahim Adigun has presented an 18-seater Coaster bus to the Community Development Committee (CDC) in the council.

    He said the gesture was in fulfilment of one of the promises he made about four months ago at a stakeholders’ forum to the community, adding that the aim was to ease the CDC’s work.

    He expressed satisfaction with their cooperation with his administration, urging them to extend same to the incoming chairman.

    The CDC Vice Chairman, Bashorun Ojo Oguntimole, described the gift as historic, noting that it was the first of its kind in the history of the community.

    ‘’It is ground-breaking. It makes us happy. We appreciate it; despite the recession, the Sole Administrator still gave us this. The bus will be very useful for our programmes,” Oguntimole said.

    The All Progressives’ Congress (APC) Chairman in the council, Mr Michael Adegoke thanked Adigun for the gesture.

    He described Adigun as a hardworking administrator who executed people-oriented programmes within a short time.

  • CDC chair urges youths to be hard working

    Chairman, Community Development Committee (CDC) and SSA, Community Affairs, Ifako Ijaiye Local Government, Lagos State, Chief Ashimiyu Onifade has urged youths to be hardworking.

    He spoke during the election of the National Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN) Ifako Ijaiye, Local Government branch in Lagos State.

    Chief Onifade urged youths to be careful and listen to advice from elders.

    “Youths have to work hard for what they get; don’t expect to achieve what you did not work for, present yourself very well, don’t misbehave, don’t be an enemy of your community, but be friendly to your society,” he said.

    Chief Onifade added that youths should work together for the betterment of the nation, nothing that to build a nation, you must first build yourself.

    He urged youths to put away the ambition of being without control, saying they should be open to learn from elders.

    Deputy Executive Secretary, Ifako Ijaiye Local Government, AbdulWahab AbdulKareem told the new leaders of the council to be alive to their responsibilities and show a sign of seriousness and positive change in the activities of the council.

    He added that they should be able to coordinate the affairs of all the councils in the local government and should be ready to serve and lead.

    He noted that the local government has always been and will always be there to assist the youths.

    Head of Department, Agric Research and Social Development, Ifako Ijaiye Local Government, Mrs Solo Adeyinka added that youths must be law abiding citizen. She said they must show practical examples of being a leader and work harder to lift the country following the present state of the economy.

    She urged them to come up with vocational skills asides their career, nothing that the local government empowers youths in vocational training and in provision of equipments for them to start up businesses of their own.

    She urged the new leaders of the council not to be biased, but should carry their followers along so that they can work in one accord to move the local government forward.

    Chairman, NYCN, Lagos State Chapter, Olayinka Oresile said the council is meant to be of benefits to her citizens so that they can be good citizens to the nation that would contribute to national development. He urged youths to be good ambassadors of their community.

     

  • Ebola patient in America ‘fighting for his life’, says CDC chief

    Ebola patient in America ‘fighting for his life’, says CDC chief

    The first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States was fighting for his life at a Dallas hospital yesterday and appeared not to be receiving any of the experimental medicines for the virus, the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

    Thomas Eric Duncan became ill after arriving in the Texas city from Liberia two weeks ago, heightening concerns that the worst Ebola epidemic on record could spread from West Africa, where it began in March. The hemorrhagic fever has killed at least 3,400 people out of at least 7,490 probable, suspected and confirmed cases.

    “The man in Dallas, who is fighting for his life, is the only patient to develop Ebola in the United States,” CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

    In a media briefing with reporters on Sunday, Frieden said he was scheduled to brief President Barack Obama today.

    He said doses of the experimental medicine ZMapp were “all gone” and the drug is “not going to be available anytime soon.”

    A second experimental drug can be “difficult to use and can actually make someone sicker,” he said.

    Frieden said the doctor and the patient’s family would decide whether to use the drug, but if “they wanted to, they would have access to it.”

    “As far as we understand, experimental medicine is not being used,” Frieden said. “It’s really up to his treating physicians, himself, his family what treatment to take.”

    Duncan remained in critical condition, Wendell Watson, spokesman for Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, said on Sunday.

    Texas law enforcement officials were also seeking a “low- risk” man who was one of 38 people who had potentially had contact with Duncan, health officials told the media briefing. The man had tested negative for fever on Saturday, but officials said they wanted to continue to monitor him.

    At Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas, parishioners prayed for Duncan, congregation member Louise Troh – who is quarantined because of her close contact with Duncan – and both of their families.

    “Although this disease has become personal to us, we realize we’re not the first to know its devastation, and we are not the ones most desperately affected,” Associate Pastor Mark Wingfeld told the church audience.

    He encouraged parishioners to focus not only on the Dallas family but also on those in West Africa stricken with Ebola.

    In Nebraska, another hospital was preparing for the arrival of an Ebola patient who contracted the virus in Liberia, a spokesman said on Sunday.

    Nebraska Medical Center spokesman Taylor Wilson would only identify the patient as a male U.S. citizen expected to arrive on Monday. But the father of Ashoka Mukpo, a freelance cameraman working for NBC News who contracted Ebola in Liberia, told Reuters on Friday that his son was going to Nebraska for treatment.

    Duncan’s case has highlighted problems that American public health officials are trying furiously to address: The Dallas hospital that admitted him initially did not recognize the deadly disease and sent him home with antibiotics, only for him to return two days later in an ambulance.

    “The issue of the missed diagnosis initially is concerning,” Frieden said, adding that public health officials had redoubled their efforts to raise awareness of the disease.

    “We’re seeing more people calling us, considering the possibility of Ebola – that’s what we want to see,” he said on CNN. “We don’t want people not to be diagnosed.”

    Frieden said he was confident the disease would not spread widely within the United States. U.S. officials are also scaling up their response in West Africa, where Ebola presents an enormous challenge, he added.

    “But it’s going to take time,” Frieden said. “The virus is spreading so fast that it’s hard to keep up.”

    When asked on Sunday if the United States should suspend flights to and from affected countries or impose a visa ban on travelers from those countries, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said “absolutely not.”

    “When you start closing off countries like that, there is a real danger of making things worse,” Fauci said on “Fox News Sunday.”

    “You can cause unrest in the country,” he said. “It’s conceivable that governments could fall if you just isolate them completely.”

    The CDC has identified 10 people who had direct contact with Duncan as being at greatest risk of infection. Another 38 were being monitored as potential contacts, out of 114 people initially evaluated for exposure risks. None from either group has shown symptoms, Frieden said.

    At Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas, where Louise Troh, the quarantined girlfriend of the first patient in the United States diagnosed with Ebola, is a member of the congregation, greeters passed out bulletins and shook hands at the church entrances. Members hugged one another in greeting shortly before the service began. A couple hundred people sat in the pews of the church and began to pray for the patient, Thomas Eric Duncan, and for Troh and both of their families.

    Associate Pastor Mark Wingfeld led the opening prayer and encouraged members not only to focus on the family in Dallas but also on those stricken with the deadly virus in West Africa who don’t have the same access to medical care.

    “Although this disease has become personal to us, we realise we’re not the first to know its devastation and we are not the ones most desperately affected,” Wingfeld told parishioners.

    “We pray that you calm the anxious hearts of so many in our city. Help the ignorant understand the truth.”

    Parishioners were told by church officials earlier in the week that neither Troh nor any of her family members had attended services since Duncan’s arrival so there was no chance of exposure within the congregation.

    Medical authorities have identified 10 people who had direct contact with Duncan as being at greatest risk of infection. Troh, whom Duncan has been staying with since he arrived on a visit from West Africa, is one of them.

    “Whether there had been contact or not, maybe we would be acting differently, but I’d like to think we wouldn’t,” Julie Sorrels, 33, said.

    Some African immigrants in Dallas are worried that the case of a Liberian man who is sick with the Ebola virus in a city hospital is generating ill-feeling, including some taunts and finger-pointing, toward the wider community.

    “Some people around here see us as bringing the disease and that’s just not right,” said a Liberian who asked to be called Sekou.

    Some African immigrants in Dallas, while saying they are thankful to the United States and its people for taking them in, say handshakes are fewer and curious glances more frequent since Thomas Eric Duncan was admitted to hospital last month with Ebola. His was the first diagnosed case of the disease in the United States.

    Duncan, who was visiting from Liberia when he fell ill, was staying in the melting-pot neighborhood of Vickery Meadow, home to about 25,000 people who speak more than 30 languages.

    The Dallas case has put authorities and the public on alert over concerns that the Ebola epidemic could spread from West Africa, where it began in March and where it has killed more than 3,400 people. The epidemic has hit hardest in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.

    Some immigrants from Somalia wearing traditional clothing that includes headscarves for women, say they have seen fingers pointed their way on the neighbourhood streets.

    “People are looking at us in a bad way. We didn’t have anything to do with this. Somalia does not have Ebola. It is on the other side of Africa,” said Shadiya Abdi, 27, an immigrant from Somalia.

    At schools in Vickery Park, where five students who came in close contact with Duncan have temporarily stopped attending school, some of the other children of African immigrants have been branded ‘Ebola kids’,” said local politician Eric Williams.

    In downtown Dallas, near where tourists gather at the site of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, an Ethiopian parking lot attendant who gave his name only as Ayob said a few people have started to see him as an object of suspicion.

    There were nearly 2 million people in the United States who came from sub-Saharan Africa, according to 2010 U.S. Census data.

  • Obama to  discuss  US response  to Ebola

    Obama to discuss US response to Ebola

    US President Barack Obama will discuss the country’s response to the Ebola virus disease outbreak in West Africa with health officials on Tuesday, the White House has said.

    Obama will travel to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta on that day to receive a briefing on the spread of the Ebola virus and discuss the US response to the crisis, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.

    The president would also thank scientists, doctors and healthcare workers who were helping those affected by the disease.

    The US government has already committed more than $100 million to help combat the Ebola outbreak, which has killed more than 2,400 people in West Africa.

    In addition, Obama will also receive an update from CDC officials on the respiratory illness that’s been reported in several states across the US Midwest, Earnest said.

  • Happy times for Edozie Madu

    Happy times for Edozie Madu

    These are joyous times for Abuja big boy, Edozie madu. He recently held a lavish dedication service for his twin children at St. Matthew’s Anglican Church, Maitama, Abuja.

    Edozie Madu is reputed as the founder of the Congress for Democratic Change (CDC), a political platform intended for youths’ participation in national development, which later metamorphosed into a political party. The self-styled youngest national party chairman in Nigerian then claimed that CDC, with its strong youth base, would give the ruling parties in Nigeria a run for their money. But for some time now, neither Madu nor his party has made any attempt to inform the populace what is happening to CDC. Has Madu given up on politics?

  • Mowe CDC elects officers

    Mowe Area Community Development Committee’s maiden inauguration will hold on Saturday at 10am at NUD Primary School, Mowe, Ogun State, under the chairmanship of Chief (Mrs) Elizabeth Anifowose, a member of the Ogun State House of Assembly.

    The newly elected chairman, Kingsley Funsho Ayeni, an engineer, said it is the pioneer executive committee of Mowe Area CDC, adding that its inauguration is to bring the much-desired development to the community by drawing government attention to immediate problems facing it.

    Ayeni, who revealed that CDAs in Mowe comprise Daleko, Olowotedo, Oloke Orimerunmu and Pakuro among others, added that the associations had always worked in collaboration with the residents of their respective domains to ensure improved living aming all their members.

    He said he would bring accelerated development to the community by ensuring residents’ effective participation in all activities aimed at making sure his people feel the impact of the government in their lives.

    “We are in an era when the running of people’s affairs is not solely left in the hands of the government. We must be involved by complementing the government’s efforts; this is what we are out to achieve,” Ayeni explained.