Tag: Ebola

  • NLC to FG: Fight Boko Haram like Ebola

    NLC to FG: Fight Boko Haram like Ebola

    President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Abdul Waheed Omar, on Monday urged the Federal Government to fight the Boko Haram sect with the same vigour it is fighting the deadly Ebola Virus Disease in the country.

    Omar stated this in Kaduna while declaring open a one-day sensitization workshop on the prevention of Ebola virus disease in the workplace, organized by National Union of Textile, Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN).

    He noted the government’s rapid response to the Ebola scourge was a commendable, adding that, “I think if Federal Government should fight Boko Haram the way it is fighting Ebola, then the insurgency would have ended since.

    “Therefore I call on the government to be as proactive to Boko Haram as it has done to Ebola.”

    In their remarks, the President and General Secretary, NUTGTWN, Comrade Oladele Hunsu and Comrade Issa Aremu, said there was the need for continuous enlightenment and sensitization on Ebola.

    Aremu said the essence of the workshop was to enlighten the labour force about the disease and how to prevent it.

    “As deadly as the Ebola virus disease is, we should not forget there are other diseases like malaria, polio, cholera which are curable but are still rampant in the country. Thus as we battle with the deadly Ebola Virus Disease, we should do more with other diseases with known treatment/prevention. It is all about good health care and good governance.

    “We commend the recent resolution of the crisis in the health sector that led to the calling off of strike action by doctors under Nigeria Medical Association. We are also impressed that the Federal government has withdrawn the earlier retrenchment of the doctors,” he stated.

  • Bayelsa denies Ebola rumour

    Bayelsa State Government on Monday denied rumours that the dreaded Ebola Virus Disease has been recorded in some parts of the state.

    The state’s Commissioner for Health and Head of Ebola Task Force, Dr. Ayebatonye Owei, said there was no truth in the speculations.

    He was reacting to rumours that three EVD cases were recorded over the weekend at the Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital (NDUTH), Okolobiri.

    It was also speculated that some of the persons who had contacts with the dead doctor in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, escaped to Bayelsa.

    Residents in the state have been in panic since some cases of Ebola were confirmed in Port-Harcourt.

    But Owei said: “There is no Ebola case in Bayelsa” and described the speculations as “false.”

    Also the Governor of the state, Mr. Seriake Dickson, urged the people of the state not to panic, explaining that proactive measures had been put in place to check the spread of Ebola.

    The governor in a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said he decided to appeal for calm because of the close proximity of Bayelsa to Rivers State and the fact that the people of the two states share a common historical and cultural heritage.

    “Government has created 103 surveillance centres in all the local government areas as part of measures put in place to curtail the Ebola virus and the people have been put on red alert for suspected patients with the symptoms of the deadly virus to check its spread,” the governor said.

    He reiterated the call for people to imbibe the culture of personal hygiene, noting that government had given adequate support to the 18-member task force set up to fight Ebola.

     

  • Ebola: Nigeria applies for Japanese drug – Minister

    Ebola: Nigeria applies for Japanese drug – Minister

    The Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, Monday announced that the country has applied for the Japanese drug for the treatment of Ebola Virus Disease.

    The drug – Favipiravir – was developed by a subsidiary of Fujifilm Holdings and could be delivered immediately.

    The flu treatment was approved by the Japanese health ministry in March. Fujifilm spokesman Takao Aoki said the company was in talks with United States authorities about starting clinical testing of Favipiravir for Ebola treatment.

    Aoki had said that developers currently had enough stock to treat around 20,000 patients.

    Apart from the Japanese drug, Chukwu said the country was also applying for the TKM-Ebola drug alongside two other vaccines which has been identified by the Treatment Research Group.

    The minister, who spoke at the opening of the 2nd Emergency National Council on Health meeting on Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in Nigeria said, “the Treatment Research Group (TRG) has been working hard to identify experimental drugs like Zmapp, and also make recommendations to government on further research on these drugs as well as vaccines for EVD treatment and prevention.

    “Following the TRG’s recommendation and in consultation with NAFDAC and NHREC, Nigeria has indicated interest to participate in the clinical trials for two candidate EVD vaccines and are considering a third that may be added to the list. We have also applied for experimental drugs such as TKM-Ebola.

    “The TRG has submitted a detailed profile and brief on the oral antiviral agent which the Japanese Government has offered to make available to affected countries through the World Health Organization. We are now considering the profile and brief to enable us reach a final decision on making it available to our patients.

    “Our initial knowledge of the agent is that it has been shown to have strong antiviral activity against the influenza virus following phases I and II human trails, it is now going through phase III clinical trials. It is shown to have strong antiviral property against Ebola virus in vitro and in vivo. The fact that it is considered safe, having passed through phase I and II clinical trials makes it a good drug for use in emergency situation as the EVD.”

  • APC to Nigerians: hold Jonathan responsible if Ebola spreads

    APC to Nigerians: hold Jonathan responsible if Ebola spreads

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has urged Nigerians to hold President Goodluck Jonathan responsible, if the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) spreads further.

    The party noted that the President failed to stop on Saturday a rally in his support in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, despite the warnings from individuals and groups.

    In a statement yesterday in Lagos by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, APC said never before had a President sabotaged his administration’s policy and endangered the lives of his compatriots as Dr Jonathan had done over the EVD.

    It said the President, who declared a national emergency on Ebola and advised against large gatherings to prevent the spread of the virus, was the first to flout the advice by failing to stop the rally organised by the so-called Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) in Port Harcourt, a few days after the virus was detected in the city.

    This, APC said, happened when contact-tracing was going on to find those who might have had contact with the doctor, who had the disease.

    It said: “On the altar of political desperation, President Jonathan put the lives of Nigerians in danger. To realise his ambition for re-election, President Jonathan has shown he is ready to sacrifice as many lives of Nigerians as possible. There goes the President’s statement that his political ambition is not worth the blood of any Nigerian. This President simply says what he does not mean.

    “As we said in our statement on August 28, calling on President Jonathan to halt the TAN rallies, especially the one in Port Harcourt, could anyone guarantee that none of those who have had contact with the doctor who died of the disease would attend the rally? That is why we are calling on Nigerians to hold the President responsible, if Ebola spreads more than it has in the country.”

    The party noted that after it called for a halt to the TAN rallies, others, including the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) and frontline lawyer, Prof. Itse Sagay, in a clearly patriotic duty, issued similar calls.

    The party said: “In fact, the APC in Rivers described such a rally, most appropriately, as a ‘firing squad against the people’. But because he will rather be re-elected than give a damn over the safety of the same people who voted him into office; because he will rather transmogrify than transform, President Jonathan ignored all the calls and allowed the rally to hold. This is an unprecedented act of political

    desperation.”

    APC stressed that for those who might try to spin the issue by saying the President had no control over the organisers of the rally, they should be asked who the rallies will benefit, whose top officials, including the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, have been attending the rallies and what is the source of the funding of the gatherings.

    It said: “The TAN rallies are government-sanctioned. The TAN rallies are the Jonathan administration’s cunning way of beating the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) ban on campaigns for next year’s general elections. The TAN rallies highlight the impunity of the Jonathan administration. President Jonathan is the sole beneficiary. He can stop the rallies today, if only he wants to put the nation’s interest above his personal interest.”

  • Ebola…Not quite farewell to an epidemic

    Ebola…Not quite farewell to an epidemic

    From Nigeria to Liberia and elsewhere, there are new developments on the Ebola disaster, some good, others bad. As Nigeria faces new realities, two doctors in Liberia recover after taking ZMapp and fears of insurance claim trail flights cancelations, writes Asst. Editor OLUKOREDE YISHAU

    ealth Minister Onyebuchi Chukwu was happy to announce that only one patient was still in isolation as a result of the dreaded virus. The development made many feel that eventually Nigeria has caged Ebola and pretty soon, its death knell would sound. Chukwu was, however, cautious and said it was not time for uhuru.

    After briefing the Federal Executive Council (FEC) on efforts to contain the deadly disease, the minister said Nigeria is not yet immune to another outbreak.

    Chukwu said the virus could still find its way into Nigeria as long as there is any case of Ebola anywhere in the world and there is free movement of persons from country to country.

    He said: “Nigeria has been successful in containment of the disease but we have not eliminated the disease. As long as there is any case of Ebola virus anywhere in the world and people are allowed to travel, we are still at risk.

    “We are not banning mass gathering and we are not panicking because of the disease. More people have even died from accident than Ebola since the disease came to Nigeria. Ebola is not the greatest killer of Nigerians.

    “We don’t want to panic, but we still need to be careful because we are still at risk until the last case is eliminated. Since, we have one case of Ebola, it is still an epidemic because it is deadlier than other diseases.”

    Just a day after Chukwu’s cautious note, it emerged that Ebola had killed another doctor, Dr. Ikechukwu Enemuo, this time in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital. The doctor was said to have been infected by a diplomat who had contact with the index patient, the late Patrick Sawyer. The diplomat, Olubukun Koye, was said to have gone to Port Harcourt to seek treatment for ill-health. He returned to Lagos after the government insisted all who had contact with the late Sawyer must be at the isolation centre in Yaba. He is said to have since recovered and back with his family. The doctor was not lucky. He was the owner of “Samsteel Hospital” in Rumuokoro, in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area, where he worked as the Chief Medical Director until he died on August 22.

    With his death, Ebola has gone beyond Lagos. There is panic in Bayelsa and other states close to the Rivers State capital.

    Two employees of the late Dr. Enemuo have shown signs of the disease and have been quarantined, Rivers State Commissioner of Health Sampson Parker

    said yesterday. A patient in “Good Hart” Hospital where Enemuo was admitted until he died has also been quarantined. Results of their samples were being awaited. The attendants at the morgue where the late doctor’s body was deposited have been placed under watch. The hospitals where the late Enemuo was treated, the Mandate Garden Hotel, Rumudamanya, where he treated his patient, Koye and his residence have been decontaminated.

    Dr Enemuo was the sixth victim and the third doctor to die of the virus in the country.

    Parker announced the ban on movement of bodies within and outside the state, adding that before any body was moved, the relatives of the diseased must obtain clearance from the Ministry of Health.

    Parker said: “Governor Chibuike Amaechi will be meeting all church leaders in the state tomorrow(today). He will also be meeting with traditional rulers on Tuesday.

    “Just as I earlier said, 200 persons that had contacts with the late Enemuo have been traced and put under watch. We have identified 50 high-risked persons, 60 others that had contacts with him are yet being traced.

    “Three patients are at the treatment centre now, a Doctor and pharmacist that worked with the victim at the SamSteel hospital and a lady that was at Good Hart hospital while Dr. Enemuo was there. However, their results are being awaited.

    “Enemuo’s widow is still in a stable condition in Lagos. Anyone that had any form of contact with the late Dr. should please come up. Ebola is curable, if diagnosed early, people have survived it and more people will. So, there is no need to run away. It is important that churches close their secret admission wards in their various places of worship. Some of them are running into churches and pastors are laying hands on them. It is wrong.

    “Movement of bodies within and outside the state must be supervised. Death certificate must be produced to ascertain the cause of death, and the state Ministry of Health must give approval before anybody is allowed to move.

    “The UPTH morgue has been decontaminated. However, all the bodies there must be buried under supervision, especially those that were there at the same time with Dr. Enemuo’s body.”

    There was tension among workers and patients of the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH) Friday, following the news of the presence of the remains of Dr. Enemuo in the hospitals mortuary.

    As Nigeria deals with this new reality, Liberia has some good news. The World Health Organisation yesterday announced that two doctors who were treated with the experimental drug ZMapp have recovered and issued certificate of discharge. Three of them received the treatment, but one died last week. The two health workers become the first Africans to survive after taking the experimental drug. Two American, who contracted the virus in Liberia, have also survived after taking the drug.

    Dr. Senga Omeonga and physician assistant Kynda Kobbah were discharged from a Liberian treatment center at the weekend. Both indicated that they will return to work soon.

    The WHO said they were received by Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf after being discharged. A third person who was infected and treated with ZMapp died last Sunday.

    The lethal virus has spread to five countries in West Africa — Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Senegal — during this year’s outbreak. Senegal confirmed its first case of the virus on Friday, one week after closing its border with Guinea, the Senegalese Press Agency reported.

    There have been 3,069 probable, confirmed and suspected cases of Ebola in West Africa — more than 40 per cent of which have occurred within the past three weeks, according to the WHO. Some 1,552 of those have died.

    It also emerged yesterday that there are concerns about likely insurance claims from flights cancellations by airlines. London-based insurers are facing claims for cancelled travel and events. Insurers said they are receiving claims relating to the outbreak.

    Amanda Lewis, an underwriter at insurer Aegis, said: “The outbreak has caused some isolated event cancellations. Losses are being reported into the London market and I would expect that to gain some momentum. People’s perception is that it is the whole of Africa. The detail gets lost in the hysteria.”

    Lewis added that even when disease is covered, insurance contracts do not generally cover losses caused by the fear of a disease rather than the disease itself. Insurers started excluding disease outbreaks in standard contracts as a result of the SARS epidemic in 2002.

    In Senegal, which recorded its first case a few days ago, the WHO said the effort to contain Ebola is “a top priority emergency,”. The government continues tracing everyone who came in contact with a Guinean student who tested positive for the deadly disease in the capital, Dakar. Senegal is the sixth country in Africa with the epidemic. Guinea, Congo, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Nigeria are the others.

    Senegal, said WHO, faces an “urgent need” for support and supplies including hygiene kits and personal protective equipment for health workers.

    “These needs will be met with the fastest possible speed,” the WHO said.

    The U.N. agency also provided new information on the movements of the 21-year-old student in the city before he was diagnosed with Ebola.

    The student showed up at a hospital in Dakar on August 26 but did not reveal that he had been in contact with other Ebola victims, said Senegalese Health Minister Awa Marie Coll Seck.

    He said Senegalese authorities were alerted next day by an epidemiological surveillance team in neighboring Guinea that it had lost track of a person it was monitoring three weeks earlier, and that the person may have crossed into Senegal.

    Seck said the student was tracked to the hospital in Dakar and was immediately quarantined, and a test confirmed he had Ebola.

    The WHO said the student arrived in Dakar by road on August 20 and stayed with relatives “in the outskirts of the city”, before going to a medical facility on August 23 seeking treatment for fever, diarrhea and vomiting.

    He was treated for malaria and continued staying with his relatives before going to the Dakar hospital on August 26.

    “Though the investigation is in its early stages, he is not presently known to have traveled elsewhere,” said the WHO.

    A doctor was quoted yesterday as saying the Guinean student “is doing very well,”.

    “This morning when I called the hospital, the doctor told me that the patient had no complaints and that his fever had disappeared,” said Dr. Gallaye Ka in an interview with the private radio station RFM.

    The WHO believes the epidemic could affect as much as 200,000 people before it will eventually be reined in.

    For now, there is no approved rug or vaccine for the dreaded disease. ZMapp and others are still being tested. While some have survived after using ZMapp, others have died despite taking it.

    Countries, such as Canada, are developing vaccines for the disease. Pharmaceutical companies are reluctant to invest in Ebola drugs because it is the sort of disease that comes once in a while and disappears, a situation which is not good for commercial purpose.

  • Ebola: NMA urges Fed Govt to police borders, ports

    Ebola: NMA urges Fed Govt to police borders, ports

    •Unilorin to establish virology complex

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) has urged the Federal Government to police the country’s borders and ports to avert further spread of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

    In a communique at the end of the National Executive Council meeting in Awka, Anambra, yesterday, its national president, Dr Kayode Obembe, commended the federal and Lagos state governments for their response to the health challenge.

    He, however, observed that the essential structures and framework for containing the outbreak on a national scale were not yet in place.

    The NMA pledged its commitment toward the health of Nigerians, saying that it would join forces with governments and their agencies to prevent the spread of EVD to other parts of the country.

    It noted that as part of the response to the outbreak, the NMA had put in place a national EVD Response Committee, headed by Prof Michael Asuzu, and similar committees at the state levels.

    The body said the controversy that trailed the establishment of the office of the Surgeon-General of the Federation was regrettable.

    It said if the office was created, it would have a nationwide structure in place, to promote the enforcement of public health issues and lead the force against emergencies, including the EVD.

    “The importation of EVD to Nigeria clearly demonstrates that we are very prone and more at risk really in the Ebola virus as a¸ open to several diplomatic and international travels.

    “We therefore call on the FG to police the nation’s borders and ports to avert a further spread of the disease. NEC, therefore, calls on the FG to take steps to further ensure the creation of functional EVD control committees at all levels of government.

    “We are deeply concerned that many states are yet to establish reliable isolation facilities and the relative unavailability of Personal Protective Equipment,” it stated.

    The University of Ilorin is set to establish a Virology complex to carry out researches on Ebola virus disease (EVD) and how to curtail its spread.

    The Vice Chancellor of the University, Prof. Abdul-Ganiyu Ambali, spoke at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Forum in Abuja yesterday.

    He said the university recognised its responsibility in conducting researches as well as community development services which was why its senate set up a committee on Ebola recently.

    In terms of the community service, Prof. Ambali said the university published information on Ebola regularly on its website and on its weekly bulletin to educate readers.

  • Ebola: Southeast governors hail Fed Govt, states

    Ebola: Southeast governors hail Fed Govt, states

    Southeast governors have hailed the Federal and state governments for containing the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

    Rising from a meeting, presided over by its Chairman and Abia State Governors Theodore Orji, the forum also sought a cargo section at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport in Enugu.

    Other governors at the meeting were Sullivan Chime (Enugu), Martin Elechi (Ebonyi) and Anambra State Deputy Governor Nkem Okeke.

    Through their chairman, the governors told reporters that they would convene a meeting of the elders in the next three weeks to discuss various issues affecting the zone.

    They expressed happiness over the befitting burial given former Information Minister, Prof. Dora Akunyili.

  • ‘No Ebola case in Cross River’

    ‘No Ebola case in Cross River’

    There is no case of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in Cross River State, Commissioner for Information Akin Ricketts said yesterday.

    He was reacting to a rumour in the social media that an EVD patient was being treated at the University of Calabar (UNICAL) Teaching Hospital.

    In a statement, Ricketts said: “Consequent upon the unsolicited but unfortunately rife rumour about the existence of an EVD case in Calabar, the government wishes to set the records straight. There is no EVD case in the state.

    “This heinous rumour is being peddled in the social media by some unscrupulous facebook users and this has started creating panic among residents.

    “Please rest assured that the Ministry of Health, which is coordinating the Cross River Ebola Response Team, the authorities of UNICAL Teaching Hospital and other stakeholders in the health sector have confirmed that there is no Ebola case in Cross River.

    “The government urges residents to disregard this rumour and continue to enjoy the prevailing peace and tranquility in the state. We urge residents to go about their daily routine and warn users of the social media to be mindful of the information they spread, as the government will not hesitate to take necessary actions against anyone found involved in the spread of such falsehood.

    “Residents are encouraged to observe basic hygiene and precautionary measures stated by the State Ebola Response Team, as this would go a long way in curbing the spread of this disease.

    “We assure residents of the government’s commitment to ensure that Cross River remains free of Ebola.”

  • Industrialist urges  protection  for hunters,  farmers over Ebola

    Industrialist urges protection for hunters, farmers over Ebola

    An industrialist and the Group Chief Executive of Origin Group Limited, Prince S.J Samuel, has urged the Federal Government to intervene in the plight of hunters who may have been adversely affected in the wake of the Ebola virus outbreak that has put the consumption of bush meat on hold.

    Prince Samuel said if no step was taken to address the plight of the hunters, whose main source of livelihood is hunting, it would lead to their inability to fend for their families and send their children to school.

    He said many states would suffer the consequence, arguing that the hunters cut across many states.

    He said: “These hunters do basically this business, what do we do about them, I am concerned and worried because that is the only source of their livelihood, that is the only way they send their children to school, that is how they feed their family. “There’s need therefore for government to quickly come up with a policy statement on the issue to address the plight of the hunters.”

    He argued that it is a known fact how Ebola came into Nigeria. “It came through somebody in the city,” he said, stating that the primary source of bush meat is the villages.  According to him, agreed that the viruses that transmit these disease are in the air and can easily be transmitted through animals,  but how many of the people infected are in the bushes and the villages? He said many of those infected are in the cities.

    He admitted that government has done well in the manner the Ebola infection  has been handled so far, but stressed that there was an economic dimension to the situation to which government must address itself.

    He said: “The government has done well in the containment of the situation, but the other economic effect on the  agric sector is where I stand that we should do something, and nobody is looking at it. It’s unfortunate and painful. The challenge we would have is the stigma that will go to the people who rear these things and to the product they sell, may not be quantifiable and measured for many years to come, even after the epidemic is gone.

    “That is why I think government should devote more effort and resources educating people about the bush meat thing and categorise it. For me the challenge is that most of the meat  we eat today is bush meat, including some of our cows.”

    Samuel said there is need for government to be distinctive on its classification on bush meat, so that people’s businesses are not unwittingly destroyed.

    “For me, I believe that there should be a sort of categorisation, more education and treading on the path of caution, so that we don’t destroy the businesses we are trying to build,” he said, adding that people have obtained loans to start some of  these businesses.

  • Agents sensitise clients on Ebola

    Insurance agents have embarked on Ebola Awareness Trek to sensitise drivers, conductors, and artisans on precautionary measures in ensuring the prevention and eradication of the deadly Ebola disease.

    The walk, which started from some streets of Lagos to the state House of Assembly, was organised by the Association of Registered Insurance Agents of Nigeria (ARIAN).

    ARIAN National President, Gbadebo Olamerun, said they had meetings with drivers, conductors, and artisans and gave them gloves and sanitisers.

    According to him, they believe that these groups of people have regular contacts with people every day.

    He said they urged them to wear gloves and use sanitisers to prevent the virus from contacting their bodies.

    The ARIAN boss observed that the government had expressed its intentions to give life cover to volunteers who treat the Ebola patients.

    He said that government was introducing insurance for them, but that insurance is not medicine after death. ‘’They don’t provide insurance when there is eventuality, you get insurance before the eventuality happens,” he said.

    He enlightened that regular washing of hands with soap and water can prevent the ebola virus infection from having any effect on a person’s health.

    Olemerun also said people should imbibe the attitude of protecting their lives and properties with insurance and not wait until they are sick or suffer a loss.

    Stressing the relevance of insurance, he said it contributes  to economies of developed countries, regretting that the reverse was the case in Nigeria.