Tag: Ebola

  • Ebola in Rivers:  Doctor, Pharmacist, quarantined

    Ebola in Rivers: Doctor, Pharmacist, quarantined

    Three people – a doctor, a pharmacist and another person – among those who had primary contact with the late Dr. Ikechukwu Sam Enemuo, the first Ebola victim in Rivers State, have been quarantined after showing symptoms of the virus.

    The results of their tests are however still being awaited. The late doctor Emenuo’s widow, who has tested positive to the virus is receiving treatment in Lagos.

    Rivers State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Sampson Parker stated this on Sunday in an update on the outbreak of Ebola in Port Harcourt.

    Dr. Enemuo contracted the virus and died on August 22 in Port Harcourt. He became the sixth Nigerian to die of the virus after secretly treating a Nigerian official of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Mr. Oluibukun Koye in a hotel in Port Harcourt.

    Koye, who contracted Ebola after having primary contact with the Index case in Nigeria Liberian-American Patrick Sawyer, escaped from quarantine in Lagos where he was treated by Dr. Enemuo.

    While Koye is free of the virus, Dr. Enemuo, Chief Medical Director of Samsteel Hospital in Rumuokoro, Obio/Akpor Local Government Area, died of the virus.

    He was the third medical doctor to die of the virus.

    The commissioner said the doctor and pharmacist started managing Enemuo’s case at his hospital, before he was moved to Good Hart Hospital, where he died.

    Also moved to the quarantine centre according to the commissioner is a patient who was on admission at the Good Hart Hospital where Enemuo was admitted until he died. Results of their samples were being awaited.

    The commissioner said 50 among the 200 people on the contact tracing list are classified to be high risk while 60 of them could not be reached even on the telephone. Some of them, he said are people who had direct contact with Dr. Enemuo at his hospital after he contracted the virus.

    Parker announced other measures taken by the Rivers State Government to include: banning movement of bodies within and outside the state, bagging of Dr. Enemuo’s body and decontaminating the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital morgue and the attendants placed under watch; a meeting by Governor Chibuike Amaechi with religious leaders on Sunday and traditional rulers Monday, to sensitise them and mobilise them on how to educate their followers and subjects on the virus.

    The commissioner assured residents of the governments’ readiness to fight the disease in collaboration with the Federal Government’s Ebola Emergency Response team and other International Agencies and NGOs including, WHO and Doctors Without Border (MSF).

  • Ebola: Researcher urges health workers to take insurance policies

    A Principal Researcher with the Independent Insurance Researchers (IIR), Mr. Obinna Chilekezie, has advised health workers to take up health and life insurance policies.

    Chilekezie gave the advice on Sunday in Lagos in a chat with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    He said that people have relegated the importance of insurance to their lives to the background.

    “Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) is no respecter of persons. Health workers are at a greater risk of being infested by the virus.

    “It had shown that no matter how many times you wash your hands or wear protective gears, you can still be infested with the virus.

    “Even though medical professional Indemnity is one of the compulsory insurance policies, but many hospitals do not buy it

    “With this Ebola Virus, it is necessary for health workers to ensure that they have insurance policies.

    “The world is a global village and nobody knows another sickness that will be introduced to Nigeria,’’ he said.

     

  • Fear of Ebola Virus

    Fear of Ebola Virus

    In India, the spirit of plague passed an old man sitting under a tree. The old man

    Inquired from him, where it was going. The spirit of plague answered the old man that it was going to Benares to kill hundred people.

    Later, the old man heard that in Benares ten thousand had died. On the return journey of the spirit of plague, the old man asked the spirit of plague, why he lied to him, because he had told him he is going to kill one hundred people. The spirit, succinctly answered the old man, “I killed one hundred. Fear killed the rest.”

    There are so many lessons to learn from the above fable which highlighted the devastating effect of fear in our societies. Undoubtedly, fear is the greatest challenge of man, inhibiting him

    From a peaceful, joyous, fruitful and fulfilling life. Today, most of our hospitals are brimming with people ridden with various fear induced diseases like the “silent killer” hypertension, diabetes e.t.c. Fear is also responsible for the carnage on our roads and the increasing teenage suicide pandemic.

    Gross Capacity Deficiency

    As a Life Coach, I’m saddened that most of our people are deficient of the proactive capacity to handle the fear of contracting this Ebola Virus. Therefore, most people in our societies are likely to be dispatched to the world beyond, not because of contracting the Ebola Virus, but because of the fear of contracting it.

    Nakedness of the Educational Institutions, Religious Institutions

    The raging Ebola Virus, which has snuffed life out many people, has exposed the nakedness of our educational institutions and religious institutions, for their inability to impart their congregants, with the proactive skill; proactive capacity to master fear and cultivate faith that put man in charge and in practical command of life. The educational institutions merely enlighten our mind, strait jacket other potentials, give us a worthless paper certificate, to go and face the absurdity, complexities, abnormalities, uncertainties of life. The religious institutions encourage dependency on the clergy. Failing to empower us with the proactive skill that empowers us to recreate ourselves, reinvent ourselves, rehabilitate ourselves, effect positive changes in our life and cultivate the lifestyle of excellence.

    Survivors

    Those that would be able to survive and navigate through the Ebola scourge are those who have learnt that they as the creating force of their lives, the master of their fate, the captain of their soul and the determiner of their destiny. The survivor would be those who have learnt that they are endowed with the innate creative potentials, which needed to be developed to maturity, harmonized and harnessed to mastering fear and cultivating faith. The survivors would be those who are able to engage their innate creative potentials to develop a prophylaxis against contracting Ebola virus.

    The Survivors would be those who have the proactive capacity to choose to partner with God, reach out for the implanted word of faith in their heart, employ and deploy it spiritually, mentally, emotionally and physically to purge themselves of the fear of contracting Ebola virus and cultivate faith that put them in charge and in practical command of Life.

     

    Jones, a life coach can be reached via; bojoneshoecares@yahoo.com

     

     

  • EBOLA: AfDB to support Nigeria with $1 million

    EBOLA: AfDB to support Nigeria with $1 million

    THE African Development Bank is to release $1 million to support the fight against the spread of the dreaded Ebola virus in the country under its Emergency Relief Assistance programme.

    Speaking at a dialogue session with international development partners organised by the National Planning Commission in Abuja, representative of the Bank, Martin Osunbor, said the AfDB was committed to the eradication of the disease from the country.

    Osunbor also said that the bank will release another $60 million to strengthen the health system in West Africa, which will be managed by the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    The Minister for National Planning, Dr. Abubakar Suleiman, said that the meeting was convened to fashion out desirable and workable solutions in addressing the spread of the disease.

    Suleiman said that the Presidential Committee on Ebola has identified some gaps in the some priority areas needing intervention and support of the development partners.

    Some of the gaps, he said, include the procurement of additional body scanners for active surveillance, capacity building for health workers, infection control, and hospital medical consumable as well as public health promotion.

    The Representative of WHO at the dialogue session, Rui Vaz, commended Nigeria for the fight against the virus.

    Vaz, however, stressed the need for better coordination among the development partners and also called for increased funding for the health sector.

     

  • From Boko Haram to Ebola

    From Boko Haram to Ebola

    Even if millions die, should that stop the President’s campaign train? Go on, TAN

    Just as we were celebrating our containment of Ebola, and as if to make nonsense of that celebration, a fresh Ebola case was detected in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, on Thursday. I had wanted to caution that we should not dance ourselves lame on Ebola yet when our health minister, Prof Onyebuchi Chukwu, said last week that we had contained the disease. But then, one could have been branded as unpatriotic. With the Port Harcourt discovery, it simply means we still have a lot to do to keep Ebola at bay.

    Indeed, Nigeria has not been at ease since Mr. Patrick Sawyer, the American-Liberian imported the disease into the country on July 20. In fairness to the Federal Government, its response and collaboration with the Lagos State government since July 20 have been impressive. This has, as it were, almost obliterated the fact that its agencies at the airport had been lax in their duties, hence Mr. Sawyer’s ability to beat the security checks there.

    Well, as some would argue, such collaboration is the most sensible thing to do where Ebola is concerned. This is a different ballgame from the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). Yes, Ebola, like AIDS does not respect party affiliation. It is no respecter of whether you are progressive or conservative. It does not recognise boundary, be it religious, social, economic or geographical. Like AIDS, Ebola has no known cure. With AIDS, one can take all the precautionary measures: buy your barbing kits to avoid using general clippers, avoid using the same injection or syringe with someone carrying the AIDS virus; don’t take blood transfusion indiscriminately, above all, avoid the ‘danger down below’, zip up.

    Even where all these fail, AIDS could still be somewhat managed. But not so with Ebola. So far, there is no known cure for it. Anyone struck by it could jolly well start singing the Nunc Dimittis, or its other version, ‘Oh Lord, I am coming home’. That is how bad things are. So, even when one is crying, he should still be clear-headed as to keep his eyes wide open. Even where political party or ideology differs, that should not preclude collaboration to ward off the Ebola.

    It seems to me that with Ebola, God does not need to take any trouble of using either fire or flood to bring the world to an end again if He so desires today. Some 5,000 Ebola patients would do the job. Imagine what would have been our fate in Nigeria had Sawyer been allowed to escape into thin air as he had wanted to, even after having been taken to First Consultants Hospital in the Obalende area of Lagos? Not even Donatus could have been as generous as he would have generously distributed the virus in the country, such that even the Boko Haram terrorists would have seen how little their bombs and other armaments that they had hitherto relied on as weapons of mass destruction could be.

    Nigeria had been dealing with a seemingly intractable blood-letting unleashed by the Boko Haram insurgents before Ebola came. Indeed, since 2009 when Boko Haram began its onslaught on the country, there has been no respite. The insurgents have attacked virtually everywhere one could imagine and even never have imagined, including police and military formations. It has sacked entire townships and presently has its flag hoisted in Gwoza, Borno State, where it has also proclaimed a caliphate. More than 12, 000 lives had been lost to the senseless attacks by the terrorists and they do not appear to be done yet. The way they slaughter their victims that they did not bomb suggests they are being propelled by some blood-sucking demons.

    As things stand, the terrorists are still holding captive more than 100 secondary school girls that they abducted in their hostel in Chibok in April. At least twice they have rubbished the ultimatums given by top military chiefs even as they seem on a systematic mission of demystifying the Nigerian military, given the ease with which they stroll into parts of the country, abducting people at will.

    In all of these, one person I do not envy is President Goodluck Jonathan. Indeed, if any man is sitting on a hot seat, President Jonathan is it. So hot is the seat that one would think he should be in a hurry to get out of it. But the most surprising thing is that he is not in a hurry to complete his term and leave. He has been to churches to pray for peace and apparently to seek God’s nod for more years in the rock. And, just in case that fails, he also invited some Senegalese clerics to Aso Rock, in what many have interpreted as a spiritual angle to the current war against Boko Haram. The 10 clerics were led to the State House, Abuja, by Khalifah Sheikh Ahmad Tijani Inyass, the grandson of Late Shehu Tijani Ibrahim Inyass, the founder of the Tijjaniya sect. They met for about an hour with the President at the First Lady’s Conference Room and offered prayers for an end to the security challenges facing Nigeria, as well as for peace and stability in the country.

    Jonathan is not alone in this. As the spokesman of the group, Ahmed Tijani Sanni Alwalu said, “It is a historic visit because it has been done by his father with the then President, Gen. Yakubu Gowon and Gen. Aguiyi-Ironsi. So, history is repeating itself and we come for the Moulude of Ibrahim Inyass Gombe and on his way going home, the President requested for a courtesy visit and Shehu granted that.”

    But President Jonathan is yet to complete the ‘tripod’ as he has not called in the African Traditional Religion people for similar prayer. In this wise, one would have thought he would cultivate Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State whose government has embraced the ‘three-in-one’. But he appears to have made Aregbesola a sworn enemy because it was only in Aregbesola’s Osun State that the president did not do well at all in the south west in the 2011 presidential election.  With Aregbe’s election for a second term, that history is set to repeat itself in the state in next year’s general elections, a thing President Jonathan had wished he could nip in the bud, by militarising the state to scare voters in the August 9 governorship election.

    Interestingly, to date, President Jonathan has not indicated his intention to stand for reelection, but his campaign train is already on the track. The most visible one is the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) that has been holding rallies on his behalf, I suspect very much against his will, reminding one of the late General Sani Abacha who never said he wanted to transmute from military to civilian president but everything, including his body language and all, pointed in that direction. With TAN having flagged off the president’s reelection campaign, Nigeria has moved on. What this implies is that that is the end of the search for the Chibok girls; that is if Nigeria ever searched for them. Apparently those who came to help us had to abandon us to our fate when they saw how unserious and unprepared we are in looking for the poor girls. Not many serious countries would want to have anything to do with a country whose soldiers, in the course of ‘tactical manoeuvre’, would stray 80 kilometres into another country in battle! But, wouldn’t it have been better for our military authorities to tell us that in this season of defections, our soldiers merely took a cue from our politicians and defected to Cameroon, instead of  saying they were on ‘tactical manoeuvre’?

    But whatever the degree of blood-letting or blood-shedding, the president’s campaign train must start. If he wins reelection, President Jonathan would still have a large part of the country under his control. And if he loses, his successor may have to negotiate with the rebels for a return of the Gwoza caliphate to Nigeria.

  • Ebola: Don’t panic, cleric urges Nigeria

    A Kano based religious leader, Pastor Felix Olotu, has advised Christians to remain prayerful in the face of the deadly Ebola virus.

    He said those who trust in God will not be infected by the virus.

    Olotu made this known while speaking with journalists in Kano.

    He said the deadly virus is not strange to his church members because it had been predicted during the New Year message that there would be an epidemic disease.

    Asked if his church will review the conditions of giving members Holy Communion to minimise physical contact, Olotu, the Kano area superintendent of the Apostolic Church, insisted that prayer is the key preventive measures for the disease.

    He urged Nigerians not to panic but intensify prayers, assuring that Ebola will become a history in Nigeria.

  • Ebola: Liberia bans sailors from disembarking

    Ebola: Liberia bans sailors from disembarking

    LIBERIA will, henceforth,  deny permission for any crew to disembark from ships at its four seaports until the current Ebola epidemic is contained.

    Sailors on commercial ships can normally ask for a “show pass” allowing them to get off the vessel and access the port but the documents are being withdrawn to curb the spread of the virus, Matilda Parker, head of Liberia’s ports authority said yesterday

    “For vessels coming in we have cancelled show passes. Absolutely no one from on board vessels will be allowed down,” she told AFP.

    The country’s four seaports, including the Freeport of Monrovia, would adopt a “zero tolerance” approach, Parker said, against an outbreak which has claimed 1,500 lives since the start of the year.

    Liberia, the hardest-hit of five west African nations struggling with the epidemic, has seen almost 700 deaths.

    “For the workers who are going onboard vessels, they are going through three layers of screening at the gate, at the security desk and also at the peer. They have been instructed not to get in contact with anybody on board,” Parker added.

    Monrovia’s port is run by APM Terminals, which operates in 63 countries, as part of a deal committing the company to a $145 million investment including a 600-metre wharf and state-of-the-art container tracking technology.

    The port — known as the “gateway to Liberia’s economy” — handles the majority of imports in an economy which has to buy in almost all commodities, meaning the price of fuel, machinery, manufactured goods and food rely heavily on its smooth running.

  • Ebola: FG supplies vehicles, motorcycles for border checks

    The federal government has provided vehicles and motorcycles to effectively man strategic borders as part of measures to contain the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

    The Minister of State for Health, Dr Halliru Alhassan, disclosed this yesterday in Sokoto while briefing newsmen on efforts to contain the deadly disease.

    Alhassan said his ministry has mapped out a collaborative mechanism with the Ministry of Interior as well as its agencies against the disease.

    He explained that the initiative was aimed at adequately manning the nation’s porous borders.

    According to him:”The federal government is up and doing with a view not to take any chances.”

    The minister said the federal government has formed a specialised rapid response team to totally deal with the menace.

    The team, he said, consists of doctors, medical laboratory scientists and other medical professionals.

    According to him: “The major challenge is getting the understanding of Nigerians, especially those under quarantine.”

    “Over 400 persons are still under observation while only one case is outstanding in Lagos with two isolation centres currently in operation in Lagos and Port Harcourt,” he explained.

    On the residency programme, the minister said that the federal government has not sacked any resident doctor.

    “The federal government only stopped the residency programme because they went on strike. But it will be reviewed,” he maintained.

  • Ebola: It’s devilish of Sawyer, Liberia to spread the evil to us – Obasanjo

    Ebola: It’s devilish of Sawyer, Liberia to spread the evil to us – Obasanjo

    Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, Saturday afternoon, rued the outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease(EVD) in Nigeria, saying it is “devilish enough that Patrick Sawyer in connivance with some Liberian authorities,” brought the evil into the country.
    Obasanjo lamented that EVD is already taking its toll not only in the areas of deaths recorded or those that are ill, but also economically.
    ” Ebola is taking economic toll. How do we handle people that are economically affected not those that are dead or ill. The economic effect has started, how do we reduce, recoup the economic cost of ebola on communities, nation, West African region and sub-region.”
    The former President who spoke while fielding questions from guests during ‘An afternoon with Obasanjo’ a programme organised by Inside Watch Africa, a continental magazine published by Oluwaseyi Adegoke – Adeyemo, said some Liberian authorities knew of the contagious and deadly illness in Sawyer and allowed the visit.
    At the event held at the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library(OOPL), Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, he urged Nigerians to be “very aggressive with precautionary measures” against ebola as there is no curative drugs yet for it.
    Obasanjo said: “when HIV came, they said don’t talk about it. Now it is ebola and ebola is even talking about HIV. We should be doing whatever we can and that is being aggreesive in taking precautionary measures to prevent it.
    “Everybody should be involved. When you see your neighbour showing unique symptoms not just the common cold or fever, take him to the clinic or doctor and we are told that when it has incubated, it becomes a problem.
    Obasanjo who disclosed that he had spoken with Presidents of Liberia, Ghana and Sierra – Leone on the Ebola issue, said there is need for Nigeria and other West African countries to talk to development partners such World Health Organisation (WHO), European Union(EU), and America for help to curtail EVD.
    Obasanjo charged the world not to see ebola disease as a burden of the West African countries but something that should be treated as an “international burden.”
    He called on the world’s pharmaceutical giants to intensify research efforts towards providing either vaccine or curative drugs for the virus.

  • Experimental Ebola drug cures laboratory monkeys

    The experimental Ebola drug ZMapp cured all 18 of the laboratory monkeys infected with the deadly virus, including those suffering the fever and hemorrhaging characteristic of the disease and just hours from death, scientists said on Friday.

    Even monkeys not treated until five days after infection survived. No other experimental Ebola therapy has ever shown success in primates when given that long after infection; the five days is analogous to nine to 11 days after infection in people.

    Although two American aid workers who contracted Ebola in Liberia were cured after receiving ZMapp, their physicians do not know if the drug helped.

    A Liberian doctor with the disease died this week despite being given the drug, as did a Spanish priest, Reuters reports.

    ZMapp, produced by San Diego-based Mapp Biopharmaceutical, has never been scientifically tested in people, and the current study was the first in primates. The success is therefore a “monumental achievement,” virologist Thomas Geisbert of the University of Texas Medical Branch wrote in a commentary on the paper, published online in Nature.

    There are no approved Ebola vaccines or treatments, but human safety trials will begin next week on a vaccine from GlaxoSmithKline Plc and this autumn on one from NewLink Genetics Corp.

    The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has killed 1,552 people out of 3,069 confirmed cases, the World Health Organization said, and is on pace to infect 20,000. Neither governments nor private medical groups have been able to contain the outbreak, which WHO said will almost certainly continue into 2015.

    ZMapp is a mix of three antibodies that bind to proteins on Ebola viruses and trigger the immune system to destroy them. Mapp had previously developed two different cocktails of antibodies, but they protected only 43 percent of monkeys when given as late as five days after infection.