Tag: Food poisoning

  • Food poisoning: Police confirm five deaths

    Food poisoning: Police confirm five deaths

    The police in Edo State have confirmed the death of five people (four boys and a girl), and the arrest of one person, in connection with food poisoning at Afashio-Uzairue in Etsako West Local Government Area, Edo State.

    Edo Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Moses Yamu, a Superintendent of Police (SP), stated last night that the food poisoning happened on October 26, thereby causing panic among residents of the ancient community.

    Yamu said: “Edo State Police Command received a report on October 26 about 7:30am, from one Elogie Ezekiel of Afashio community, that at about 6:30am of same date, he went to check his son, named Emmanuel Elogie (19 years), at his apartment.

    Read Also: Police confirm five dead, one arrested in Edo over food poisoning

    “That upon gaining entrance into the apartment, he met the lifeless body of his son’s friend, named Nurudeen,, at the corridor. He went further and met the lifeless bodies of his son, with his girlfriend, Ada Samuel (16 years), on the bed. Another two of the son’s friends, named Samuel Ayegwalo and Jeffrey Ayegwalo, who turned out to be siblings, were found in the sitting room.”

  • Police confirm five dead, one arrested in Edo over food poisoning

    Police confirm five dead, one arrested in Edo over food poisoning

    The Police in Edo State have confirmed the death of five and the arrest of one person in connection with food poisoning at Afashio-Uzairue in Etsako West Local Government Area. 

    Edo Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Moses Yamu, a Superintendent of Police (SP), said the food poisoning occurred on October 26, causing panic among residents. 

    The deceased include four boys and a girl. 

    Yamu said: “Edo State Police Command received a report on 26/10/2024, at about 0730hrs, from one Elogie Ezekiel of Afashio community, that at about 0630hrs of same date, he went to check his son, named Emmanuel Elogie (19 years), at his apartment.

    “That upon gaining entrance into the apartment, he met the lifeless body of his son’s friend, named Nurudeen, surname not known, at the corridor. He went further and met the lifeless bodies of his son, with his girlfriend, Ada Samuel (16 years), on the bed, in the bedroom. Another two of the son’s friends, named Samuel Ayegwalo and Jeffrey Ayegwalo, who turned out to be siblings, were found in the sitting room.

    Read Also: Wike launches ‘Project 10 Million’ to combat rising non-communicable diseases in Abuja

    “The police arrested Aisha Suleiman, 16, alleged to have caused the deaths through food poisoning. On 29/10/2024, at about 1710hrs, operatives of Jattu Division received information that a girl, later identified as Aisha Suleiman, was about to be lynched by some young men from the community.

    “They (operatives of Jattu Division of Edo Police Command) mobilised to the scene, rescued the suspect, and moved her to the police station. The case was transferred the next day to the state Criminal Investigation Department for discreet investigation.”

  • Five ways to prevent food poisoning

    Five ways to prevent food poisoning

    Food poisoning is a serious and potentially life-threatening condition that affects millions of people worldwide. By taking simple steps in food handling, storage and consumption, we can reduce the risk of falling victims of foodborne illnesses. 

    Here are five ways to prevent food poisoning. 

    *Check expiration dates: While the dates printed on food packages are a measure of quality and not necessarily safe, it is wise to heed to expiration dates. It indicates the last dates the products is guaranteed to be fresh and safe to consume. 

    Expired products are more likely to be spoiled, which can cause foodborne illnesses leading to bacterial growth such as salmonella, E. coli, and listeria. Checking expiration dates significantly reduces the risk of food poisoning and ensures a safer and healthier food supply. 

    *Cook food thoroughly: Cooking breaks down toxins produced by bacteria, like botulinum toxin, making them difficult to produce, multiply and harmless. The heat caused by cooking inactivates viruses like norovirus and hepatitis A, which can cause foodborne illness. 

    Cooking meticulously also reduces the risk of cross-contamination and makes it safer for vulnerable populations like the elderly, pregnant, women, men and young children.  

    *Store food properly: Proper storage helps maintain food freshness and reduces the risk of foodborne illness. Storing raw meat, poultry and sea-foods from ready-to- eat foods prevents cross- contamination. 

    Read Also: How I survived carbon monoxide poisoning in 2023 – Actress Ireti Doyle

    The storage of foods in airtight containers also reduces oxidation, which can lead to spoilage and bacterial growth. Storing foods properly is essential as it prevents food poisoning and keeps foods safe to eat. 

    *Avoid high-risk foods: High-risk foods are more likely to contain harmful bacteria, viruses or parasites, so avoiding them reduces exposure to pathogens. Always double or even triple think before eating raw oysters, sushi, unpasteurized juices, steak tartare and cookie dough with raw egg products. If at all you want to eat them ensure they are prepared in a sterile environment. 

    By avoiding or handling high-risk foods with caution, you are significantly reducing the risk of food poisoning. 

    *Refrigerate leftovers quickly: Ensure to refrigerate leftovers quickly preferably in containers with lids that snap tightly shut. Leaving foods on the serving table or not putting away leftovers opens the door to dangerous microbes therefore, it is important to refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours. Also, it is essential to freeze foods at 0F (-18C) or below. 

    Quick refrigeration of foods enables safe storage of leftovers for later consumption, thereby reducing the risk of foodborne illness.

  • How ‘quack doctor’ saved 18 pupils after food poisoning in Osun school

    How ‘quack doctor’ saved 18 pupils after food poisoning in Osun school

    Spoilt eggs serve children allegedly responsible for crisis

    Allegation of food poisoning politically motivated, says govt

    Eighteen students of St James’s Primary School ‘B’, Owo-Ope, Osogbo developed complications after eating food provided by the state government under the free food scheme codenamed O’Meal on Monday. TOBA ADEDEJI reports on the intrigues provoked by the incident.

    On Monday, it was the hoot from a commercial bus that headed for the motor park to begin the day’s business that jolted Blessing Ojo, a single mother, from sleep at her residence in Owo-Ope area of Osogbo, Osun State capital.

    The petty trader and mother of three, who lived adjacent to St James Primary School ‘B’, embraced the day with another hope that things would get better.

    After attending to her basic house chores, including fetching water for her children to bath, the Bayelsa State returnee woke them up and got them dressed for school, following which the children crossed the road to the other side where their school, St James Primary School, was located.

    Before they entered the gate, the children, in their usual habit, had waved to their mother. But by the time they returned home around 1:30 in the afternoon, two of them were very weak and feeble, forcing her to ask what was wrong with them.

    One of the children named Taye responded that they had a meal of rice and egg during the break session of the school, which resulted in some complications.

    One of Blessing’s children, who spoke with The Nation correspondent after her mother had authorised him to speak, said the food vendor of O’Meal provided a meal of rice and egg which the school’s pupils ate for lunch.

    He said: “They gave us food in Primary 3. We noticed that the egg on the food was smelling, but we ate it like that. A few hours later, I started vomiting and vomited till we closed and until I met my mother.”

    Blessing, who sells fried potatoes, said: “God is to be praised because He was the one that resuscitated my two children affected by food poisoning.

    “I am a single mother and my children are my companion. On Monday, they came back from school weak and sick. I have three children in the school, two of them returned weak after vomiting repeatedly and passing loose stool.

    “They lost their strength and energy because of the complications, and I felt disturbed.

    “Fear further gripped me when the children of my neighbour complained about the same problems my children were battling with. We asked them what they took and the eldest of them, who is in Primary 3, said they ate the rice and egg provided by the vendor of O’Meal.

    “We tried to give them quick aid around 2:30 pm but it did not work. When it was getting out of hand, I took them out of the room to the front of the house and started shouting.

    “A crowd gathered in front of the house and later I was advised to take them to a hospital behind the house.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Panic as 18 Osun pupils hospitalised over alleged food poisoning

    “The hospital’s bill is cheap and the owner, Dokky, has been treating children from this neighbourhood very well. Although there are other private hospitals around, their services are expensive.

    “The Primary Health Care centre at Sabo is not far, but I was told that some parents whose children were affected by the food poisoning left the place for one reason or the other.”

    Responding to the allegation that some parents might have collected money from some people to blackmail the government’s food programme, Blessing yelled at our correspondent, saying “I never collected any money from anyone. I relocated from Bayelsa to Osun, so I don’t know anybody.

    “Other children in the school who did not eat the egg provided were not affected. Even pupils from St James School ‘A’, close to the school of my children which is ‘B’, were not affected.

    “Officials of the state government from Abere came to meet us at Dokky’s place. They promised that they would settle the bill. So nobody should tell us that food poisoning on our children is fabricated.”

    Blessing also said she had instructed her children not to eat anything from the school again. “I will be preparing their food for them at home,” she said.

    Another distraught mother named Rashidat Wasiu, who has two kids in Primary One and Two, corroborated Blessing’s position that they suspected the egg that was served the pupils was the cause of the complications suffered by their children.

    Rashidat said it was one of her two children that ate the egg.

    She said: “When I asked them about the food they ate, the younger one told me that he gave his elder brother the egg that was given to him because he didn’t like the smell; meaning that the elder brother took two eggs.

    “The elder brother experienced the complications, vomiting and running stool. He was weak and could not talk. The younger one was fine because he only took the rice given to them.”

    “It took the efforts of Dokky who has his hospital close to this place to revive our children. He is our hero. He really tried for us.

    “When we got to the hospital, we met about 13 other parents at his place. He infused them with drips and gave them injections.

    “Government people later came to the place to sympathise with us and they said they would pay our bills. They told us not to worry about payment because they would take care of it.”

    On her part, another parent, Mrs Irewumi Omolara, said she refused to take her children to Dokky’s hospital because he is not certified. She however invited a relation of hers who is certified to treat her children at home.

    Yet another parent whose child was a victim recalled her son’s ordeal, noting that the seven-year-old only narrowly escaped death.

    Kafaya Lukman, who sells oranges, said: “I went out to hawk oranges, but when I returned around 2:30 pm, my father-in-law told me that I should not go out again because my son had been vomiting blood.

    “I was scared because my father-in-law tried first aid on him but he was weak and was running loose stool. When his health had still not improved around 3 pm, we took him to the primary health care centre in Sabo but they told us that they did not have what was needed to treat him. They said we should go to the teaching hospital.

    “We met other parents at the centre but we were all referred to teaching hospital. I guess that when they observed the prevalent complaints from about six parents we met there, they were afraid of handling them because they were all very weak.

    “We went to Dokky, who was another alternative in the neighborhood, because at that point, we were about six parents whose children were affected.

    “We arrived at his single room hospital and he charged us N4,000. We told him to go ahead with the boy’s treatment. He gave him drip and then injection, which went a long way in stopping the vomit and loose stool. He was our saver.”

    Dokky, however, declined comments when our correspondent sought his reaction, warning him (correspondent) not to come to his place again.

    “Don’t come here again. If you have any question, go and ask them at Osun State University Teaching Hospital where the children are continuing their check-up after they were resuscitated,” he said. 

    Further investigation by The Nation revealed that Dokky had been practising in the neighborhood for five years, and despite the availability of three private hospitals in the area, he thrived because many in the neighbourhood are poor and cannot afford the cost of health care services in private hospitals. They are also usually disappointed most times they visit the Primary Health Center in Sabo as the basic things they need are mostly not available.

    Contacted, the Chairman of the Olorunda Local Government Education Authority (LGEA), Mr Nathaniel Ojetola, confirmed that the pupils were taken to quack doctors for treatment after the complications they suffered over alleged food poisoning.

    He added that “one Dokky took care of them by orthodox medicine and traditional means when he mobilised other government officials to the single room used by the one KB.”

    Our correspondent visited the office of the Chairman Medical Advisory Committee, who is also the Deputy Chief Medical Director of Osun State University Teaching Hospital, Dr Tunde Afolabi, who confirmed that he received 32 pupils brought in by the state government for examination.

    He said: “We received a total of 32 student brought in by the Ministry of Food and agency O’ Meal. I invited directors in various areas like laboratory science, pharmacy, nursing services, and also because of the pupils’ age, people in pediatrics were involved.

    “We have three consultants, including a professor, to review the children’s cases. Each of them was tested, treated and re-evaluated.

    “We discovered that they were in a stable state and only one had some degree of weakness, and following our investigation, we also carried out test on them. Thirty-one of them were asked to go.

    “Those of them passing stool were given oral rehydration to rehydrate them. Some of them were given antibiotics and the one that was found to be very weak was placed on admission and discharged on Wednesday.”

    The Special Adviser to the Governor on O-Meal, Grace Ayodele, however, debunked the food poisoning allegation, describing it as fake news from opposition political parties to tarnish the image of the state government.

    She said: “Findings of government investigation also showed the inconsistency in the testimonies of some of the parents as well as the shady circumstances between the morning feeding and alleged food poisoning late at night.”

  • Ola Ade-John: Coping with food poisoning (2)

    Ola Ade-John: Coping with food poisoning (2)

    By now, tourism minister Lola Ade John, banker and tech investor, should have ridden over the health challenge which sent her to hospital a few weeks ago. The good cheer, as she has made it known, is that the condition may not have been food poisoning , otherwise this may have raised questions about the quality of catering for top-notch citizens and even tourists.

    The itinerant Dr HCA Vogel, author of the fabulous book, The Nature Doctor, discovered that a busy person may not always be meticulous enough about what he or she puts into the mouth or stomach, or about what may be hanging around him or her which may be quietly impacting his or her health. He fell in love with papaya (pawpaw) and banana in Africa and, through hard experiences, had to learn to first thoroughly wash them and his hands before peeling and eating them. What I learned about the banana is to never cut the fruit with my fingers and then put it into my mouth. Dr Vogel discovered that troublesome organisms such as the amoeba may hang on the peel , even after being well washed, and it may be ingested with the fruit. Where one does not have the right concentration of hydrochloric acid in the stomach  and the right mix of digestive enzymes to kill incoming pathogens as well as to digest proteins in the food, intestinal problems may arise which may take months or even years to resolve. That’s one of the reasons I suggest that pawpaw leaves, well soaked in cider vinegar or saline water for some time and then rinsed in clean water, be eaten as part of the salad in at least one meal every day. It has all the digestive enzymes and is good for aging persons who are not producing enough digestive enzymes. This column often reports cases in which worm eggs escape the weak enzymes and later flood the brain with worms. There was even a case where a baby tape worm was found nestling somewhere in the brain, presenting headache symptoms until a scan spotted what looked like a tumour which, upon the brain being opened up, turned out to be an embryonic tape worm!

    Luckily, coconut oil, yes good old coconut oil, has proven a good intestinal cleanser, even against the germs which cause gastro intestinal opportunistic diseases in HIV- challenged persons. Now, it is being studied in the United States as a possible remedy against Alzheimers, dementia and glaucoma. I shall come to this in future columns.

    I hope I have not digressed too far. I am even now salivating for lettuce, banana and groundnuts. On October 7, 2023, I had my first meal at about 3 pm. As I wrote through lines, Udeme has just returned from church. It was 4.15pm. I  just had garri and groundnuts about an hour earlier. I did not eat raw leaves such as those of pawpaw and oregano with them to mineralise the meal and provide digestive enzymes and antioxidants, among others. Often, you would find one or two decaying nuts in a N100 worth of these nuts. The taste of decaying matter is enough warning to spit out everything in the mouth. For that taste may come from fungi or mold. It is the family member of Microzyma which cause the decomposition and decay of all living things in which have occured the need for the dissolution of their material essence. To this family belongs Candida Albicans. Dr Robert O. Young in his book, P h MiracleI, demonstrates that microzyma is in every living cell, human, plant or animal. It is inactive for as long as the cell remains alkaline in its constitution. Once it begins to become acidic, microzyma will devolve, that is degrade, first to bacteria and, as the acidosis increases, to viruses and, later, to fungi and its various family members including candida, and finally to mold. These are very difficult to eliminate from the body and sometimes involves the use of dangerous strengths of anti fungal drugs. Oral thrush, that white patch on the tongue which is meant to be pinkish red, is candida growth and may be evidence of candida colonisation of the intestines.

    Read Also: Deputy Senate President Barau mourns

    Many of us are fungi infested without realising it, and it may take just a little mis step into the wrong food(s) to cause a health  collapse. I was frightened by a Food And Agriculture (FAO) survey of open food markets in Nigeria which reported that almost every food item is fungi infested. When you buy stock fish, critically examine it. You may discover powdery substance on the skin. What is it? Under the microscope, you may notice mushroom like heads on the skin. Even if you kill off this stuff with plain hot water, saline water or white cider vinegar, what of the roots it had injected deep into the tissue of the stock fish with all the cancer causing aflatoxins? We taste candida in roasted fish, in corn, in infected raw red pepper, onion and in red meat that is not well refrigerated. Nevertheless, we do not pay enough attention to smell and taste, and often wonder why cancer, kidney diseases, liver problems, nervous system challenges as well as uterine fibroids are hitting near epidemic propotions. When a uterine fibroid tissue is cut through and examined in the labouratory, the  probable microscopic culprits often found resident there are bacteria, viruses and fungi! They and their toxins cause irritation, inflammation, unhealthy growths and dysfunctions. It was when I learned that the common affliction among inhabitants of a groundnuts growing zone in the United states was pancreatic cancer and that the reason was that they ate lots of infected groundnuts and aflatoxins that I began to pay more attention to the detoxification of my organs, especially the liver. Sometimes, I am on a course  of Amazon A-F for one month. It is designed against fungi and the rest of them. Another month may see me through the intake of Maria Treben Bitters, which has about 42 uses. When using it, I remember the saying by Ken Saro Wiwa, later hung by Gen Sanni Abacha, that, “To be  a millionaire, Think like a  millionaire”. The Maria Treben bitters formula belonged to a horse riding gentleman who died at the age of 103 during a horse riding accident. From this information, IIanalways tempted to remind myself that” to be 103, act like the man who was 103″. To be frank with you, unless you like the bitter principles in food and know what they really do to give their patrons radiant health, you are unlikely to enjoy this drink…even a teaspoonful in a glass of water is really really bitter  and may leave a bitter taste in the mouth all day! Women don’t like it, yet it is one of the best medicines for rebalancing their sweet tooth habit. I swirl Maria Treben bitters with my tongue around the gums and teeth, sometimes before I go to bed. Yet, another month, I may settle for KYOLIC food supplements. Kyolic is energising, whether designed for blood circulation to prevent strokes or their re-occurences, to keep diabetes away or to keep cholesterol in check. It is about 50 times more powerful than natural garlic. Then, there are recipes such as activated charcoal, diatom (diatomaceous earth) or DE, olive leaf extract, oregano oil or leaf, golden seal, bitter kola etc.

    How they work

    I will mention in brief how some of them will work, beginning with activated charcoal. It is not a magic wand in all sorts of poisoning. Activated charcoal is made by heating charcoal from wood and other substances under high temperatures to enlarge its surface area. Activated charcoal will not stop strong poisons such as those of strong acids and bases from absorbtion into the blood stream. It will also not stop poisoning by an overdose of iron tablets because they will not effectively bind to it. With weaker poisons, activated charcoal may have a field day. A 50 grams powder of activated charcoal is believed to have a surface area as large as 50 football fields. This is a large wrapper big enough to wrap up such poisons and drag them out with stool because charcoal cannot be digested or absorbed, and it leaves the body within about 18 hours of ingestion. Gas, bloating and alcoholic hangovers do succumb also to activated charcoal , but not the very strong poisons for which hospital care by poison experts is required.

    Daiatom

    Long before hospital surgeons stepped on the Medicare scene, diatomaceous earth (DE or Diatom) was called the “homeopathic surgeon”, because it was used for some conditions which required removal of retrograde tissue such as tumours. Ancient Greeks used it as a hardener, in brick and block making, and in Europe later on for industrial uses such as removing heavy metals from water. It is obtained from sediments of fossilised algae in water in several parts of the earth. I guess this is what is called Nzum in some parts of Eastern Nigeria. Popular as Nzum is, it has not being purified and, so, I do not recommend it because of the side effects of consuming the impurities which may come with it. Even in purified form, Diatom comes in two grades …a) the food grade which is edible and b) the pet grade which is used for pest control. When cockroaches are too many in any of my rooms, for example, I spread the pest grade on door passages or on landings on staircases. It is often fun to see an assembly of cockroaches , belly up and dead everywhere, next day! That’s a picture of what the food grade may do to germs in the intestine. Made up of about 80 to 90 percent silica content, Diatom  is believed to kill germs and pests by drying them out. In the body, it strenghtened bones and teeth, dissolves cholesterol and lumps, as well as beautify skin, nail and hair. It is also a stool loosener, a plus for digestion, and an excellent alkalising agent in conditions of acidosis. As in everything, addictive use of Diatom is not encouraged as over-exposure is thought to compounding conditions such as asthma and congestive obstructive pulmonary Disease  (COPD), especially when the dust of powder is inhailed by susceptible persons. The pest grade is dangerous to human health. It should be kept handy somewhere away from the first aid box. The news of a bedbugs outbreak in France and efforts of the Nigerian government to prevent it from spreading to this country, reminds me  of how the pest grade helped me to eradicate bedbugs in my house about 10 years ago. I sprayed it everywhere the bugs could hide and that was the end of them.  Bedbugs, like lice, are endemic in Nigeria, anyway. Pest grade diatom can be sprayed on house hold items where bed bugs are found. I prefer the food grade which is more expensive because it can find its way into clothing, the skin and even food. I recommend it more especially where children always frequent.

    Milk Thistle

    This is one out of several hepaprotectives in natural medicine. An hepaprotective is an agent which protects the liver against damage by poisons. There are many dangerous poisons around us, outdoor and indoor, against which milk thistle, a plant, has proven an effective hepaprotective against Carbon Tetra Chloride.Mild and short term exposure to this chemical cause headaches, nausea, lethargy, vomitting and weakness. Long term and severe exposure may cause liver and kidney damage.

    As liver and kidney damage cases continue to grow in Nigeria, it may become necessary to find out if correlations exist between this event and increasing prevalence of carbon Tetrachhloride in household applications. Household cleaning agents which contain bleaches may release chlorophorm and carbon Tetrachloride. Many of these household cleaning agents have now invaded almost every home. I smell strong odours everywhere around my household when a certain toilet cleaner and a certain laundry soap are used. I show those who believe they must use them how the back of their hands have become wrinkled and why they should wear plastic or cotton hand gloves for self protection.

    But What about the inhalation, where nose guards may not help? Refrigerants and aerosol sprays contain this killer chemical. What appears most reasonable to me to do, therefore, is safeguarding the liver and other critical organs. This is where Milk Thistle and other hepaprotectives come into the picture. In several animal studies, the animals were distributed into several groups. Some had carbon Tetrachloride added to their meals or water to induce oxidative stress in the liver and to damage  it. Some had carbon tetrachloride and Milk Thistle added to their meals or water. Some were used as control, with no carbon tetrachloride and milk thistle.The ones without milk thistle in their meals or water died from liver damage, whereas no damage was evident in the ones induced but simultaneously given milk thistle in their diet and water. This shows milk thistle may (and, in fact, it does) protect the human liver and kidney against carbon Tetrachloride and other chemical poisoning damage. It is therefore, suggested that milk thistle be considered a regular food supplement feature in the diet of everyone, young and old , children in particular, as we all live today in a world where poisons have invaded the water we drink, the air we breathe and the food we eat.

    Milk thistle is a food supplement persons challenged with hepatitis should always have around them. This ailment causes inflammation of the liver and may also cause liver cancer. The active ingredient in milkthistle is Silymarin. It has been used in hepatitis treatment world-wide since the 1970s to provide remedial effects in some types of hepatitis as an hepaprotective, anti inflammatory and regenerative. My first recommendation of milk thistle was made in the 1980s to a member of the Day Tata family who had liver challenges. At that time, settled medical opinion was that liver cells were not regenerable. This case proved that damaged liver cells could regenerate under the right conditions. Dynapharm, a natural medicines network company, was brought to Nigeria from Kenya by a Nigerian who had liver challenges, attended a dynapharm product presentation in that country, tried milk thistle, got better, and brought the company to his own country.

    Another herb we cannot forget for its anti-poison properties is Bitter Kola, which is everywhere but has become increasingly expensive since it has been yielding its secret in this regard. I discovered it in the 1980s. Then, I had something to do every Saturday and Sunday for some months in Agbara, Ogun State, before I went to the office. I would leave home as early as 5 a.m and arrive in Agbara just before seven. Agbara is mid-way between Lagos and Badagry. Once done with my assignment there by about 8:30 am, I would stop over at a canteen near the highway for breakfast. What always took me there was palm wine and “bush meat”. The palmwine had no sacharin, was fresh but always had flies, honey bees and other insects in the froth. I will remove them and empty the palmeine in a plastic keg for home consumption. The “bush meat” was cheap, but sometimes had off taste from inadequate refrigeration. When my tummy ran for some time and bitter kola helped me to quieten it, I learnt to keep some in my pocket whenever I went out. Tiny as this nut is, liver researchers give it due respect. One of their studies with rats shows that phenolic compounds in bitter kola prevented liver cell death. Another study reported by www.sciencedirect.com found that a bioflavonoid of bitterkola  called kolaviron “gives protective action against carcinogen induced liver damage, acting as a protective natural antioxidant and enhancing drug detoxifying enzymes such as microsomal aniline hydroxylase”.

         It is, therefore, beneficial to chew one or two bitterkolas on every outdoor meal, even if the quality of preparation is unquestionable. A stitch in time saves nine, it is said. When I began to write about bitter kola about 20 years ago, some of my friends began to make bitterkola wine by crushing some and infusing them in red wines which they took in dosages of one or two tablespoons alone or in a glass of water or in empty stomach. This should help them detoxify overnight toxin hangovers in the liver and intestine, thereby reducing poison accumulation or overloading.

    This column would like to congratulate tourism minister Lola Ade John for overcoming so soon whatever health challenges stood in her way recently.

  • Police woman, two others die after dinner

    A female police officer and two other members of her family in Osogbo, the Osun State capital lost their lives on in the early hours of Thursday following a dinner they had the previous night.

    The police officer identified as Mary Samuel living in a rented apartment at Oloosaoko Compound of Oja-Oba area of the town were suspected to have died as a result of food poisoning.

    Investigation revealed that a baby’s continued cry from the apartment attracted the people, who out of curiosity discovered the lifeless bodies lying about on the floor.

    However, the cause of their death could not be ascertained.

    A resident of the area, who preferred anonymity, said they woke up in the middle of the night by persistent crying of a baby from the apartment.

    According to her, the baby and another woman in the apartment were survivors.

    Read also: Dana Air bags two crew proficiency awards

    She said: “When the cry of the baby became persistent, I tried to investigate what was going on and on getting to the apartment I knocked severally without an answer from within. Then I peeped through the window and saw the woman in a deep sleep lying with half cloth on a chair.

    “I raised an alarm and with other people we tried to force open and on the floor was Auntie Mary half naked with a torchlight in her hand. She was sitting lifeless on a chair.

    “We quickly alerted the police. The police brought out three lifeless bodies,  including Auntie Mary. But her sister, who appeared to be alive as she was breathing was rushed to the hospital. The baby appeared to be alright and she is in a safe custody of good Samaritan in the neighborhood.”

    Meanwhile, the victims’ bodies have been deposited at the mortuary of the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology Teaching Hospital, (LAUTECH), Osogbo.

    The eye witness said the state Commissioner of Police, Mr. Fimihan Adeoye, had earlier in the day visited the scene.

  • Expectant mum, husband die of food poisoning

    AN expectant mother and her husband died in Swali, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State capital, at the weekend, after eating a meal suspected to have been poisoned.

    A 10-year-old boy, Obinna Ogbani, living with them, also died.

    The Nation learnt the food was allegedly prepared by the 35-year-old woman, identified as Mrs. Nkem Igwenta.

    The husband, Orji Igwenta, and Obinna, said to be Igwenta’s cousin, were found dead after eating the poisoned food.

    Eyewitnesses said two rats, which reportedly ate the remnants, also died.

    It was gathered neighbours, who were thrown into mourning on Saturday afternoon, alerted the police.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said: “Tragedy has occurred at Winners Road, Swali. It was a black afternoon for us, as a family was killed by food poison.

    “A man, his expectant wife and a 10-year-old boy living with them died. How their food was poisoned is still a mystery till now. They died after dinner. The meal was prepared by the wife. Even two rats that ate the remnants also died. Vengeance belongs to God if it was done by enemies.”

    Police spokesman Asinim Butswat confirmed the incident.

    He described their death as sudden and unnatural.

  • 78 women prisoners hospitalised, food poisoning suspected

    Some 78 female inmates of a jail in India’s financial capital have been hospitalised due to suspected food poisoning on Friday, hospital dean said.

    “The prisoners of Byculla jail were rushed to the state-run J.J. Hospital when they complained of stomach pain, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea a few hours after having their breakfast in the morning,’’ Mukund Tayade told newsmen.

    Tayade added that the hospital has, however, confirmed the admission of the prisoners.

    “Seventy-eight patients have so far been admitted to the hospital.

    “Though a few more are likely to be brought to the hospital.

    “However, none is in serious condition,’’ Tayade noted.

    A high-level probe has been ordered into the incident.

    This is the second such incident in the past three months.

    Two prisoners died and over 50 had to be hospitalised for diarrhoea due to suspected food or water poisoning in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh in May.

  • Dangerous meat, toxic waters 3: Nigerians  die from  ‘food poisoning’

    Dangerous meat, toxic waters 3: Nigerians die from ‘food poisoning’

    IN Kogi, the shrill taunt of death afflicts the natives like a bad dream. The wild cries of deaths at home and the fields, haunt indigent folk of Okunran, Okoloke and Isanlu-Esa in Yagba West local council. It torments them in their sleep and as they go about their daily chores.

    It started as a ‘strange disease.’ Six weeks after it berthed in Okoloke village, a settlement predominantly inhabited by Fulani herdsmen, gastroenteritis, a diarrheic ailment caused by zoonotic bacteria, has been identified as the cause of 62 deaths in Yagba West.

    The State Commissioner for Health, Saka Audu,   revealed that those so far diagnosed were found to be suffering from gastroenteritis and malaria.

    “The disease actually started six weeks ago in Okoloke village in Yagba West, which is a settlement that is predominantly inhabited by Fulani herdsmen. There have been cases of reported deaths following abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhoea, but the patients who showed signs of illness had since been evacuated and transported to Kogi State Specialist Hospital Lokoja, for better treatment,” said Audu.

    Gastroenteritis, according to health experts, is an inflammation of the stomach and intestines that manifests in the form of vomiting or diarrhoea. Bleeding may occur in stools and in severe cases, the victim dies. Acute gastroenteritis manifests as diarrhoea and vomiting, and fever occasionally. The disease is a major global health problem, causing about two million deaths annually among children under five years of age. The greatest burden of the disease, however, impacts in developing countries, often devastatingly, due to poor sanitation, lack of safe drinking water, and unsanitary food processing culture, argued Kola Atunbi, a medical doctor.

    Atunbi stated that the most common cause of gastroenteritis is a viral infection. “It is often caused by food poisoning or contaminated water supply,” he said.

    The disease’s outbreak in Okoloke, an area predominantly inhabited by herdsmen, substantiates fears across medical circuits that its transmission route in Kogi can be traced from cattle to man. The most common cause of  the viral infection however, has been identified as food ingested by its human victims.

    “Food infected with Salmonella, Brucella and Escherichia Coli (E. coli) can cause gastroenteritis. Meat and other poultry products, dairy milk, shellfish and parboiled rice are also common vectors of the disease. It is most likely that the disease spread faster across the affected areas as a food borne virus,” said Isabella Momodu, a public health consultant.

    Momodu’s summation may not be too far from the truth. Previous outbreaks of gastroenteritis and other zoonoses have been traced beyond slaughterhouses, to neighbourhood food canteens, stalls of itinerant food hawkers and presumably standard, decent eateries and restaurants.

    The fact that the current outbreak in Kogi has been traced to local cattle herds, further substantiates established medical and scientific discoveries of food-borne hazards along Nigeria’s meat value chain.

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) reports that illness due to contaminated food is the most widespread health problem in the world and an important cause of reduced socio-economic productivity.

    In Nigeria, there is no organised system for monitoring outbreaks of food-borne infections in humans, which explains the inability to ascertain the true nature of the crisis in Kogi, soon after the first casualty.

    For six weeks, the government dithered for lack of essential and policy provisions guiding responses to an outbreak of such fatal consequences. Thus the coinage of ‘strange disease’ in describing the diarrheic outbreak that claimed 62 lives in three local governments in the state.

    Reason for Kogi’s death toll

    Most food-borne diseases in Nigeria appear to occur predominantly as isolated sporadic cases rather than taking the form of outbreaks and many, if not most, cases of food-borne infections are unrecognised, uninvestigated and undocumented, lamented Bodunde Hakeem, a medical lab scientist.

    Corroborating him, Thelma Soaga, a public health officer, stated: “Many patients do not seek help from hospitals but rather engage in self-medication or use of medicinal herbs. It is, therefore, difficult to determine the actual incidence of food-borne infections. However, diarrhoea is a good indicator of food-borne disease and better data exist for the prevalence and impact of diarrhoea in Nigeria.”

    In developing countries, typically 50 to 60 percent of diarrhoea cases are bacterial in origin. In Nigeria, the proportion may be higher at 65 to 80 per cent, according to health experts.

    “Most of the bacterial causes of diarrhoea are zoonotic, that is, transmissible between animals and humans, and the most notable bacterial zoonoses are toxigenic E. coli infection, campylobacteriosis, brucellosis, cryptosporidiosis, Staphylococcus aureus (S.aureus) infection, salmonellosis, listeriosis, toxoplasmosis, and Bacillus cereus infection.

    “Important non-zoonotic bacterial causes of diarrhoea include typhoid and cholera. Others such as B. cereus may be environmental contaminants as well as zoonoses. This complexity makes it difficult to estimate the relative importance of infected animals, polluted environments and infected people as sources of infection.

    “Even if food-borne zoonotic pathogens are detected in humans, they are often not traced back to the likely animal source due to inadequate medical diagnostic facilities in most hospitals across the country,” explained Funmilayo Osuntuyi, a medical doctor.

    A large number of studies examining food-borne hazards have established that besides Brucella,  E. coli and Salmonella are two popular meat-borne hazards in the country. The E. coli strains are important food-borne pathogens responsible for gastroenteritis with manifestations of abdominal pains, bloody diarrhoea and kidney failure, especially in children. Cattle are important reservoirs of E.coli virus and contaminated meat is a major vehicle for its transmission from animals to humans.

    Local fast-food restaurants commonly referred to as “bukas” are regarded as likely sources of infection. In Akwa Ibom, bloody, diarrheic E. coli accounted for 31 per cent of all cases of diarrhoea in humans, according to recent scientific findings.

    A significantly higher prevalence of the virus was observed in Lagos (35.0%) with greater rate of meat consumption and more eateries than in Zaria (23.7%) which had a lower rate of meat consumption and fewer eateries.

    In southeastern Nigeria, seven E. coli strains were isolated from 520 diarrhoeic stool samples from patients with acute diarrhoea in Enugu and Anambra States recently.

     

    Food-borne viruses

    Contamination can occur at multiple steps along the food chain. A previous outbreak of Salmonella food-poisoning in Ibadan, Oyo State, resulted in the death of 20 people. The outbreak was attributed to the consumption of improperly preserved sandwiches contaminated with the Salmonella virus (typhimurium phage type U282).

    And just recently, 10 duplicate (20) samples of fresh meat (beef) were randomly sampled from two major markets, the  Watt and Marian markets in Calabar, Cross River State by researchers Iheanyi Okonkwo, Udeze Augustine, Ani Nkang and peer across six universities including University of Port Harcourt, University of Ibadan, University of Ilorin and Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Imo State.

    The meat samples were analysed microbiologically to establish rates of contamination by bacteria. Fresh meat samples from both locations, Watt and Marian markets, showed marked growth of bacteria and a total of 36 isolates comprising eight different classes of bacteria were isolated with an average incidence rate of 50% in each market.

    The viruses include Klebsiella pneumoniae, E. coli, and Salmonella, and their presence in the fresh meat samples is alarming.

    A series of unfortunate findings

    Besides, Salmonella, E. coli and Brucella, Giardia, a diarrheic virus, has manifested in parts of the country. In a six- month scientific study of Giardia parasites among patients that attended the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Maiduguri, Borno State, of the 256 patients examined, 85 (33.2%) haboured Giardia species. Of the 156 diarrhoeic patients examined, 64 (41.0%) tested positive to the disease, while 100 non-diarrhoeic patients, 21 (21.0%) were also infected. The even spread of infection among patients has been described as endemic in Maiduguri.

    Giardiasis is usually associated with contaminated water supplies, poor personal hygiene, ignorance and poverty. The diarrheic virus is also transferrable by vectors such as housefly and it is responsible for over three million deaths annually, mostly in children. However, despite the danger constituted by the disease, there is still dearth of information and proactive campaign against Giardiasis and other zoonoses in Maiduguri.

    Leptospirosis, a zoonotic disease also manifests in the country with debilitating and life threatening consequences on its human hosts. The disease’s prevalence rate in Abuja, Benue, Plateau and Nassarawa States excites worry as recent screening of 263 blood samples from male and female abattoir workers in the four states showed 87.7% (male) and 81.0% (female) prevalence rates respectively.

    Nassarawa State had the highest prevalence rate of 94.3%, while the least rate was found in Plateau State with 82.8%. Like Brucella and Salmonella, symptoms of Leptospira infection closely mimic those of many febrile illnesses and accurate diagnosis may be missed due to its similarities to other fever.

    Human leptospirosis manifests as a wide spectrum of clinical illnesses, ranging from mild infections to severe multi-organ failure associated with high mortality and morbidity in different countries. It is transmitted to humans via direct or indirect contact with water, food or soil containing blood, urine and tissue from an infected animal.

    It infects the body through mucous membranes of the eyes, nose and mouth, or abraded skin by bathing or accidental immersion in fresh water lakes, rivers or canals contaminated with the urine of the infected livestock. Livestock often contract the disease from rats.

    The disease has also been reported in Enugu, Oyo and Bauchi among cattle, abattoir workers and volunteer blood donors. Despite its significance as a public health threat, leptospirosis is rarely diagnosed in most health care facilities in the country.

     

    Antibiotic-resistant viruses

    Listeria and E. coli isolates from muscle tissues of slaughtered cattle at a Bodija municipal abattoir in Ibadan, Oyo State revealed that meat is prone to contamination by antibiotic-resistant strains of the viruses, during slaughter and processing, due to unhygienic practices by abattoir workers.

    A research team including Victoria Adetunji and Tajudeen Isola of the Department of Veterinary Public Health and Preventive Medicine, University of Ibadan (U.I)  “found that the muscle tissues from the slaughtered cattle were highly contaminated, with the total aerobic, coliform and  Listeria counts being higher than the acceptable international standards. Isolated E. coli and Listeria demonstrated 100 per cent resistance to all tested antibiotics,” according to the team.

    Apparently, majority of the viruses responsible for diarrhoea in Nigeria are zoonotic and cattle are important reservoirs for many. In recent hospital studies, 33 out of 116 patients examined, had a history of meat consumption shortly before the onset of symptoms.

    Worried by high incidences of zoonotic infections in humans, the Federal Department of Livestock, four Nigerian universities teaching veterinary medicine, the Directorate of Research of the National Veterinary Research Institute, the Nigerian Institute for Trypanosomiasis (and Onchocerciasis) Research and Chief Veterinary Officers from selected states, and representatives of the private sector, met with International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) scientists at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Ibadan, Oyo State, to deliberate and address the country’s zoonoses burden.

    The forum identified food as a gendered commodity, with men and women typically playing different roles in livestock production and processing, with implications for food safety.

    The health experts warned that the general public is at high risk of contracting food-borne viruses through the consumption of contaminated food and abattoir workers are at greater risk of exposure.

    However, because the number of consumers of meat is greater than the number of people working closely with animals and their products, the greatest burden of infection is borne by consumers.

    There is no gainsaying that beef is the most commonly consumed meat in Nigeria thus increasing its potential contribution to the food-borne diarrhoea burden. The cost of illnesses associated with food-borne and beef-borne diarrhoea in the country was estimated by the Nigerian and ILRI scientific think-thank as follows: 173 million episodes of diarrhoea in the country is attributable to food and 35 million episodes of diarrheic ailments are attributable to beef.

    The cost of diarrhoea are US$ 3.6 billion (about N1.3 trillion) and the cost of food-borne diarrhoea are US$ 2.0 billion (about N724 billion). The cost of beef-borne diarrhoea from treatment and lost income is US$156 million (about N57 billion), according to the forum.

    Public health officers identify a higher prevalence of zoonoses in food sellers and handlers due to the crucial role they play in the preparation and sale of food in public and the nation’s abattoirs.

    Biological contaminants, largely bacteria and other parasites, constitute the major causes of food-borne diseases often transmitted through food, water, nails, and fingers of food sellers and handlers contaminated with faeces. A recent study in Abuja, Federal Capital Territory (FCT), established the prevalence of bacteria and intestinal parasites among food handlers in the FCT. Stool, urine and fingernail analysis of 168 food handlers revealed worrisome truths about their food processing culture.

    Staphylococcus and E. coli viruses were found in their fingernails. The subjects’ stool samples also tested positive to Salmonella (42.3%) and Shigella (15.5%) viruses. A high prevalence of intestinal parasites (38.1%) and bacteria (62.6%) was also discovered in the stools of the food-handlers.

     

    Is livestock business and policy review the answer?

    The use of retention ponds for pre-treatment of abattoir effluents has been suggested as an effective physical treatment method in reducing contamination levels of communal waters. Health experts also advised that entrepreneurs dealing in animal wastes such as bones, manure and blood should be encouraged through government policies to convert abattoir wastes to useful products.

    Abattoir operators should be trained on hygiene methods and enlightened by the government and NGOs, on impacts of abattoir effluents on public health and the environment.

    Public health practitioners also suggested that the country’s  policy on livestock business and ownership should be reviewed to meet the challenges of present realities.

    “Government should ban public hawking of livestock and the use of residential houses as poultry farms. These portend great health hazard to human population and could snow-ball to a deadly epidemic. It will be difficult to contain any such pandemic given the poor state of the nation’s health sector and lethargic emergency response facilities,” warned Bidemi Kalejaiye, a veterinary doctor.

    Kalejaiye advised that the government and regulatory authorities should ensure that the policy regulating abattoir operations and poultry farms are strictly adhered to. The government must institute policy that outlaws the location of new abattoirs, meat markets and poultry in residential areas,” she said.

    Ruth Onoshe, a food seller and resident of New Oko Oba, Agege, Lagos, however, argued that, besides the occasional stench of slurry and other animal waste that emanates from the abattoir, “No one could possibly die or fall sick by living close to an abattoir.”

    She described complaints about food-borne viruses and food poisoning as exaggerated claims and false alarms. The mother of four said that she has been selling food in the Oko-Oba abattoir for four years and none of her customers had ever complained of stomach ache or food poisoning.

    “See how enticing the aroma is. See how it sizzles in the pot. Taste it. It is very delicious. My food is always delicious,” said the food seller, who also believes that adding ‘curry and ginger’ to beef meal rids it of every infection.

  • Food poisoning: Bello warns conspiracy theorists

    Food poisoning: Bello warns conspiracy theorists

    Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello has appealed for calm in the wake of the death of six persons who died after allegedly taking a meal made from cassava flour.

    The incident, he said, had been painted in an ethnic light with people saying a tribe was deliberately targeted.

    A statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Petra Akinti Onyegbule, expressed regrets over such, saying appropriate authorities are investigating the matter and so no one should preempt the outcome of such investigations.

    The statement reads: “No one knowingly takes poisoned foodstuff to the open market in a multi-ethnic society, hoping only people from a particular tribe will buy.

    “That’s like throwing a stone in a crowded market and foolishly hoping it will strike your one enemy. It just does not make sense”.

    In addition to the ongoing police investigation, Governor Bello said health officials are also carrying out their investigation because of the public health angle to the incident, saying nothing will be left to chance.

    The governor vowed to come down hard on people with a negative tribal agenda in the state, warning that their activities go against his plans of fostering good communal relations in the state and making Kogi a home for all.