Tag: outbreak

  • Institute warns against outbreak of cassava killer-disease

    National Root Crops Research Institute (NRCRI), Umudike,Abia State has warned against the outbreak of the deadly Cassava Brown Streak Disease (CBSD).
    It gave the warning during the launch of WAVE Project, a campaign against the dreaded CBSD in Umudike, Abia State, attended by agricultural researchers from Ivory Cost, Benin Republic, Burkina Faso, Togo and Ghana.
    The institute advised the Federal Government to arrest the situation, saying the disease could affect the economy if not checked on time. It warned that the outbreak of CBSD, which attacks mainly cassava, could cost the economy about N400 billion ($2 billion) yearly.
    The institute said it based its loss assessment on the effect the disease had in countries it had attacked, stressing that those who do not learn from history plans to fail.
    NRCRI said the crop disease has not reached Nigeria or any West African countries. “There was great need to prepare against it as it is already having devastating effect in some East African nations like Kenya, ”it said.

    Bill and Milinda Gates Foundation has commenced measures with $3.6 million for research and campaign against CBSD and the fund is domiciled with the University of Felix Houphant-Boigny in Ivory Cost.
    The institute said as an institution with a national mandate for cassava research and development, it was taking a pre-emptive initiative to tackle the CBSD threat in Nigeria.
    This, it said, is because its effect could result in complete loss of root yield in cassava thus making it a severe threat to food security in the sub-Saharan Africa.
    The institute said: “With symptoms like folia necrosis, stem lesions and root necrosis, it has since emerged as the one of the two most important diseases of cassava, the other being the cassava mosaic diseases”.
    NRCRI warned that a CBSD attack would affect Nigeria’s position as the world’s largest cassava production, saying it will not be good to the food production level of the country and also affect its economy.’’
    It continued: “CBSD used to be confined mainly to coastal areas of eastern and southern Africa, but in the past few years it has become substantially more virulent and begun spreading across the continent.”
    In his address, the Executive Director of the Institute, Dr. Julius Okonkwo, noted the importance of the WAVE project, saying that it would help to save the continent from serious embarrassment.
    He noted that the institute has made tremendous progress in developing value added products in cassava bread, cakes, donuts, chin-chin, ginger drinks, ginger powder, cocoyam chips and soup thickener.
    Launching the project, Abia State Governor, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu, represented by the Secretary to State Government, Dr. Eme Okoro praised the project, saying that it fits into the government programme of interest in agriculture.
    He also praised the Bill and Milinda Gates Foundation for initiating the research to take proactive position against the dreaded crop disease.

  • Cholera outbreak kill 8 in Ebonyi

    Eight persons have died as a result of fresh cholera outbreak in Ebonyi State.

    Three of the deaths were recorded in Ndiogbu Ndieze village, Izzi local government area of Ebonyi State.

    Seventeen persons in the community were also hospitalized.

    Five deaths were confirmed by the Director of Public Health and Disease Control in the state, Dr. Christian Achi in Ikwo community, Ikwo local government area of the state as a result of fresh outbreak of the disease in the area.

    The State Epidemiologist, Dr. Francis Onwe and other officials of the state Ministry of Health were forced to visit the affected areas following the outbreak and distributed drugs.

    A stakeholder of Ndiogbu Ndieze village, Chief Austin Igwe Edeze whose younger brother was among those that died following the outbreak said people who attended burial of a resident of the area came back and started vomiting and defecating uncontrollably.

    He said:‘’Nobody suspected that cholera was responsible for the frequent vomiting and defecation by the people that attended the burial ceremony.

    ‘’ So before we could notice it is cholera, was down; vomiting and stooling and we took him to the hospital and he died early in the morning.

    ‘’We raised alarm to the Ministry of Health and the officials advised that we should quickly bury him to avoid the disease spreading to other people around which we obeyed and bury him immediately.

    ‘’The Permanent Secretary of the Ministry sent a team who visited us for enlightenment on the prevention of the disease and donated some drugs after the lecture’’ he added.

    The state Epidemiologist Dr. Francis Onwe said the state health officials were contacted by Chief Austin Igwe Edeze whose younger brother was among those that died as a result of the epidemic.

    He advised the residents to ensure personal and environmental hygiene to avoid contracting the disease.

    Onwe further advised them to ensure they bury any victim immediately such person dies to avoid spreading the epidemic.

    He also warned them to desist from drinking stream and contaminated water which he explained are sources of contracting the disease..

  • Anxiety over rumour of Ebola outbreak

    Anxiety over rumour of Ebola outbreak

    Last week, there was a major scare over the outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in Abuja when a woman was alleged to have died of the virus at the Asokoro General Hospital. GBENGA OMOKHUNU reports.

    There have been speculations about the possibility of a case of Ebola virus disease in Abuja. Sources say the suspected carrier attended a conference at the NICON Luxury Hotel and must have had contacts with other people. Residents of Abuja experienced another Ebola scare, aside the earlier one which featured the unfortunate viral messages that prescribed bathing with and drinking of salt water as preventive measures.

    Health authorities had also educated people on the Ebola virus; informing them about the possibility of surviving the disease. People have  also  been encouraged to improve the level of personal hygiene and avoid unnecessary body contacts with people.

    The current wave of scare started when activities in the Utako District of Abuja were paralysed over an alleged Ebola victim. The incident took place at a junction along Ekukinam Street beside Alibro Atrium, close to ABC Transport Park, where a middle-aged man suddenly slumped while walking along the road.

    The man was reportedly vomiting and sweating profusely. The incident scared people who immediately speculated that he was probably an Ebola victim. Nobody went to his aid for the fear of Ebola.

    But less than three weeks after a suspected Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) patient died in a private hospital in Abuja, the scare about the virus in an Asokoro General Hospital began.

    The incident which caused grave panic in the territory is yet to abate as officials of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Health Secretariat are still making efforts to enlighten the public properly.

    When contacted for comment on the issue, the spokesperson of the FCT Health Secretariat, Badaru Salisu Yakasai, in a statement said the results of the test are yet to either confirm or refute claims that the patient died of the Ebola Virus Disease.

    He said: “The Family Medicine Unit of Asokoro District Hospital suspected Ebola disease in a patient on admission at the Accident and Emergency Unit on August 28 and immediately isolated the patient. Strict infection control measures were immediately taken.

    “Blood sample was then taken to the designated FCT Ebola testing laboratory which is within the hospital premises. The Epidemiology Unit of Public Health Department of the Health and Human Services Secretariat was notified and their response was immediate.

    “The results of the Ebola testing were being expected from the laboratory. Members of staff of the hospital who came in contact with the deceased were then placed under strict surveillance, pending when the test results will be out.

    “The case also served as a drill to test the preparedness of the hospital to manage and contain Ebola disease. Clinical assessment, however, did not reveal any history of contact or travel.

    “However, in view of the high index of suspicion, isolation and strict infection control measures were continued and the unit was condoned off. Unfortunately, the patient died the next day, Friday, August 29.

    ”The Accident and Emergency Unit was temporarily relocated to the General Outpatient Unit (GOPD). A list of all medical staff that had contact with the patient has been compiled and they are all under surveillance.

    “The general public is advised not to panic as a case of Ebola has not been confirmed at the hospital and the measures that have been put in place are only precautionary in the interest of public safety.”

    Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu immediately refuted the claim after tests had been carried out on the dead person. He confirmed that she did not die as a result of the Ebola virus, adding that there was no Ebola outbreak in Abuja.

    Despite this clarification, some are still convinced that the patient died as a result of the Ebola virus while others are living in fear.

    Many residents spoke to our correspondent about their reactions on the speculation.

    A businessman, Mr. Shola Odumosun said: “When I had about it, I had to disregard it. Being an enlightened person, one of the things I have discovered since the spread of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in Nigeria is that apprehension and unnecessary fear kills faster than the virus itself. There is the need for people to be properly enlightened about the sad development.

    “As far as the Ministry of Health is concerned, I am quite convinced that for now there is no Ebola outbreak in Abuja. But you know people around me started being panicky and were even calling their loved ones to stay away from the Asokoro General Hospital.

    “I watched a video about a man running from Ebola and a lady around there had to jump into a well. This means that she had even sentenced herself to death before death itself would come. People should take their time to ascertain the truth or otherwise of every rumour they heard. If care is not taken, it may affect both our private and public health sectors so much so that those who are supposed to receive emergency attention for a particular sickness far from Ebola will end up being quarantined unnecessarily.

    “These days, many are dying due to the fear that they are carriers of EVD. That you have Ebola is even not an automatic death sentence. There are measures to be taken in Lagos and other places where some people that were quarantined initially were freed.

    “I haven’t called any member of my family in Abuja because I know it was a rumour.”

    Another resident, Adelani Adepegba said: “The news which turned out to be a rumour really scared me. I immediately concluded that it meant that the EVD is already in Abuja. I asked members of my family and friends to take note and avoid the hospital.

    “The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory and the chairmen of the area councils need to do more as regards enlightenment campaigns. We cannot afford to experience EVD in Abuja; it will be more disastrous being the seat of power. I was worried but thank God it was a rumour. People should be more particular about personal hygiene.”

    A civil servant, Mr. Paul Oba said he had vowed not to visit the hospital for now. “I was sad when I heard of the EVD case in the hospital. I quickly alerted members of my church who use it . I then vowed not to visit the hospital. But we thank God that it was a rumour.”

    On her part, Mary Obioma said: “I use the hospital frequently before the rumour, but now I am  afraid of visiting that hospital. Prevention, they say, is better than cure. When I heard the news, I was shocked because I was at the Asokoro Hospital on that day.

    “Government should make public happenings in our hospitals to avoid the spread of the EVD. Who knows if some people have been affected and are afraid of coming out in public to be cured or quarantined? They may be afraid of stigmatisation.

    “They should also know that they are doing more harm to members of their family, their neighbourhood and the entire country. My prayer is that the EVD should not go beyond the present stage in Nigeria.”

  • Ebonyi sets up committees to check Ebola outbreak

    THE governmentof Ebonyi State has set up two committees in order to check Ebola outbreak in the state.

    The two committees are the ‘Rapid Response Team’ and the ‘Treatment Team,’ with 19 and 15 members respectively.

    The state also announced that henceforth movement of corpses from other parts of the country into its environs and inter- state trading would no longer be allowed.

    The two committees are chaired by the state commissioner of health, Dr. Sunday Nwangele.

    Governor Martin Elechi has also urged the members of the committees to be committed in the various duties assigned to them.

    He said that the issue of epidemics such as yellow fever, cholera, Hiv/Aids had reared their ugly heads in the past but due to the determination of people, they were properly contained.”So Ebola virus will not be different from others,” he added.

    He appreciated the members of the committee for accepting to work at a time like this which he noted showed their love and patriotism for the state and the country in general.

    “Just as the people in the past did not give up; they fought tirelessly to eradicate yellow fever in the sixties, later cholera and recently HIV/AIDS. So shall we fight to stop Ebola,” he said.

    The Commissioner for Health, Dr Nwagele, explained that the Rapid Response Committee would ensure that residents of the state were adequately sensitised about the Ebola virus and to properly educate the people on the need to adopt preventive measures such as environmental sanitation and regular hand washing.

    He explained further that the treatment team would be in charge of diagnosis and treatment should there be any case of Ebola virus in the state.

    Elechi, the state executive council members and the members of the committees all used the hand sanitiser brought to the meeting venue before having hand shake with their colleagues.

  • Our battle against Ebola virus outbreak, by Fashola

    Our battle against Ebola virus outbreak, by Fashola

    There is no Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) epidemic in Lagos, Governor Babatunde Fashola said yesterday.

    In a broadcast on the disease, Fashola said though the state had suffered painful loss of lives, the situation was not an epidemic as being alleged because “all those who have either died or are suffering from Ebola are directly traceable” to the Liberian EVD importer, Patrick Sawyer.

    He said 61 contacts were cleared last week after the 21 days surveillance, which is the known lifespan of the virus.

    “These people were not sick. They were persons who needed to be monitored because of real or suspected contacts to be certain that they did not eventually fall sick. We cautiously wait to see how many more people will be cleared and hope that there will be no new cases.

    “Nevertheless, our strategy is to prepare for the worst by making plans to expand the facility to take any new cases, while we hope for the best. There is a lot to do, and we need your collaboration to remain focused on containment and treatment”, Fashola said.

    He also debunked claims that Ebola victims were being neglected, adding that the state did not reject any useful drug; neither is there fund shortage.

    Fashola said victims were receiving the best care as recommended by experts, urging medical volunteers willing to fight the cause to sign up and present themselves for training.

    “I wish to state very categorically that none of these is true. What is true is that we should perhaps never have been in this situation, but we are now in it. What is true is that the Ebola virus did not break out from within Nigeria, it was imported into Nigeria.

    “What is true is that we have followed all the contacts that we know who have had primary and secondary contacts with the patient who imported the virus into our state, or with people who had contact with him.

    “Because we had to react to an unexpected situation, we had to react in a proper and methodical way, according to acceptable global health standards.

    “I can now tell you that in the last one week, with the help and advice of our technical partners, such as the World Health Organisation, the Centre for Disease Control and the Medecins Sans Frontiers, who have tracked this virus and studied it for decades, our response is a lot better than when the news first broke; and our capacity is increasing daily.

    “Although we have suffered very painful losses of lives, I think it is fair to say that we are not yet at an epidemic stage and we are determined to do everything not to get to that stage; because of the grave consequences to the safety of human lives,” said Fashola.

    Fashola said the discovery of EVD in the state posed a threat to the primary purpose of his administration, which is to secure lives. He described the situation as the biggest challenge to public health.

    He said he had been engaged in meetings daily with various stakeholders on the progress made by the government and the need for caution, adding that with news of complete recovery of a Nigerian doctor confirmed to have contracted the virus, the case of unknown origin had been eliminated.

    “My view of the fact that we are gaining control is informed by verifiable facts that I receive daily from our health workers that all the cases of those who have either unfortunately died, or those who are sick, and those who are contacts under surveillance are directly traceable to the imported case.

    “The challenge of managing the Ebola virus is big but our resolve to contain and defeat it is bigger. That resolve is demonstrated by the courage shown by the first set of health workers at state and federal levels who stood up to be counted, and the leadership of the state and federal ministries of Health with the support of our international partners.

    “In spite of fear, they stood up to be counted at a time of grave danger. We should salute their courage, professionalism, patriotism and humanitarian disposition. They are the heroes and heroines that we have looked for a long time. I cannot thank them enough.

    “While we are doing everything to assure their safety and to give them confidence to proceed, I want to passionately appeal that we must not do anything to distract them or demotivate them.”

    The governor urged the people to report suspected cases around them as well as stop unhygienic practices, such as defecating or urinating in public, because those are body fluids and waste through which the virus is known to thrive.

    Fashola expressed appreciation to those who are seeking to raise funds for the current battle against the virus but pointed out that the State “is not yet at the fund-raising stage and cannot foresee that eventually”.

    “For now, the State has enough resources to fund everything that is needed. This is what your taxes can do in emergencies. Our House of Assembly has thankfully approved a request for any needed expenditure”, the Governor said adding that the Federal Government has shown “the appropriate level of concern about the national and global risk this poses and I am sure they will provide funds should we be unable to do so if we ask for it”.

    He said the combined team of State and Federal personnel and the international partners are also sharing information with the public and the Federal Government about the status of the patients and contacts in a transparent way adding, “We should all please listen to them. They are the ones who have the facts”.

  • Economics of Ebola Virus outbreak

    Economics of Ebola Virus outbreak

    International rating agency Moody’s has warned that besides the death toll, the outbreak will cause “critical commercial and transport disruptions” in the affected West African countries, leading to “significant” economic and fiscal damage, writes CBC News

    In the world of business, there is a saying that markets are driven by fear and greed. As shares in drug companies surge, the Ebola virus has already unleashed the power of greed. And as we watch the coverage of the disease move into what many commentators have labeled irrational hysteria, some people are finding ways to tap the power of fear.

    Joel Kettner of the International Centre for Infectious Diseases in Winnipeg says that when it comes to infectious diseases, fear is not clearly good or clearly bad.

     

    “It can be both,” he says.

    Most medical experts say Ebola’s contagion in the global consciousness has outgrown the disease’s actual risk. One of the people pointing that out is Seth Berkley, head of the GAVI Alliance, a group that promotes developing world health through vaccination.

    “It starts with familiar flu-like symptoms,” he wrote on the BBC Health site. “But within days this can quickly descend into something more exotic and frightening: Vomiting and diarrhoea, followed by bleeding from the gums, the nose and gastrointestinal tract.”

    But the disease Berkley is describing is not Ebola but Dengue shock syndrome. Caused by a mosquito-borne disease, the latter kills about 20 times more people worldwide every year than the confirmed death toll from the current Ebola outbreak (although the numbers are changing constantly).

    Despite the wall-to-wall coverage of Ebola as the latest terrifying plague, its ranking in the death pecking order is negligible. Latest estimates from the World Health Organisation show that, for example, between one and two million people die of AIDS every year.

     

    Fear as motivator

     

    According to Berkley, the reason the developed world fears Ebola despite its low risk of spread in the developed world is that the idea of an untreatable disease is foreign to us and stimulates long-forgotten fears.

    There is no doubt some truth in Berkley’s analysis, but as a participant and a critic of the influence of media on our lives, I don’t think we can absolve the people in my business. During the quiet summer news cycle, the news media are partly implicated in stimulating a disproportionate horror of Ebola, just as they did with H1N1 and SARS.

    Unlike many other commentators, however, I think this could be a good thing.

    And with some reservations, Joel Kettner agrees. Fear is motivating, he says.

    Certainly, in parts of West Africa where the disease is spreading, fear – of hospitals, of western medicine, of neighbours — is part of the problem.

    Fear is closing borders, shutting down trade, seriously damaging local and national economies. Liberian Finance Minister Amara Konneh recently said due to the Ebola outbreak, the country’s growth forecast “is no longer realistic.”

    International rating agency Moody’s has warned that besides the death toll, the outbreak will cause “critical commercial and transport disruptions” in the affected West African countries, leading to “significant” economic and fiscal damage.

    Fear can also help the disease spread. The frantic urge to escape areas where the Ebola virus is present can make it worse. “You’re not leaving the risk behind,” says Kettner. “You’re just carrying it to another location.”

    As a result, Kettner says there is a “reasonable expectation” that people will arrive in Canada or other developed countries who may have been exposed to the virus and won’t get sick until after their return. Fear of that happening is already prompting Canadian health authorities to dust off their preparedness skills, which were learned during the SARS crisis.

    Kettner also observes that global media fears and a sense of crisis have awakened new interest in companies and agencies working on cures and vaccines. Although its shares have fallen from their highs earlier this week, Canada’s Tekmira Pharmaceuticals gathered worldwide attention and credibility for its experimental Ebola drug.

    Despite a rollercoaster ride on the market, Tekmira’s shares are still worth nearly twice as much as they were a month ago, giving the company better access to capital to do its work. And Tekmira is not alone. Suddenly, investors are also interested in BioCryst, MAP BioPharma and others because of their “race to combat Ebola.”

     

    The upside of panic

     

    In an article ostensibly telling us to beware trading in Ebola virus stocks, Turney Duff, a former Wall Street trader and author of The Buy Side, actually gives instructions on how to profit from health scares.

    “The last thing you want to do when news breaks is try to find the right stocks to trade,” Duff wrote on CNBC.com. “Back when I was a health-care trader and the SARS virus had the world’s attention, we broke down every sector to see how it could be impacted.”

    Pharmaceutical companies – and those that invest in them – can benefit from outbreaks by creating and selling drugs to fight diseases.

    While critics of the pharmaceutical industry may fulminate against the ethics of profiting from poverty and disease, the fact is, the wave of fear over Ebola means the virus is punching far above its weight compared to other developing country diseases. After all, the pharmaceutical industry is notorious for ignoring diseases of the developing world because poor people can’t pay for expensive drugs.

    But the Ebola scare has actually helped focus minds – and financial resources – on creating treatments that, in a commercial sense, might not justify their development costs.

    Respiratory illness, for instance, kills more than a thousand times more people than Ebola.

    A recent recurrence of one of those respiratory diseases — H1N1, or swine flu — that swept through Canada in 2009 reminds Kettner of another advantage of the fear of disease and the attention it brings.

    “We became aware that the population of First Nations and other aboriginal people, especially those living in remote and northern communities, appeared to be at higher risk for getting severe [cases of the] disease,” says Kettner.

    He said fear in those communities “was a motivation for focusing on the health needs… and quality of health care in those communities.”

     

    Opportunities to

    improve health care

     

    Fear of a new disease is not irrational. Diseases mutate. And while Ebola is not a perfect candidate, epidemiologists know there is a chance that some new strain of bug will ride our integrated transportation system to sweep the world like a modern Black Death. That would be a personal problem for many of us, but it would also be a very big economic problem.

    Kettner observes that the main causes of disease outbreaks that could spread around the world are not germs, but poverty and poor health care.

    “What I hope will happen from the fear that is generated from the Ebola virus is that there will be more attention paid to the health needs of the communities that are at risk,” he says.

    After years of civil war, with poverty, few doctors and abysmal education levels, the people in the worst affected areas of West Africa are poorly equipped to save themselves from a disease like Ebola.

    Maybe it is a good thing for those of us in the developed world to be afraid, to buy into the current hysteria. Because if we don’t commit the resources to stop the outbreak there, maybe, just maybe, Ebola will soon be coming for you.

  • Ebola: Second American infected

    •Liberian president orders new measures

    A second American aid worker in Liberia has tested positive for Ebola, according to the Christian humanitarian group she works for.

    Nancy Writebol is employed by Serving in Mission, or SIM, in Liberia and was helping the joint SIM/Samaritan’s Purse team that is treating Ebola patients in Monrovia, according to a Samaritan’s Purse statement.

    Writebol, who serves as SIM’s personnel coordinator, has been living in Monrovia with her husband, David, according to SIM’s website. The Charlotte, North Carolina, residents have been in Liberia since August 2013, according to the blog Writebols2Liberia. They have two adult children.

    On Saturday, Samaritan’s Purse announced that American doctor Kent Brantly had become infected. The 33-year-old former Indianapolis resident had been treating Ebola patients in Monrovia and started feeling ill, spokeswoman Melissa Strickland said. Once he started noticing the symptoms last week, Brantly isolated himself.

    Brantly, the medical director for Samaritan Purse’s Ebola Consolidated Case Management Center in Monrovia, has been in the country since October, Strickland said.

    “When the Ebola outbreak hit, he took on responsibilities with our Ebola direct clinical treatment response, but he was serving in a missionary hospital in Liberia prior to his work with Ebola patients,” she said.

    Health officials say the Ebola outbreak, centered in West Africa, is the deadliest ever.

    As of July 20, some 1,093 people in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia are thought to have been infected by Ebola since its symptoms were first observed four months ago, according to the World Health Organization.

    Testing confirmed the Ebola virus in 786 of those cases; 442 of those people died.

    Of the 1,093 confirmed, probable and suspected cases, 660 people have died.

    There also are fears the virus could spread to Africa’s most populous country, Nigeria.

    Last week, a Liberian man hospitalized with Ebola in Lagos died, Nigerian Health Minister Onyebuchi Chukwu said.

    Lagos, the largest city in Nigeria, has a population of more than 20 million.

    The man arrived at Lagos airport on July 20 and was isolated in a local hospital after showing symptoms associated with the virus. He told officials he had no direct contact with anyone with the virus nor had he attended the burial of anyone who died of Ebola.

    Confirmation of the death in Lagos came after news that a doctor who has played a key role in fighting the Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone is infected with the disease, according to that country’s Ministry of Health.

    Dr. Sheik Humarr Khan is being treated by the French aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres — also known as Doctors Without Borders — in Kailahun, Sierra Leone, agency spokesman Tim Shenk said.

    Before falling ill, Khan had been overseeing Ebola treatment and isolation units at Kenema Government Hospital, about 185 miles east of the capital, Freetown.

    Ebola typically kills 90% of those infected, but the death rate in this outbreak has dropped to roughly 60% because of early treatment.

    Officials believe the Ebola outbreak has taken such a strong hold in West Africa because of the proximity of the jungle — where the virus originated — to Conakry, Guinea, which has a population of 2 million.

    Because symptoms don’t immediately appear, the virus can easily spread as people travel around the region. Once infected with the virus, many people die in an average of 10 days as the blood fails to clot and hemorrhaging occurs.

    The disease isn’t contagious until symptoms appear. Symptoms include fever, headache and fatigue. At that point, the Ebola virus is spread via bodily fluids.

    Health workers are at especially high risk, because they are in close contact with infected people and their bodily fluids. Adding to the danger, doctors may mistake the initial stages of an Ebola infection for another, milder illness.

    Liberia president orders new  measures

    Liberia’s president has closed all but three land border crossings, restricted public gatherings and quarantined communities heavily affected by the Ebola outbreak in the West African nation.President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf described the measures late Sunday after the first meeting of a new taskforce she created and is chairing to contain the disease, which has killed 129 people in the country and more than 670 across the region.A top Liberian doctor working at Liberia’s largest hospital died on Saturday, and two American aid workers have fallen ill, underscoring the dangers facing those charged with bringing the outbreak under control.Last week a Liberian official flew to Nigeria via Lome, Togo and died of the disease at a Lagos hospital.

    The fact that the official, Patrick Sawyer, was able to board an international flight despite being ill raised fears that the disease could spread beyond the three countries already affected – Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.There is no known cure for Ebola, which begins with symptoms including fever and sore throat and escalates to vomiting, diarrhea and internal bleeding. The disease spreads through direct contact with blood and other bodily fluids as well as indirect contact with “environments contaminated with such fluids,” according to the World Health Organization.”No doubt, the Ebola virus is a national health problem,” Sirleaf said.

  • ‘No need to trade blames on Ebola outbreak’

    ‘No need to trade blames on Ebola outbreak’

    The Nigeria Association of Women Journalists (NAWOJ) has urged journalists to help disseminate correct information to prevent Ebola spread.

    A statement by its National President, Ifeyinwa Omowole and National Secretary, Ladi Patrick, in a statement, reads: “The Ebola Virus may have come into the country under avoidable circumstances but this is no time to trade blames or take sides with doctors or the government. It is a time for journalists to report on issues that will lead to the containment of the virus. As mothers, we would not like to see our husbands, children, sisters and brothers die of this scourge that has sneaked in on us; we should, therefore, all work assiduously to ensure that everyone around us is informed about the virus and how to prevent it. We want to call on all Nigerians to put national interest above self interests; we should not hide family members, who may show signs of the virus as we are not only endangering our lives but the lives of many other Nigerians.

    “NAWOJ also calls on doctors to kindly call off the strike and respond to the national emergency, just as government has declared a state of emergency on Ebola virus and release of the funds will help to procure more protective gears for their job. We commend all the doctors and other health workers who have risked their lives and continue to risk their lives to save the lives of many other Nigerians; we Nigerians can only thank them by playing our part in the fight against Ebola. We must all take a unanimous stand to fight this virus and contain it, containing this virus is as much an individual effort as it is a collective effort; government cannot do it alone if we all do not assist by being vigilant, taking precaution and adhering to all the advice of the medical practitioners.

    “While NAWOJ appreciates the Nigerian culture of making light every challenge, we urge everyone to be careful the way we make light this particular health challenge. We must endeavour not to make this worse than it already is by spreading rumour, which may only lead to more health challenges just as the salt-water anti-Ebola therapy did. The association is also using this opportunity to commend the Federal Government and some state governments for promptly responding to the scourge.”

  • We’ll prevent Ebola outbreak in Oyo – Govt

    We’ll prevent Ebola outbreak in Oyo – Govt

    The Oyo State Government has assured the people of the state that it has taken some steps to ensure the prevention of an Ebola disease outbreak in the state.

    A statement issued in Ibadan on Friday by the state Commissioner for Health, Dr. Muyiwa Gbedegesin said that the state government was working closely with the Federal Ministry of Health, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Ministries of Health of the neighbouring states to prevent the outbreak of the disease.

    “All the disease surveillance and notification officers in all the local government areas have been alerted and sensitized to promptly respond to the outbreak,’’ it said, adding that a sensitization programme had been also been organized for a similar purpose.

    The statement also said that public enlightenment highlighting how to prevent Ebola Virus disease, its causes, mode of transmissions and steps to be taken in case of outbreak had already commenced in form of sensitization of traditional healers, religious and community members, as well as through airing of jingles and distribution of posters.

    It highlighted the signs and symptoms of the disease to include onset of fever, weakness, muscle pain, headache and sore throat, conjunctivitis, hiccups, dysphasia followed by vomiting, diarrhea and rash.

    While assuring the people of the state of effective monitoring of the situation, the state government, however, urged them to take any suspected case to the nearby public health facility for adequate care.

  • That outbreak of cholera

    SIR: Apart from the recent outbreak of cholera in Nigeria that killed three in Lagos and some others in Zamfara, at least 352 people have been killed by this infection in a space of three months. More than 6,400 cases have also been reported, mostly in the North. Doctors are currently monitoring outbreaks in 12 of the 36 states.

    Nigeria had the first series of cholera outbreak between 1970- 1990. Despite this long experience with cholera, an understanding of the epidemiology of the disease and the reason for its persistence is still lacking.

    Developed countries have almost zero incidence of cholera because they have widespread water treatment plants, food-preparation facilities and they observe strict sanitation protocols. Most people have access to toilets and hand-washing facilities. A lot of responsibilities in curbing this epidemic lie with the government although the citizens have a great role to play in battling and subduing cholera.

    Individuals can prevent or reduce their chances of contacting cholera by thorough hand-washing, drinking treated water and eating clean and well prepared food.

    Cholera is an acute infectious disease caused by a bacterium, Vibrio cholerae which results in painless diarrhea (the main symptoms are watery stool and vomiting). Most people who contact this disease get it primarily from drinking water or eating food that has been contaminated by the faeces (waste product) of an infected person, including one with no apparent symptoms.

    To prevent cholera requires washing the hands frequently with soap and water especially before handling food and after using the toilet. Alcohol-based hand sanitizers can be used when soap and water are not readily available.

    Intervention measures that address the root problems of poor sanitation and unsafe water supplies are required to fully solve the problem of cholera. U.N. figures indicate that half of Nigeria’s population of 160 million do not have access to safe water and a third, to proper sanitation.

    • Tolulope Ojo,

    Lagos