No Lassa Fever Death in 72 Hours – Adewole

Wed, Jan 13, 2016
By publisher
2 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Health

– 

Nobody has died of lassa fever in the last 72 hours in any part of Nigeria in past three days. The federal ministry of health which has been working vigorously to stop the spread of the disease announced the development on Tuesday, January 12, at a news conference in Abuja. Isaac Adewole, minister of health, said the situation showed that the spread of the disease was being curtailed. “As of today, records from our surveillance team show that the number of suspected cases is 93; number of laboratory confirmed cases is 25, and the number of reported deaths is 41, with a fatality rate of 44 percent.

“We will like to state that given the high index of suspicion, the increasing number of suspected cases may not be out of place as health practitioners are more likely to include Lassa fever as a differential diagnosis in their health care facilities. However, the good news is that there have been no new confirmed cases or deaths in the last 72 hours. This is a reflection of our coordinated response and advocacy to all states,” Adewole said.

The minister assured Nigerians that there was no need to panic because the nation’s health armada was enough to deal with the outbreak of the disease. He also disclosed that four suspected cases of the disease in Rivers and Lagos states turned out to be negative. While stating that there was a cure for Lassa fever, the minister advised Nigerians to be vigilant as early detection could help in nipping the disease in the bud.

He assured Nigerians that nobody would use the outbreak of the disease as an avenue to make money, disclosing that funds for the containment effort was from the budget of the ministry of health.

According to the ministry, by last weekend 10 states of the federation had been put under watch over the spread of the disease. The states are, Bauchi, Nassarawa, Niger, Taraba, Kano, Rivers, Edo, Plateau, Gombe and Oyo.

—  Jan 13, 2016 @ 11:20 GMT

|  

Tags: