The Federal Government on Friday in
Abuja said the mortality rate of the re-emergence of Lassa fever has
increased to 43.2 per cent and has claimed the lives of five more
people.
With the development, the death toll has
now hit 40 as against 35 that was recorded on Thursday, thereby
bringing the total number of reported cases to 86.
The Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac
Adewole, at a news conference, also stated that two more states, namely
Plateau and Gombe, had been affected by the disease, which is in its
sixth week. Meanwhile, laboratories have confirmed 17 cases, which are
indicative of a new outbreak of the disease as 80 per cent of human
infections are asymptomatic.
Adewole said, “The total number of
reported cases, so far, is 86 while there have been 40 deaths, with a
mortality rate of 43.2 per cent. Our laboratories have confirmed 17
cases, indicative of a new roundtrip of Lassa fever outbreak.”
According to him, modalities have been
put in place to curb the spread of the disease, which can also occur and
be transmitted in health facilities where infection prevention and
control practices are not observed.
The measures, according to the Minister,
include “immediate release of adequate quantities of Ribavirin, the
specific antiviral drug for Lassa fever to all the affected states for
prompt and adequate treatment of cases.”
He said, “We have deployed rapid
response teams from the ministry to all the affected states to assist in
investigating and verifying the cases, as well as tracing contacts.
Clinicians and relevant health workers had been sensitised and mobilised
in areas of patient management and care in the affected states, as well
as intensifying awareness creation on the signs and symptoms, including
preventive measures such as general hygiene.”
Adewole said Nigeria has the capability
to diagnose Lassa fever as all reported cases were confirmed in the
nation’s laboratories.
“However, due to the non-specific nature
of Lassa fever symptoms and varied presentations, clinical diagnosis is
often difficult and delayed, especially in the early course of the
disease outbreak,” he added.
He, therefore, advised the public to
“avoid contact with rodents/rats as well as food/objects contaminated
with rats’ secretion and excretions.”
He urged the public to “also avoid drying food in the open and along the roadside.”
He said the World Health Organisation
had been notified of the confirmed cases while calling on health care
workers, who are expected to ensure that all patients are treated
freely, to immediately contact the state epidemiologists in the state
ministry of health or call the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and
the Federal Ministry of Health.
Lassa fever is an acute febrile illness,
with bleeding and death in severe cases, caused by its virus, which has
an incubation period of six to two days.
About 80 per cent of human infections
are asymptomatic; the remaining cases have severe multi-system disease,
where the virus affects several organs in the body, such as the liver,
spleen and kidneys.
The onset of the disease is usually
gradual, starting with fever, general weakness, and malaise followed by
headache, sore throat, muscle pain, chest pain, nausea, vomiting,
diarrhoea, cough, and bleeding from mouth, nose, vagina or
gastrointestinal tract, and low blood pressure.
The reservoir or host of the Lassa virus
is the “multimammate rat” called Mastomys natalensis which has many
breasts and lives in the bush and peri-residential areas.
Meanwhile, Lassa fever panic has hit
Plateau State as cases have been reported in five local government
areas of the state. One person has already been reported dead in Jos,
the state capital.
Although the area where the person died
was kept in guided secret, the State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Kuden
Kamshak, said some cases were reported in Jos North, Mangu, Langtang
South, Pankshin and Shendam local government areas of the state.
Kamshak said that the state government
had established Disease Surveillance and Notification Officers in each
of the 17 local governments in the state to monitor and manage the
problem before it escalates into an epidemic.
Kamshak, while addressing newsmen in Jos
on Friday, said, “We are also working with medical experts from the
World Health Organisation, which is assisting the state to curb the
spread.”
CREDIT: PUNCHNG

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