"The total
number (of suspected cases) reported is 86 and 40 deaths, with a
mortality rate of 43.2 percent," Adewole told a news conference in the
capital, Abuja.
The minister
said that so far, laboratory tests have confirmed that 22 of the 86
suspected cases were Lassa fever and results were expected on the
remainder.
Seven of the
affected states are in the north -- Bauchi, Nasarawa, Niger, Taraba,
Kano, Plateau and Gombe -- while the remaining three are in the south --
Rivers, Edo and Oyo -- he added.
The first case of the disease was recorded last November in Bauchi state. Cases were then reported in Kano and elsewhere.
According
to the WHO, Lassa fever is an acute haemorrhagic illness which belongs
to the arenarvirus family of viruses, which also includes the Ebola-like
Marburg virus.
People with Lassa fever do not display symptoms in
80 percent of cases but it can cause serious symptoms and death in the
remainder.The virus, which is endemic in rodents in west Africa, is transmitted to humans by contact with food or household items contaminated with the animals' faeces and urine.
Person-to-person
contact is also possible through bodily fluids, particularly in
hospitals when adequate infection control measures are not taken.
The
number of Lassa fever infections in west Africa every year is between
100,000 to 300,000, with about 5,000 deaths, according to the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Adewole
said recorded cases of Lassa fever in Nigeria peaked in 2012 at 1,723
with 112 fatalities but rates have declined since then.
In
the latest outbreak, the minister said "most of the cases that we
recorded are not through person-to-person contact" but the number of
deaths was "unusual".
He
expressed concern about disease notification systems, particularly in
Niger state, where "unusual" deaths in August were not reported for up
to four months.
Authorities
in Lagos, Nigeria's most populous city of more than 20 million people,
on Thursday alerted residents on the need to observe proper hygiene to
curb the spread of the disease.
Lagos state, in the southwest, is some 80 kilometres (50 miles) from Oyo state, where suspected cases have been reported.
No comments:
Post a Comment