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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Nigeria struggles to contain spread of deadly Lassa fever

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Sophie Bouillon


Nigeria is battling on two fronts against an unprecedented outbreak of Lassa fever, a cousin of Ebola, that has already killed 110 people this year.


Health watchdogs are struggling to understand why the deadly virus has spread so dramatically.


The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has confirmed 353 Lassa cases since January 1, compared with 143 cases for the whole of 2017.


But the possible reasons for this surge are many, said NCDC director Chikwe Ihekweazu.


“The harder you look, the more you find,” he said, citing a change in the virus’s environment, viral mutation — and better reporting of cases by the public in response to awareness campaigns.


Lassa fever is an acute viral haemorrhagic disease that can be transmitted to humans from infected rat faeces or urine.


Like the notorious Ebola — but thankfully somewhat less contagious — it can also be passed from one person to another via contact with infected bodily fluids.


Full protective gear for medical personnel is vital and isolation is essential.


A visit to the Lassa fever isolation ward at the Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital in southern Edo State — the only such unit in a country of 190 million people — provides a snapshot of the difficulties in tackling the peril. Before the unit was built in 2008, suspect blood samples were sent to South Africa for an accurate diagnosis — but when the results came back it was already too late, doctors say.


The Lassa facility, staffed by a dozen Nigerian employees and a handful of European tropical medicine specialists, is struggling.


In normal times, it treats just a couple of dozen patients each year. But since the start of 2018, the unit has already admitted more than 150.


“Now we have just below 30 patients,” said director Ephraim Ogbaini-Emovon. “We never recorded this (in previous years). Facilities are overstretched.”


Kevin Ousman, who specialises in combating viral risks at the World Health Organization, spends his days reminding people of basic protection. “Change your gloves!” Ousmane orders. “Throw away this water! Don’t put this bag on the floor.”


In front of the hospital, surgical gloves and syringes spill out of the trash bins onto the grass.


A striking sight is that of relatives trying to care for their loved ones. They were flip-flops and a simple face mask.


“It’s a tradition in Africa for families to take care of their sick,” a WHO employee remarks. “But we have to put a stop to that, it’s too risky.”


— AFP


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