Lassa Fever: Nigeria Records 166 Deaths In 9 Months 

0
10

….As Edo, Ondo, Bauchi, Taraba, Ebonyi Top Charts

 

 

Lucky Obukohwo, Reporting

 

 

 

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) has revealed an alarming state of Lassa Fever in the country, saying that 166 people died from the disease between January and September with the case fatality rate now higher than 2024 year.

 

This is contained in Epidemiological Week 37, covering September 8 to 14, sighted on the NCDC website yesterday.

 

The Public Health agency said that 895 confirmed cases were recorded across 21 states and 106 local government areas.

 

It said this represents a case fatality rate (CFR) of 18.5 percent, compared to 16.9 percent reported within the same period in 2024.

 

The agency noted that while suspected and confirmed cases were fewer than those reported last year, more patients are dying because of late presentation and poor health-seeking behaviour, often linked to the high cost of treatment.

 

According to NCDC, Ondo, Bauchi, Edo, Taraba and Ebonyi states continue to account for 90 percent of all confirmed cases, with Ondo alone responsible for a third of infections.

 

 

The NCDC also confirmed that no new healthcare worker was infected during the reporting week.

 

However, it warned that poor environmental sanitation, weak awareness in high-burden communities and delayed treatment continue to fuel the spread and severity of the disease.

 

To strengthen control, the NCDC said it had deployed 10 rapid response teams to affected states, launched new infection prevention and control (IPC) training modules and supported clinical management fellowship programmes in collaboration with local and international partners.

 

The agency urged states to intensify community engagement and preventive campaigns and reminded healthcare workers to maintain high suspicion and initiate early treatment when symptoms appear.

 

Lassa fever, an acute viral haemorrhagic illness caused by the Lassa virus, is transmitted to humans through contact with food or household items contaminated by infected rodents, particularly the multimammate rat.

 

Human-to-human transmission can also occur, especially in healthcare settings without adequate infection control.

 

Symptoms include fever, headache, sore throat, chest pain, vomiting, diarrhoea and in severe cases, unexplained bleeding.

 

The disease is endemic in parts of West Africa, with Nigeria bearing the highest burden.

Leave a reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here