Cholera: NCDC activates emergency operations to curb new outbreak in Nigeria

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The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control(NCDC), says it has activated a multi-sectoral National Cholera Emergency Operations Centre to curb the increase in cholera cases across the country.

READ ALSO: Gombe: 61 persons recover from cholera outbreak

The NCDC Director-General, Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, disclosed  this in statement made available to Newsmen in Abuja yesterday.

It was reported that since the beginning of 2021, 10,833 suspected cholera cases have been recorded with 112 confirmed cases and 289 deaths.

In the last month, an increasing number of cholera cases have also been reported across the states. The most affected states are Plateau, Bauchi, Gombe, Kano, Zamfara, Bayelsa and Kaduna, NCDC said.

The EOC is co-led with the Federal Ministries of Environment and Water Resources, given the link between cholera and water, sanitation and hygiene.

“The National EOC has been supporting states to ensure a coordinated, rapid, and effective response to the ongoing outbreak.

“This includes the deployment of National Rapid Response Teams (RRT) to support the response at the state level, provision of medical and laboratory supplies, scale-up of risk communications amongst other activities,” he explained. 

The resources that have been developed as part of Nigeria’s COVID-19 response were being used to strengthen the response to the cholera outbreak.

“This includes the digitalisation of the national surveillance system, establishment of laboratories and treatment centres and training of health workers, among others,” he added.

Cholera is a preventable and treatable epidemic-prone disease that is transmitted by eating or drinking contaminated food or water.

Ihekweazu, therefore, urged Nigerians to be aware of the risk of the disease and adhere to precautionary measures to ensure safety.

Boil and store water in a clean and safe container before drinking. Prepare, cook and store food safely.

“Wash hands frequently with soap under clean running water to prevent infectious diseases including cholera. This is especially important after defecation and before handling food or eating.

“Avoid open defecation and indiscriminate refuse dumping which contribute to the spread of cholera.

“Visit a health facility immediately if you have symptoms such as watery diarrhoea,” he advised.

He noted that this was a critical measure to prevent cholera cases and outbreaks.

Ihekweazu also called on State Governments to continue to provide access to clean water for citizens.

 

MTO/Punch

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