South-
West
governors on Wednesday rose from a meeting in
Lagos and called on the Federal Government to
stop the spread of the deadly Ebola virus.
Before that, the Minsiter of Health, Prof.
Onyebuchi Chukwu and the Lagos State
Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris,
announced at separate news conferences that
the matron of the Lagos hospital where a
Liberian-born American, Patrick Sawyer, was
admitted, died on Tuesday afternoon.
The matron whose name was not given by
Chukwu,and Idris, was reported by the media
on Wednesday to have shown the symptoms of
the virus.
She was among the health workers that attended
to Sawyer who died in the Lagos hospital on July
25 and officially, the first Nigerian casualty.
The matron had been quarantined alongside
seven others at the Infectious Diseases
Hospital, Yaba, Lagos for close monitoring.
One of them, a female medical doctor, who also
attended to Sawyer, had also contracted the
disease.
About 59 people were reported to have had
direct or primary contacts with the Liberian-
American. Twenty seven others who had
secondary contacts with the primary contacts
had been traced.
Chukwu, while announcing the death of the Lagos
matron confirmed seven other Ebola cases,
Idris called on religious groups in the state to
stop all gatherings until a solution to Ebola
outbreak was found.
The South-West governors first met behind
closed-doors at the Lagos House, Ikeja, and
later with commissioners for Health in the
zone.
In attendance were the host Governor,
Babatunde Fashola; Olusegun Mimiko(Ondo);
Ibikunle Amosun(Ogun); Kayode Fayemi(Ekiti);
and the Deputy Governor of Oyo State, Moses
Adeyemo.
They said the Federal Government must assist
the states by ensuring that all the nation’s
borders in the zone were effectively policed to
ensure that Ebola virus did not get into their
states.
Fashola, at a news conference said the meeting
afforded them the opportunity to share
experiences and seek collaborative efforts to
prevent the spread of the virus in the zone.
He said, “The meeting addressed issues of
containment and the challenges of illegal
borders.
“We also discussed possible support by the
Federal Government and coordination among
states. We feel that it is imperative that our
collaboration suggests to us that Nigerians
should not panic and that we would overcome this
with the very best practices and collaboration.
“It is important therefore that advocacy must
continue about what the risks are and the
sources are.”
Amosun said Ogun State was overwhelmed and
was short of manpower and material to
effectively man its over 100 illegal borders
where foreigners enter the state with ease.
He said, “We are more prone and more at risk to
Ebola virus and we have put all our security
agencies and the respective medics at these
illegal borders.
“But when you have in excess of 100, you and I
know that the state doesn’t have the capacity to
man these borders.
Mimiko said the onus lay on every Nigerian to
ensure that foreigners did not have unfettered
access into the country.
“Every Nigerian should know that those who aid
and abet illegal entry into Nigeria now could be
up to something that could be dangerous to the
health of the country.”
Fayemi spoke on the possibility of Nigeria
seeking the assistance of the United States for
ZMapp, an experimental drug for the treatment
of the EVD.
He said, “The drug has not been certified as a
cure for the disease; however, the Federal
Government can try out its efficacy in a
controlled centre.”
FG confirms seven Ebola cases
The Health minister, at a news conference in
Abuja on Wednesday, said, “Nigeria has now
recorded seven confirmed cases of EVD.
“The first one was the index case, which is the
imported case from Liberia of which the victim
(Sawyer) is now late.
“On August 5, 2014, the first known Nigerian to
die of the EVD was recorded and this was one of
the nurses that attended to the Liberian.
“The other five cases are currently being
treated at an isolation ward in Lagos.”
He added that all the Nigerians diagnosed were
primary contacts of the index case.
Chukwu also announced the appointment of Prof.
O. Onajole of the Lagos University Teaching
Hospital as the director, Communication and
Community Mobilisation. for the EVD.
He pledged to visit Lagos within the week, in
company with his colleagues in the Ministry of
Information, to assess the situation on the
ground.
He added that the 24/7 Emergency Operations
Centre planned by the government would be
fully functional by tomorrow (Thursday) . Dr.
Faisal Shuaibu will be the Incident Manager of
the centre.
Shuaibu was expected to lead a six-member
inter-agency team, drawn from the National
Primary Health Care Development Agency, the
US CDC, the WHO, UNICEF and the Bill and
Medinda Gates Foundation to Lagos to complete
the setting up of the centre.
Chukwu said the team would be joined by other
personnel from the Lagos State Government,
federal hospitals in the state and the Nigeria
Centre for Disease Control.
He added, “We are embarking on recruiting
additional health personnel to strengthen the
team who are currently managing the situation in
Lagos.
“We are making arrangements to procure
isolation tents to quicken the pace of providing
isolation wards in all the states of the federation
and the Federal Capital Territory.
“We are also setting up a special team to provide
counselling and psychosocial support to patients,
identified contacts and their families.”
The minister reassured Nigerians that the
government was working hard to ensure the
containment of the outbreak.
Chukwu later told State House correspondents
after the Federal Executive Council meeting in
Abuja, that he had requested the experimental
drug being used to treat two American
missionary doctors infected with the virus in
Liberia from the US Centre for Disease Control.
The minister, who also shed light on the isolation
tents, said as of the time he was briefing
journalists, he had yet to receive a response
from the USCDC.
Chukwu explained that the isolation tents would
be used to cater for those who might be
quarantined because of the virus.
This, he said, had become necessary because
residents were raising objection to housing the
patients close to them.
He put the cost of one isolation tent at about
N20m.
“We have a national emergency. Indeed,
everyone in the world is at risk. Nobody is
immune. The Nigerian experience had alerted
the world because every country is connected by
flights,” the minister said.
The minister also said the government had
decided to embark on mass recruitment of
health personnel to strenghten the team
managing the outbreak in Lagos.
He expressed the hope that the Nigeria Medical
Association would soon call off its strike to join
in the emergency service since government had
met almost all their demands.
Chukwu warned members of the public to stop
wearing gloves as a way of stopping the spread
of the virus, saying such practice could further
compound the situation.
He however advised them to avoid handshake as
much as possible if they could afford it,
describing the virus as both contagious and
infectious.
He said the virus could also be contracted
through the sharing of bedspreads, pillow cases
and towels among other personal effects with
infected persons.
Chukwu also said a website, www.ebolaalert.org,
had been designed to offer information on the
virus.
While disclosing the existence of a Twitter
handle, @ebolaalert, the minister added that
help could also be reached through a designated
toll-free telephone line .
Ebola outbreak, national emergency –FG
The Federal Government also said on
Wednesday that the Ebola outbreak had
become a matter of national emergency.
The Minister of Information, Mr. Labaran
Maku; made government’s position known while
also briefing journalists on the outcome of the
FEC meeting
Maku said the meeting was devoted to the
measures being taken by government to deal with
the outbreak of the virus.
He recalled that the council had set up a
committee about two weeks ago to sensitise
Nigerians to avoid unhealthy practices.
Lagos to offer life insurance cover to
doctors, others
In Lagos, Idris told journalists that the
matron, who also contracted the EVD while
participating in managing Sawyer died at about
2.06pm on Tuesday.
The commissioner added, ‘In all, eight people
came in contact with Sawyer, comprising the
dead matron, the doctor on admission at the
IDH, the four new victims and two other people,
whose medical test results are being awaited.
Two of the four new victims are critically ill.”
Idris said that 27 people who came into contact
with those on admission at the IDH had as of
Tuesday been traced.
When asked what government intended to do
concerning the traced secondary contacts, he
replied, “ We cannot isolate these 27 secondary
contacts because they are not showing symptoms
yet, they are just contacts.
“What we can do for now is to monitor them;
take their blood samples for testing and check
their temperature daily. If any one of them
starts showing symptoms, then we will take him
or her to the hospital.”
He called on volunteers to help the state in
tracing more secondary contacts and in managing
the established cases since the situation was “a
dire emergency.”
The commissioner said the state was presently
facing a shortage of health workers needed to
attend to those that had been infected and
more of those that might be isolated for
monitoring.
He disclosed that the government would offer
life insurance cover to those who volunteered
to work with experts monitoring and testing
suspected Ebola cases.
Idris said, “We will provide life insurance
cover for any doctor, nurse and other experts
that want to work with isolated patients.
“We need more hands, because we have moved
from the stage of primary contacts to secondary
contacts.We are tracing all the people that had
contacts not just with Sawyer, but those that
had contacts with the health workers and others
that have died. We have identified 27 secondary
contacts already and we are tracing the
addresses of others.
“ it is a tedious task, because we will also be
taking their blood samples for testing and we will
be monitoring them.
“We are appealing to the doctors on strike to
resume work and set aside their grievances.
This situation is a dire emergency and our health
professionals must recognise that.
“It will be morally unjustifiable for us to call for
help from the international community if our own
experts and doctors are not working.”
Idris added that the government would
evacuate tuberculosis patients at the IDH to
another hospital to accommodate more
suspected and isolated Ebola cases.
He said, “ The TB patients at Mainland hospital
were protesting this(Wednesday) morning but we
made them to understand that if they stayed
there, they might be exposed to Ebola virus .
“If we need to evacuate any hospital to ensure
that we contain this(Ebola) disease, we will do it.
If we have to take suspected cases to LASUTH,
we will do it. If we need to take decisions that
will inconvenience some people but beneficial
to the larger population, we will do it because
Ebola is a highly infectious disease.”
Religious groups advised to stop gatherings
The commissioner also advised religious groups
in the state to stop all planned gatherings until a
solution to the Ebola outbreak was found.
Idris, who noted that such gatherings usually
involved people from outside the country, said
the advice was in public interest.
He said, “We are worried that a gathering of a
large group of people would not be the best at
this period. Those churches and Islamic
associations that are planning large gatherings
should stop for now.
“When we heard that there was a convention
going on at the Redemption Camp of the
Redeemed Christian Church of God in Ogun
State, we went there to check.
“We were impressed with what was on the
ground because of the outbreak. There were
sanitisers everywhere, doctors and other health
workers were on standby. The General Overseer
(Pastor Enoch Adeboye) also took time to
educate people on the virus and what could be
done to prevent it.
“We also went to Synagogue church when we
heard that they were planning a conference on
Ebola. But the truth is that there was nothing
like that. The founder(TB Joshua) told us that
he was planning to travel out. He also promised
to cooperate with the government.
“But the best thing is that any form of large
gathering must stop for now.
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