The Lagos State
Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, on Monday said 59 people in the
state came in contact with the 40-year-old Liberian who died of Ebola
virus in Lagos.

'So far,59 contacts have
been registered, consisting 44 hospital contacts (38 health care
workers and six laboratory staff) and 15 airport contacts. The 15
airport contacts comprise three ECOWAS staff-driver, Liaison, and
Protocol Officer, Nigerian Ambassador to Monrovia, two nursing staff and
five airport passenger handlers.
'As of the time of this
report, 20 contacts had been physically screened of which 50 per cent
had type one contact and 50 per cent had had type two contact.
'Airline manifest has
not been provided by the airline and therefore the precise number of
passenger contacts has yet to be ascertained, especially as two flights
were involved (Monrovia-Lome and Lome-Lagos). There was no report of
medical incident and the General Declaration report of the flight,' he
stated.
The commissioner assured that nobody in the country had been infected with the virus, as he advised Nigerians not to panic.
'We can categorically
state that as of today, we have only one case of imported Ebola and
death. No Nigerian is infected, but all contacts are being actively
followed.
'We call on all
Nigerians to be calm and not panic. We assure them that both the state
and the Federal Government are up in arms to ensure that the virus did
not escape and that no Nigeria is infected with this virus.
'The National Centre for
Disease Control of the Federal Ministry of Health, in collaboration
with the Lagos State Ministry of Health and the World Health
Organisation established an Incident Command Centre that coordinates the
Rapid Response Team activities on the field.
Five working groups were established, namely:
(i) Contact tracing, Surveillance & Laboratory
(ii) Health education/Social mobilisation
(iii) Case management and infection prevention/control
(iv) Logistics (v) Data management.
'An Emergency Operations
centre was also activated at the conference room of Central Public
Health Laboratory in Yaba, Lagos, which also serves as the secretariat.
WHO provided technical support and action plan was developed. The Port
Health Services of the FMOH, in collaboration with the Federal Ministry
of Aviation has put in motion mechanisms to track down all contacts at
high risk.
'An isolation ward has
been designated by the Lagos State Ministry of Health at the Infectious
Disease Hospital, Yaba for case management.
The designation of three other health facilities is underway,' Idris said.
The commissioner, who said that the government was decontaminating the First Consultants Hospital in Obalende where the Liberian was taken to during his illness, added that his body was decontaminated and cremated.
'Adhering strictly to
WHO guidelines, the body of the deceased patient was decontaminated
using 10 per cent sodium hypochlorite and cremated, with the permission
of the government of Liberia.
A cremation has been
prepared for dispatch to the family. The vehicle that conveyed the
remains was also fully decontaminated,' Idris said.
In the same vein, the
Special Adviser to Governor Babatunde Fashola on Health, Dr. Yewande
Adesina, said Ebola illness initially gives symptom of malaria and
difficulty in eating.
'After these, the
patient could be vomiting and stooling as if he has diarrh0ea. Later,
blood would be coming out from the eyes, ears, nose, anus and private
parts.
'So if we are taking
care of a patient that we believe has malaria, we should always wash our
hands with water and soap. Once we recognise the symptom of Ebola
illness, we should alert the team set up by the government and also monitor update through the media.
'Now, we advise that charms and prayers cannot stop the virus,' she said.
*What does type one contact mean?and who have these 59 people touched?They should stop trying to beat down this virus...these 59 people should be excommunicated oooooh
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