The Minister of State for
Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, made the announcement in his office in Abuja on
Friday, according to a statement by the Director of Media, Mrs. Boade Akinola.
The Federal Government has
confirmed six fresh cases of monkey-pox including one in Abuja, the Federal
Capital Territory.
Ehanire said apart from
Abuja, there are two new cases of the disease in Bayelsa and Akwa Ibom states
each and one in Enugu.
This brings the total
number of confirmed monkeypox cases to nine.
Ehanire noted that
investigations were ongoing to see if any of the new cases had a link with the
Bayelsa cluster, where the outbreak started.
He called for calm among
members of the public, as the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control is working
with all affected states to ensure case finding and adequate management.
The minister explained that
as frightening as the manifestation of the ailment may seem, “no fatality has
been recorded till date. As of October 25, 2017, a total of 94 suspected cases
have been reported from 11 states (Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta,
Ekiti, Enugu, Imo, Lagos, Nasarawa, Niger, Rivers and the FCT).”
He noted that the newly
confirmed cases were patients already being managed by public health
authorities and have been receiving appropriate clinical care since the onset
of the illness.
Ehanire stated that the
Federal Ministry of Health, through the NCDC, was in close contact with all
state epidemiology teams, as well as the health facilities providing clinical
care to both suspected and confirmed cases.
The minister said health commissioner
across the 36s states had been advised to place all health care facilities and
disease surveillance and notification officers on alert, to ensure early case
detection, reporting and effective treatment.
He said the NCDC had also
deployed rapid response teams in the four states with confirmed cases.
Ehanire said an interim
national guideline for monkeypox had been developed and disseminated to all
states for coordination of response activities. This is also available via
http://ncdc.gov.ng/themes/common/docs/protocols/50_1508912430.pdf.
He explained that monkeypox
is a largely self-limiting disease i.e. a disease that resolves itself.
Generalised vesicular skin
rashes, fever, and painful jaw swelling are characteristic symptoms associated
with an infection. Although there is no specific medicine to treat the disease
when intensive supportive care is provided virtually all patients recover
fully, as we have seen with the current outbreak.
It is thought that people
could get monkeypox if they are bitten or scratched by an animal, or come in
contact with animal blood in preparing bushmeat or have contact with an
infected animal’s body fluids or sores.
“Monkeypox may also be
spread between people through prolonged face-to-face contact, or through
contact with body fluids or sores of an infected person, or items that have
been contaminated with fluids or sores (clothing, bedding, etc.),” Ehanire
said.
Measures that can be taken
to prevent infection with Monkeypox virus include avoiding contact with animals
that could carry the virus such as rodents or other animals that appear sick or
were found dead in areas where monkeypox occurs.
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