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NCDC alerts on cholera outbreak
….As Nigeria records
30 deaths; 1,141 suspected cases
The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, NCDC,
has alerted on increasing cholera cases nationwide, with 30 deaths, 1,141
suspected and 65 confirmed cases reported.
Disclosing this in a public advisory, the Director-General
of the centre, Dr. Jide Idris, said the cases, which occurred between January
and June 11, 2024, were reported from 96 LGAs in 30 states.
He stated that the 10 states that contributed 90 percent to
the burden of cholera include Bayelsa, Zamfara, Abia, Cross River, Bauchi,
Delta, Katsina, Imo, Nasarawa and Lagos.
He urged Nigerians to be wary of the increasing trend of
cholera cases across the country, as the raining season intensifies.
He said: “An outbreak in Lagos State has recently been
reported. From January 1 to June 11, 2024, a total of 1,141 suspected and 65
confirmed cases of cholera with 30 deaths have been reported from 96 LGAs in 30
states.
“The multi-sectoral National Cholera Technical Working
Group, led by NCDC and comprising Federal ministries of Environment and Water
Resources, National Primary Health Care Development Agency, NPHCDA, the World
Health Organisation, WHO, United Nations Children’s Fund, UNICEF, and other
partners, has been providing support to the affected states.
“This support includes risk communication, active case
search, laboratory diagnosis, case management, provision of response
commodities, water sanitation and hygiene, WASH, interventions and
dissemination of Cholera awareness jingles in both English and local
languages,” he explained.”
He explained that Cholera was a food and water-borne
disease, caused by the ingestion of the organism Vibrio Cholerae in
contaminated water and food, adding that water was usually contaminated by the
faeces of infected individual
“Contamination of drinking water can occur at the source,
during transportation, or during storage at home. Food may be contaminated by
soiled hands, either during preparation or while eating.
“Beverages prepared with contaminated water and sold by
street vendors, ice, and even commercial bottled water have been implicated as
vehicles of transmission, as have cooked vegetables and fruits freshened with
untreated wastewater.”
He listed people at risk to include; people of all ages
living in places with limited access to clean water among others.
He explained that disease can be prevented through ensuring
access to safe, potable drinking water; proper sanitation and waste disposal;
and appropriate hygiene including handwashing.
Idris advised Nigerians to reduce the risk of cholera by
ensuring that water is boiled and stored in a clean and covered container
before drinking.
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