Lassa Fever: 92 People Are Currently Under Watch In Lagos

The Lagos State Government says 92 people who had contact with the Lassa fever patients are currently being followed up. At a press conference on Saturday, Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris called on residents to remain calm over the outbreak of Lassa fever, and assured that the state government is doing everything possible to curtail the spread of the virus in the state.

Idris said in line with international standards, 92 persons who had direct and indirect contact with the index case are currently being followed-up.

He confirmed that the index case, a 25-year-old male undergraduate of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Kaduna State, was reported to have fallen ill after arriving in Lagos and was taken to Ahmmadiyyah Hospital, Ojokoro on 9 January with complaint of fever, sore throats and difficulty in swallowing.

He said the patient was subsequently placed on admission for six days and was thereafter referred by the said private hospital to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) on January 14, 2016 owing to the fact that the fever was persistent and his condition was not improving.

According to Idris, the patient was confirmed as a case of Lassa fever on January 15, at LUTH, and is currently being managed to the extent that his condition is now stable.

Idris added that 15 in-patients who were admitted alongside the index case as well as 25 health workers who attended to them have been placed on compulsory 21 days monitoring, and that the phone numbers and addresses of the persons in that category have also been collected for proper tracking.

Any of the persons in that category with temperature above 38.5, according to Idris, would be isolated so as to prevent the spread of the disease, while they have also been advised on the need to maintain little or no contact with others, at least for now.

Dr. Stella Ameyo Adadevoh And The Ebola Scourge: A Year After The Storm By Babs Iwalewa

It’s been almost a year that Dr. Stella Ameyo Adadevoh, a senior consultant endocrinologist at the First Consultant hospital Lagos breathed her last. The circumstances of her death were tragic-comical to say the least. She had “laid down her life so that we may live” so to speak.

Whenever the story of the outbreak of the ebola scourge in Nigeria is told, the story of the late medical doctor is also sure to be told. The story of Dr. Adadevoh was one that was very uncommon in this clime. The late doctor prevented the spread of ebola in Nigeria and paid with her life. It was she who oversaw the treatment of the late Patrick Sawyer, the infected Liberian who against all odds flew into Lagos with the aim of connecting a flight to Calabar for a conference before he suddenly took ill upon his arrival at the airport in Nigeria.

It was Dr. Adadevoh’s dedication and commitment to professional ethics that made her “detain” and quarantine the infected patient in the hospital, thus preventing him from having further contacts with people. Had Patrick Sawyer been “released” by the doctor, the damage to have been done is better said than imagined.

It was during the course of this patriotic duty that she contracted the deadly virus, with about five other nurses and paramedics that came in contact with Patrick Sawyer at that time.

Her uncommon courage, dedication and forbearance, that made her a martyr needs to be recognized by the federal government and not only the Lagos state government. Though the outgone Fashola administration needs to be commended for its efforts in managing the health crises at that time, more still can be done.

Consequently the Federal and Lagos state government should use the opportunity of the first year remembrance of her death, to take stock and evaluate the efforts in managing the ebola virus so far, and to also honour her posthumously. Such honour should be one that doesn’t erase her memory from our national consciousness.

Babs Iwalewa
@babsiwalewa (twitter)