Oyo State Commissioner for Health, Dr Muyiwa Gbadegesin, has
confirmed the outbreak of Lassa fever in the state in western Nigeria,
assuring that the government is on top of the situation as well as
curtailing it.
Gbadegesin, who disclosed this to journalists in
Ibadan, said that the government is aware of 10 cases of Lassa fever,
adding that out of the 10 cases, three were brought into the state from
another state.
“We are already working to bring it under control.
We are doing the best to curtail it. We have what it takes to manage it
very well. I only want to appeal to our people to be very hygienic and
when they feel that something is wrong with our system, we should go to
the hospital for proper diagnosis of their sickness and treatment,” he
said.
Corroborating what the commissioner said, the Head of
Virology Department, University Teaching Hospital, (UCH), Ibadan,
Professor Olufemi Olaleye, dispelled the notion that Lassa fever is
contracted from some black domestic rats.
“Most of this black rats
in our houses don’t have this virus. Most of the rats with this virus
are from the bush. There are farmers who in the process of making
cassava flour will cut their cassava and spread them on the road. When
these rats see this cassava, they go there to eat from them and in the
process, they pee on them and through that they transfer the virus on
the cassava. Anybody that eats out of the cassava flour made from such
cassava might have the fever,” Professor Olaleye said.
He further
stated that some of the cases reported at UCH during the outbreak of
Ebola in Nigeria were actually Lassa fever cases, adding, “some patients
that came to UCH thinking that they had Ebola were later diagnosed of
Lassa fever. Lassa fever has drug. It can be treated if promptly
reported.”
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