The Nigeria
Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) yesterday confirmed eight new cases of Lassa
fever and three deaths in six states, within one week.
According to
the latest update by the NCDC, for Week 14 (April 02-08, 2018), “eight new
confirmed cases were recorded from five States – Edo (three), Ondo (two),
Ebonyi (one), Plateau (one), and Taraba (one) with three new deaths in
confirmed cases from Ondo (one), Ebonyi (one) Taraba (one) and a backlog of an
old death in a confirmed case from Kogi state.
“From 1st
January to 8th April 2018, a total of 1,781 suspected cases have been reported
from 20 states. Of these, 408 were confirmed positive, nine are probable, 1,351
are negative (not a case) and 13 are awaiting laboratory results (pending).
“Since the
onset of the 2018 outbreak, there have been 101 deaths in confirmed cases, nine
in probable cases. Case Fatality Ratio in confirmed cases is 24.8 per cent.”
The NCDC
noted that 20 states have recorded at least one confirmed case across 57 local
councils of (Edo, Ondo, Bauchi, Nasarawa, Ebonyi, Anambra, Benue, Kogi, Imo,
Plateau, Lagos, Taraba, Delta, Osun, Rivers, FCT, Gombe, Ekiti, Kaduna and
Abia).
It, however,
noted that nine states have exited the active phase of the outbreak while 11
states remain active.
In the
reporting week 14, one new healthcare worker was affected in Ebonyi state with
one death. “Twenty-seven health care workers have been affected since the onset
of the outbreak in seven states –Ebonyi (16), Nasarawa (one), Kogi (two), Benue
(one), Ondo (three), Edo (three) and Abia (one) with seven deaths in Ebonyi
(four), Kogi (one) and Abia (one).
According to
the NCDC, 81 per cent of all confirmed cases are from Edo (42 per cent) Ondo
(23 per cent) and Ebonyi (16 per cent) states; and that fifteen cases are
currently being managed in treatment centres across six states -Edo (four),
Ebonyi (five), Ondo (four), Plateau (one), and Osun (one).
The NCDC
noted that a total of 4,480 contacts have been identified from 20 states and of
these 658 (14.8 per cent) are currently being followed up, 3,815 (85 per cent)
have completed 21 days follow up while seven (0.2 per cent) were lost follow
up.
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