Bauchi records 43 Lassa fever cases, 16 deaths in 2020

 

The Bauchi State Surveillance Support Officer (BSSO) at Lassa fever camp of the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University Teaching Hospital, Dr. Suleiman Lawal, has said that 43 cases of the disease and 16 deaths have been recorded in the state this year.

Lawal who stated this in an interview with journalists Wednesday said that of the 43 cases, two were brought in from the neighboring Plateau state. 

“Bauchi state has recorded 43 confirmed cases of Lassa fever, but two out of this number were brought in from Plateau state. Among these confirmed cases, 16 deaths were recorded this year.

“There are also three people that have died of probable cases. They are called ‘probable cases’ because we couldn’t take their samples before they died.

“Totally, we have seven health workers that were affected. One of the doctors who was pregnant and had the disease, we treated her and discharged her. Four others are currently on admission, we’ve been treating them. They are now stable. In fact, we will discharge two of them today because they have finished their 10- day treatment period.

“Two doctors died, one was a doctor that died here (at the ATBUTH) while the other one died in a private clinic here in Bauchi.

“Most of the deaths are as a result of late reporting and that is not our fault. Something will happen and people will not report on time.  We are appealing to people to always come on time,” he pleaded.

He said the state has received assistance from the World Health Organisation and the United Nations Children Endowment Fund (UNICEF) in its efforts aimed at reducing the scourge of the disease to the barest minimum even as he appealed to well-meaning members of the public to support the fight against Lassa fever.

Lawal said there are seven pillars that will help in managing the epidemic which he said are: education, communication, risk communication, surveillance, case management, laboratory confirmation, prevention and control.

He pointed out that communication is key in managing the epidemic.

“If people get the correct information, they will know how to protect themselves and this will help in breaking this chain and reduce the spread. Sometimes people feel it has spiritual undertones, but if you give them the correct information, they will know exactly what it is.  So, communication is a very key pillar in controlling outbreak responses.

“You know when you have one case and you allow it, it will spread, but once you are able to contain it, then you will limit the spread and it will die naturally,” Lawal said.

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