LASG allays fears on outbreak of Lassa fever
The Lagos State Government on Saturday called on residents
to remain calm over the outbreak of Lassa fever, just as it assured that it is
doing everything possible to curtail the spread of the virus in the State.
Addressing journalists at the Alausa Secretariat, on the
first case of the disease recorded in the State, Commissioner for Health, Dr.
Jide Idris said in line with international standards, 92 persons who had direct
and indirect contact with the index case are currently being followed-up.
Idris confirmed that the index case, a 25-year-old male
undergraduate of the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Kaduna State, was reported
to have fallen ill after arriving in Lagos and was taken to Ahmmadiyyah
Hospital, Ojokoro on January 9 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.
The Commissioner said: “Though Lassa fever and Ebola Virus
Disease belong to the same Viral Hemorrhagic fever group, Lassa fever is milder
and can be treated and cured if defected early. Therefore, any persistent fever
should be reported to the nearest public health facility.
“Residents are urged to watch out for the signs and symptoms
of Lassa fever which typically occur with incubation period of 1-3 weeks after
the patient comes into contact with the virus. Early symptoms of the disease
include fever, headache, chills, diarrheas, nausea, vomiting, sore throat,
backache, and joint pains.
“Late symptoms include bleeding from the eyes, ears and
nose, bleeding from the mouth and rectum, eye swelling, swelling of the
genitals and rashes all over the body that often contain blood. It could
progress to coma, shock and death,” he said.
While stating that drugs and other materials have been
prepositioned at the designated facilities across the State, Idris said
isolation centres have equally been prepared to manage suspected and confirmed
cases, adding that the State Government is fully prepared to manage the
situation and as such people should not panic for whatever reasons.
On steps to be taken to prevent the spread of the disease,
Idris urged residents to “avoid contact with rats, ensure proper collection and
disposal of waste, cover all foods including left-overs and water properly,
wash their hands properly before and after cooking of foods, block all rat
hideouts and store food items in rodent-proof containers.”