The risk of an Ebola outbreak in Nigeria has been rated as high by the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC).
Naija News earlier reported that all members of the House of Representatives voted in favour of a motion introduced by Dachung Bagos regarding the potential for another Ebola virus outbreak.
The motion of Urgent Public Importance on the Need for Federal Government was moved to activate responses against the Possible Detection of Ebola in Nigeria.
As Uganda continues to struggle with an outbreak of the deadly disease, the NCDC released a statement on Tuesday that included this information.
The part of the statement reads: โBased on available data, the overall risk of importation of the Ebola virus and the impact on the health of Nigerians has been assessed as HIGH for the following reasons:
โThe Sudan Ebola Virus does not currently have an effective drug for treatment or licensed vaccine for prevention.
โThe extent of the outbreak in Uganda has not yet been ascertained as investigations have shown that some persons may have died with similar symptoms which were not reported to health authorities. In addition, their burials were not conducted safely to prevent transmission.
โThe case fatality rate of the Sudan virus varied from 41% to 100% in past outbreaks.
โThe likelihood of importation to Nigeria is high due to the increased air travel between Nigeria and Uganda, especially through Kenyaโs Nairobi airport, a regional transport hub, and other neighbouring countries that share a direct border with Uganda.
โThe likelihood of spread in Nigeria following importation is high due to the gatherings and travel associated with politics, the coming yuletide as well as other religious gatherings and festivals during the last few months of the year.โ
The NCDC also asserted that Nigeria is prepared to respond to an outbreak:
โDespite this risk assessment, Nigeria has the capacity โ technical, human (health workforce), and diagnostic โ to respond effectively in the event of an outbreak. This is exemplified by our successful response to the Ebola outbreak in 2014, as well as improvements in our capacity for health emergency response during the COVID-19 pandemic.
โWe have the diagnostic capacity to test for the EVD presently at the National Reference Laboratory in Abuja and the Lagos University Teaching Hospitalโs Centre for Human and Zoonotic Virology Laboratory.
โHowever, diagnostic capacity will be scaled up to other laboratories in cities with important Points of Entry (POE) and others as may be required. An effective response system is in place with the availability of control capacities (trained rapid response teams, and an effective infection prevention and control programme) to limit the risk of spread in the event of a single imported case.โ
This article was originally published on Naija News