Photo
of a child suffering from cerebro-spinal meningitis Image credit: VOA
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• Vaccine for disease remains scarce, costly •Nigeria needs ₦23.4bn to procure drugs •To
begin immunization with .5m doses in Zamfara •Lagos alerts residents, denies
recording any case
The scarcity of the
needed vaccines to stem the growing epidemic of cerebrospinal meningitis (CSM)
is causing more deaths and spread of the disease to more states.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
The
new outbreaks are caused by new strains of CSM, Neisseria meningitidis serogroup C (NmC), the vaccines for which
are not commercially available and need to be acquired through a special
process managed by the World Health Organization (WHO).
As
the country does not have enough vaccine doses to deal with the deadly
meningitis outbreak, and the drugs are too expensive at the cost of US$50 (₦18,000)
per dose, more Nigerians may die from the disease. This is especially so since
the means of livelihood of the majority of the citizens have been eroded by the
current economic recession and the US$50 which is the cost of the meningitis
drugs per dose is the national minimum wage.
The
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Dr.
Chikwe Ihekweazu, told The Guardian that the country urgently needed 1.3
million doses to meet its immediate targets but had taken delivery of only
500,000, which it plans to deploy in Zamfara State on April 7, 2017. Ihekweazu,
however, said the country was expecting another batch of 800,000 doses this
week.
This
means that the country needs to spend not less than US$65 million (₦23.4
billion) to meet its needs.
Ihekweazu
said the coordinating agencies would be meeting Monday afternoon to assess the
situation and official statement would be released later in the evening.
The
last official figures from the Federal Government through the Federal Ministry
of Health (FMoH) and NCDC put the death toll in the current meningitis epidemic
at 328 (as at Saturday) from 278 on Thursday last week even as 2,524 persons
were affected (as at Saturday) from 1,966 people on Thursday. Also, the
epidemic had spread from six states on Tuesday last week to 16 states by
Saturday, four days later.
There
is the fear that the epidemic might have spread to more states and killed many
more Nigerians because of the delay in deploying the vaccines and the
conditions of living in most communities in the country that encourage the
transmission of the disease.
According
to the WHO, the bacteria are transmitted from person-to-person through droplets
of respiratory or throat secretions from carriers. Close and prolonged contact
– such as kissing, sneezing or coughing on someone, or living in close quarters
(such as a dormitory, sharing eating or drinking utensils) with an infected
person (a carrier) – facilitates the spread of the disease. The average
incubation period is four days, but can range between two and 10 days.
Neisseria meningitidis infects only humans;
there is no animal reservoir. The bacteria can be carried in the throat and
sometimes, for reasons not fully understood, can overwhelm the body’s defences
allowing infection to spread through the bloodstream to the brain. It is
believed that 10 per cent to 20 per cent of the population carries Neisseria meningitidis in their throat
at any given time. However, the carriage rate may be higher in epidemic
situations.
The
most common symptoms are a stiff neck, high fever, sensitivity to light,
confusion, headaches and vomiting. Even when the disease is diagnosed early and
adequate treatment is started, five per cent to 10 per cent of patients die,
typically within 24 to 48 hours after the onset of symptoms. Bacterial
meningitis may result in brain damage, hearing loss or a learning disability in
10 per cent to 20 per cent of survivors. A less common but even more severe
(often fatal) form of meningococcal disease is meningococcal septicaemia, which
is characterized by a haemorrhagic rash and rapid circulatory collapse.
Acting
Director-General of the National Primary Health Care Development Agency
(NPHCDA), Dr. Emmanuel Odu, said US$1.1 billion was required for the
vaccination of 22 million persons in the states affected.
Odu
who briefed the Senate Committee on Primary Healthcare and Communicable
Diseases on efforts being made to contain the outbreak, said each vaccine could
cost between US$30 and US$50.
The
committee declared that the spread across the country was caused by poor
awareness campaigns of relevant government agencies. It promised to provide the
necessary support to the Ministry of Health to contain and end the outbreak.
At
another meeting with Ihekweazu, the Senate committee chairman, Mao Ohuabunwa
(Abia North) lamented that awareness remained low across the country.
“If this had been detected early, then we would have had rounds of vaccinations and would not be having this epidemic,” he said.
“If this had been detected early, then we would have had rounds of vaccinations and would not be having this epidemic,” he said.
Senate
President Bukola Saraki has assured that the upper chamber would provide the
necessary support to the Ministry of Health to end the outbreak.
Saraki,
in a series of tweets on his twitter handle, said he had spoken with the
Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, to assure him of the Senate’s
commitment to help end the epidemic.
As
part of efforts to contain the spread of the disease and prevent deaths, the
Lagos State government yesterday alerted members of the public to the dangers
and urged them to report any suspected case to the nearest public health
facility.
Commissioner
for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, said that no case of CSM has been recorded in the
state contrary to media report. “However as a responsive government, we deem it
fit to alert the public,” he said.
In
a statement, Idris noted that though, seasonal meningitis outbreak usually
affects the mainly Northern states that fall within the meningitis belt of the
country, it is not impossible that outbreaks can occur in any part of the
country, Lagos inclusive, in view of the phenomenal climatic change as well as
the high human migration.
The
Kwara State government has deplored epidemiologists to all its local government
areas in readiness for any outbreak of the Meningitis in any part of the state.
At least two epidemiologists were sent to each council just as the government has rejigged its Notifications and Surveillance Unit in Ilorin, which at present is headed by the Commissioner for Health Alhaji Atolagbe Alege.
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