Cerebrospinal Meningitis (CSM) epidemic death toll has risen from 328 to 336 as at yesterday even as the number of cases also increased from 2,524 persons to 2,997.
This means that the country has recorded eight more deaths and 473 more cases. But the epidemic is still contained within 16 states with Zamfara leading with more than half of the cases and deaths at 1,846 and 216.
A situation report on the CSM epidemic jointly published yesterday by the Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH), Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) and World Health Organisation (WHO) noted: “As of 3rd April 2017, a total of 2,997 cases with 336 deaths have been reported from 92 Local Government Areas (LGAs) with 146 of cases being laboratory confirmed and Case Fatality Ratio (CFR) of 11.2 per cent.’’
A breakdown of the report showed that Zamfara tops the list of affected states with 14 LGAs affected, 1,846 cases and 216 deaths; Sokoto with 17 LGAs, 662 cases and 41 deaths; Katsina with 12 LGAs, 211 cases and 46 deaths; Kebbi with LGAs affected, with 69 cases and 11 deaths; Niger with five LGAs, 93 cases and 33 deaths; Federal Capital Territory Abuja (FCT) with two LGAs, five cases and five deaths; Nassarawa with one LGAs, one case and zero deaths; Gombe with one LGA affected, with one case and zero case; Taraba with one LGA affected, four cases and zero death; Kano with 13 LGAs, 36 cases and three deaths; Cross River with one LGA, two cases and zero death; Osun with one LGA, one case and zero death; Lagos with one LGA, three cases and two deaths; Yobe with three LGAs affected, with 51 cases and nine deaths; Jigawa with six LGAs affected, eight cases and one death; and Plateau with one LGA affected, four cases and no death.
Meanwhile, the Federal Government, through its agencies; the NCDC, NPHCDA and partners activated an Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) on Monday to manage the epidemic. Technical Assistant on Communications, NCDC, Dr. Lawal Bakare, in a statement yesterday said this brings the national response into an Incidence Management System, to ensure that all activities across the country will be managed using a clear command and control structure led by an Incident Manager who reports through the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the NCDC, to the minister of health.
Bakare said with this new coordinating structure, the country would have a tight, multi-partner team of experts pulled from the most competent agencies focusing on outbreak control in Nigeria.
Also, the Senate has urged the Federal Ministry of Health and other relevant government agencies to carry out a nationwide immunization of children and adults that are susceptible to the disease.