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The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, NCDC, on Thursday, placed Lagos, the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Kano, Rivers and several other states on high Ebola preparedness alert following the classification of Nigeria’s risk of importing the deadly Bundibugyo Ebola Virus Disease as “HIGH”.
In a national public health advisory addressed to Commissioners for Health across the 36 states and the FCT, the NCDC warned that Nigeria must urgently strengthen surveillance, isolation capacity and infection prevention systems as the virus spreads across parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has already declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC), a development the NCDC said underscores the urgency for immediate nationwide readiness before any suspected case is detected in Nigeria.
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Although Nigeria has recorded no confirmed case, the agency said its Dynamic Risk Assessment, conducted with partners after the WHO declaration showed that the country faces a “high risk of importation” due to regional transmission, international travel, porous land borders, informal crossings and trade routes across West and Central Africa.
According to the advisory, 1,077 suspected cases and 247 deaths have already been reported in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, with a case fatality rate as high as 24.6 per cent.
“The overall risk of importation of the disease into Nigeria has been assessed as HIGH due to increasing ongoing regional transmission, international travel, regional population movement, major airports, seaports, porous land borders, informal crossings and trade routes,” the NCDC stated.
The agency stressed that all states and the FCT must immediately activate full preparedness systems to ensure early detection, rapid containment and protection of healthcare workers.
“The immediate objective of our national preparedness and readiness efforts is to ensure that every State and the FCT can reasonably detect, contain and respond swiftly to any suspected case while protecting health workers and sustaining essential health services,” it said.
The advisory also stated the risk stratification of states, with the NCDC grouping the country into three preparedness tiers based on exposure routes and likelihood of importation.
At the top of the risk ladder, the agency classified Lagos, FCT, Rivers, Kano, Enugu, Borno, Akwa Ibom, Cross River, Taraba and Adamawa as high-risk states due to their international airports, seaports, major trade corridors, porous borders and heavy
While all states are expected to maintain Ebola preparedness, the NCDC said high-risk states must scale up readiness faster and more aggressively, particularly in surveillance, laboratory readiness and isolation capacity.
The advisory warned that Bundibugyo Ebola Virus Disease currently has no approved vaccine or specific treatment, making early public health intervention the only effective defence.
It added that existing Ebola vaccines and monoclonal antibody treatments are primarily targeted at the Zaire strain and should not be relied upon for this outbreak.
The agency also cautioned that Ebola is not airborne but spreads through direct contact with blood, body fluids, contaminated materials or infected animals.
It urged health workers nationwide to maintain a high index of suspicion, warning that early symptoms often resemble malaria, Lassa fever and other common febrile illnesses.
“Health workers must not wait for bleeding before suspecting Ebola in any patient with compatible symptoms and relevant travel or exposure history,” the advisory warned.
Symptoms include fever, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, rash, hiccups, unexplained bleeding and signs of shock, the NCDC said.
The agency confirmed that its National Emergency Operations Centre has been activated in alert mode to coordinate preparedness across federal and state levels, with emphasis on surveillance, infection prevention and control, case management, safe sample handling and risk communication.
It directed State governments to ensure immediate operational readiness across both public and private health facilities, including contact tracing systems, isolation centres and healthcare worker protection mechanisms.
According to the advisory, preparedness efforts must prioritise early detection, immediate isolation, optimized supportive care, strict infection prevention and control, safe sample handling, contact tracing readiness, and public communication.
The NCDC assured that it is working closely with states and development partners to strengthen national preparedness and prevent any potential importation or community transmission of the virus.
The NCDC said the classification of high-risk states is a critical step in Nigeria’s early warning system, but warned that sustained vigilance and funding will determine how effectively the country can contain any potential outbreak.
Angry residents of a town at the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak in eastern Congo attacked and burned a tent that was part of a health center where people are being treated for the virus, the staff there said Saturday. It was the second such attack in the region in a week.
No one was hurt in the attack, according to initial reports but as patients ran out to escape the fire, 18 people with suspected Ebola infections left the facility and are now unaccounted for, a local hospital director said.
The angry residents had arrived at the clinic in the town of Mongbwalu on Friday night and set fire to a tent set up for suspected and confirmed Ebola cases by the Doctors Without Borders humanitarian group, Dr. Richard Lokudi, director of the Mongbwalu hospital, told The Associated Press.
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“We strongly condemn this act, as it caused panic among the staff and also resulted in the escape of 18 suspected cases into the community,” he said.
On Thursday, another treatment center, in the town of Rwampara, was burned down after family members were banned from retrieving the body of a local man suspected to have died of Ebola.
The bodies of those who died of Ebola can be highly contagious and lead to further spread when people prepare them for burial and gather for funerals. The dangerous work of burying suspected victims is being managed wherever possible by authorities, which can be met by protests from families and friends.
A communal burial for Ebola patients in Rwampara took place on Saturday under tight security as tensions between health workers and the local community ran high, said David Basima, a team leader with the Red Cross overseeing burials.
Armed soldiers and police monitored the burials as Red Cross workers clad in white protective suits lowered sealed coffins into the ground. Crying family members stood at a distance.




















