Monkeypox: Panic As NCDC Registers 15 New Cases

Monkeypox Panic As NCDC Registers 15 New Cases
Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu
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The Director-General of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu, on Tuesday in Abuja revealed that 59 suspected cases and 15 confirmed cases of Monkeypox have been registered by the agency.

Ihekweazu made this disclosure while reacting to the reports of a Dallas, Texas resident who recently returned from Nigeria and tested positive to the disease.

It was the first confirmed case of the virus in the U.S. since 2003, with health officials saying that the public should not be perturbed.

Africa Daily News, New York gathered that laboratory tests confirmed that the patient was infected with a strain of the virus mainly seen in West Africa, which included Nigeria.

Read Also: COVID-19: Active Cases Drop, As NCDC Reports 127 Recoveries

While rare, this case is not a reason for alarm and we do not expect any threat to the general public,’ Dallas County Judge, Clay Jenkins, said in a statement by Dallas County’s health department.

With passengers wearing masks on the flight and in the airport, the health department said that the risk of spreading monkeypox via respiratory droplets to others on the planes and in the airports was low.

Ihekweazu said that just as the agency responded to other epidemic-prone diseases in the country, an outbreak would be declared when there was a large cluster of monkeypox cases that constituted an emergency.

‘The Federal Government was notified of the situation in Texas, through the International Health Regulations (IHR), who reported a case of monkeypox disease diagnosed in a patient who had recently visited Nigeria.

‘Since the re-emergence of monkeypox in the country in September 2017, the agency has continued to receive reports and responses to sporadic cases of the disease from states across the country.

‘We have been working closely with state health ministries to strengthen monkeypox disease surveillance and response in the country.

‘We work with Enhanced Monkeypox Surveillance Project where we have been training health workers across states to rapidly detect and manage cases.

‘Our initial focus is on the states with the highest number of cases – Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers and Lagos.

‘We will continue working with all states to strengthen monkeypox prevention, detection and control in Nigeria,’ he explained.

He urged Nigerians to continue adhering to precautions that protected them from monkeypox and other infectious diseases.

 

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

 

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