Liberian Undergoes Test For Ebola In Lagos
The Special Adviser to the Governor on
Public Health, Dr. Yewande Adeshina, has said the suspected case of the
deadly Ebola Virus Disease in a Liberian man is being investigated.
Adeshina, at a press briefing by the
state’s Ministry of Health in Lagos, stated that the patient was
admitted on Tuesday at a private health facility in the state.
According to her, the 40-year-old
patient, who works for a West African organisation in Monrovia, arrived
in Lagos on a flight from Monrovia via Lome on Sunday, has had no
contact with any infected person so far.
She stated that the patient’ s blood
samples had been taken to the Virology Reference Laboratory at the Lagos
University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, and World Health Organisation
Reference Laboratory in Dakar, Senegal, for further testing.
Adeshina said, “History taken revealed
that he had no contact with any case of the Ebola virus, did not visit
any person with the virus in the hospital and neither did he partake in
the burial of any person who died of it.
“However, on account of his working and
living in an endemic region like Liberia, and the presentation of
non-specific constitutional symptoms and signs of fever, malaise, body
aches, vomiting, diarrhea associated with the disease, he had to be
admitted for further testing. Presently, the patient’s condition is
stable and he’s in recovery.”
The public health physician urged
residents to stay calm and take appropriate measures to reduce their
risk of contracting the deadly virus by washing their hands often with
soap and water, avoiding close contact with people who were sick and
ensuring that objects used by the sick were decontaminated and properly
disposed.
The Ebola Virus Disease is a viral
hemorrhagic fever. The initial symptoms of the viral disease can include
sudden fever, intense weakness, muscle pain and sore throat, which can
later progress to vomiting, diarrhoea and, in some cases, internal and
external bleeding.
The outbreak of the disease has been recorded in some neighbouring West African countries like Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
The virus is spread through humans,
however, its hosts have been found to be fruit bats and infected exotic
animals including chimpanzees, monkeys and other game meats who live
with fruit bats.
The World Health Organisation has sent a
warning to those living in high risk areas such as West Africa not to
eat raw bush meat for now.
Source:punchng.com
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