The
introduction of Ebola to Nigeria by Patrick Sawyer was a wakeup call to
all health care workers in Nigeria. I still thank and strongly
recommend that the management and staff of First Consultants Hospital,
Lagos be compensated for the patriotic role they played which ensured
that the index case was contained – a role for which they paid dearly
with the lives of some of their staff.
Now that Nigeria has
been ‘allegedly’ declared Ebola-free, do our experts really take into
consideration that another ‘Patrick Sawyer’ can easily fly into the
country anytime and any day? Do we still have direct or indirect flights
to and fro Liberia? How prepared and vigilant are our health officials
at our ports of entry? This is because it was when Patrick Sawyer came
that the moribund Infectious Disease Units in our ministries of health
were revamped. Believe you me, there are officials in that segment of
the ministries of health, receiving salaries at the end of the month,
threatening government with industrial actions concerning their
promotions and other allowances but it was when Ebola came into the
country that they dusted their chairs and removed the cobwebs in their
offices. Why was it impossible for the laboratory at LUTH (Lagos
University Teaching Hospital) to run a confirmatory test on the Patrick
Sawyer’s sample sent to it initially and why did we have to wait till a
confirmatory test was done outside the country?
It
should be noted that the laboratory at LUTH showed that Patrick
Sawyer’s sample had an Ebola virus but the strain of the virus (which
may be Zaire, Bundibugyo, Sudan, Reston or Tai forest species) that
infected him was confirmed outside the country. It was confirmed that
the strain of the virus that infected him was the Zaire species.
Although I’m not an expert in Infectious Disease Control and Prevention
hence I may be pardoned if the gold standard is that the sample must be
confirmed outside Nigeria (possibly in a WHO reference laboratory), all
I’m saying is that as a giant of Africa, the 26th largest economy in the
world and the much-taunted largest economy in Africa, we were supposed
to complete the test here.
Today, many hospitals and public
places that installed health measures at the outbreak of the index case
of Ebola in Nigeria have since abandoned them since the country has been
declared Ebola-free. I think the current index case of Ebola Virus
Disease that was diagnosed recently in Dallas, Texas United States of
America, should tell us that we can be hit again by this deadly virus.
If the US can be hit by the deadly virus despite all sensitisation and
their preparedness, how much more a developing country like ours, where
some officials manning our ports of entry can be easily bribed to
neglect their duties? The current index case in America was said to have
travelled from Liberia to America. In view of this, another ‘Patrick
Sawyer’ may surreptitiously come into our own country and this time, it
will be more disastrous than the first.
We should not relax yet
as the battle is not over. Just like any other diseases (for example
Cholera, Influenza etc.) that come as an epidemic, Ebola can pay us an
unscheduled visit anytime and it’s likely to have easy entry through our
ports. When I saw the volume of arms and ammunition plus heavy military
equipment recovered from Boko Haram insurgents, I asked how these
fighting instruments got into the hands of the insurgents in the first
place even when it is extremely difficult to smuggle a car into the
country from Benin Republic. It then follows that there must be either a
mole in the regulatory agency or the officials were negligent.
Health
workers manning our ports of entry must be patriotic since any further
incident of Ebola virus disease in Nigeria now will have multiplier
effects as we are currently complacent having been declared Ebola free.
Paul John is a Medical Practitioner based in Port Harcourt, Rivers State.
Ebola bye bye
ReplyDeleteEBOLA IS ONLY D DESEASE OF EGYPTAINS NT FR D CHILDREN OF GOD SO AM NT AFRAID OF EBOLA VIRUS I BELIVE JUST BELIVE WIT ME.
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