7 doctors, 5 nurses quarantined as Lassa fever hits Adamawa
No fewer than Twelve health workers including seven doctors and five nurses have been quarantined at the Federal Medical Centre, Yola, Adamawa state to avert likely spread of Lassa Fever.
The affected health workers were quarantined following their contact with a patient diagnosed with Lassa fever in the hospital.
ABUJAPEOPLE learnt from a source that a pregnant woman who lost her fetus was the primary contact.
She said the woman was admitted at the labour ward, where the fetus was evacuated on Friday.
“After the evacuation, it was observed that the woman had fever and was bleeding.
“So, the medical team thought as much that it was a case of Lassa fever, then she was transferred to the isolation room,” she said.
“When she was sent to the isolation room, the blood samples were taken away for test, because normally they don’t do the test here (FMC Yola).
“They had to send the samples and we wait for the test results which came out yesterday and showed that she was positive.
“But the patient died about two days to the release of the result.”
He said there have been no symptoms from other health workers.
“The only problem now is that many people are in contact with the patient.
“Seven doctors, five nurses and two sub staff had direct contact with her,” he said.
“But these are just contact, they don’t have any case or anybody that is manifesting any symptom.
“Those that had direct contact with the patient are being quarantined for the incubation period of the disease.”
Those who are in isolation are expected to be observed for at least 21 days.
This development is coming a day after the Jigawa state government confirmed a case of Lassa fever involving a medical doctor.
In Ogun, Tomi coker, the state commissioner of health, also confirmed a single case of the disease.
She said the patient is a pregnant 29-year-old who took ill and was referred to the Federal Medical Center (FMC), Abeokuta.
The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) had earlier confirmed the death of two health workers, who contracted the disease, in Kano.
The NCDC said 195 cases of Lassa fever have been confirmed and that 29 deaths have been reported in 11 states as of January 24.
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