Nigeria moves to avoid overcrowding at isolation centres
One of the isolation centres at Onikan Stadium in Lagos…yesterday
• Places infected persons into categories
• SGF, Ehanire, others, test negative
• Presidency fumigates Buhari’s offices, others
• We’re yet to be tested, Kyari’s aides, reporters lament
To ensure that the isolation centres in the country are not overcrowded, the Federal Government is to clinically classify cases of coronavirus infection according to their severity.
The classification would determine where any individual who tested positive for the coronavirus disease would be isolated for treatment.
Meanwhile, the tracing of all Federal Government officials who had contact with one of the presidential aides who tested positive for the killer virus has been completed and most of them tested negative.
Among those who tested negative were the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha; Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed; and Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire.
It was learnt that an infected presidential aide was receiving treatment in an undisclosed “secure facility in the country, as he does not need to be in a category four treatment, but only requires a general treatment.”
Health Minister Ehanire who disclosed this while briefing journalists yesterday in Abuja explained that in treating coronavirus disease, the government had created four categories of patients. “While 80 percent of people who are infected with the virus may have little or no symptoms, some will have mild, some moderate and others severe symptoms, and may require oxygen and ventilators.”
According to Ehanire, those with severe symptoms are the ones that will go to the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital in Gwagwalada while those with mild or moderate symptoms will be in the facilities where they will be taken care of.
“Because we are grading our cases in such ways, that is why Gwagwalada is not yet overcrowded. We are considering the severity of cases, otherwise, one isolation centre will be filled up if we are mixing all the cases together”.
On where the presidential aides who tested positive are being treated, Ehanire said: “The president’s aides who tested positive are receiving treatment in a secure facility in the country. They do not need category four type treatment, they require general treatment. They are in a secure government facility where they are being monitored and checked, but if they get to that critical level four type, they will be moved to another facility. With the symptoms and levels they are in, they can be treated in a facility that is able to handle the symptoms they are displaying. Any other person who has the same symptoms can be classified like that.
“There are casual contacts and close contacts and the contact tracing had been done. I am one of those tested and the result came out negative. The permanent secretary and the secretary to the government of the federation also tested negative. Every other person that did the test has to reveal his status by himself.
“The minister disclosed that by yesterday, 51 confirmed cases of coronavirus disease had been recorded in Nigeria, of which 32 are in Lagos State, 10 in FCT, three in Ogun State and one each in Ekiti, Oyo, Edo, Bauchi, Osun and Rivers states.
According to him, out of the 51 cases, 37 have immediate travel history to one or more of the coronavirus-affected countries in the last two weeks; eight had close contacts with confirmed cases while six neither have any recent travel history or contact with infected people.
“While two persons have been cured and discharged from treatment, we have recorded just one fatality. All 48 presently active cases are clinically stable with only mild or moderate symptoms,” the minister said.
The minister said that the Federal Government was doing everything possible and leaving no stone unturned in efforts to contain the pandemic, adding that the presidential task force would continue to review the strategies and take steps as appropriate.
“One major item in Nigeria’s disease containment strategy is social distancing, which has been repeatedly announced. Directives have thus been issued at national and state levels to limit all large gatherings, including religious, social, political and schools, events. Some states have put the maximum number at a gathering at 50, but a general order will be announced.
culled from the guardian.ng