Lassa Fever kills 242 persons – NCDC
By Bisola Adeyemo
Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has said 242 persons have been killed by Lassa fever in Nigeria this year.
NCDC released this figure in a situation report on the disease.
This means 72 more persons died than the 170-casualty figure recorded last year.
Lassa fever is a disease spread to humans through food or household items contaminated with rodent urine or faeces.
The disease is endemic to the West African country and its name comes from the town of Lassa in northern Nigeria where it was first identified in 1969.
It is endemic in part of West Africa, including Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea and Nigeria. Neighbouring countries are also at risk.
From the NCDC’s report, Nigeria has so far recorded 1,175 confirmed cases of the disease in 2020 as against the 817 confirmed cases recorded in 2019.
The cases were recorded in 27 out of the nation’s 36 states and 130 local government areas out of the country’s 774.
In 2019, the cases were recorded in 23 states and 86 local governments.
The case-fatality ratio for 2020 was put at 20.6 per cent while that of 2019 was 20.8 per cent.
The highlights of the report read, “In Week 51, the number of new confirmed cases increased from five in Week 50 to 12 cases. These were reported from two states; Edo and Ondo.”