Ebola: Ambassador, 58 Others Had Contact With Dead Liberian

than 59 people who had contacts with the Liberian who died of Ebola Virus
in the state, Mr Patrick Sawyer.
Commissioner for Health, Dr Jide Idris, said at a news conference in Ikeja
that the contact tracing became imperative to ascertain any possible
transmission of the virus by the victim.
Idris said the identified contacts comprised 44 hospital and 15 airport
contacts, including the Nigerian Ambassador to Liberia.
He said 20 of the contacts had been screened and that none of them had so
far been found to be infected with the virus.
He, however, said the contacts did not include those he might have been
with on his flight to Nigeria on July 20, as the airline had yet to
release the passenger manifest for investigation.

He said, “The airline manifest has not been provided by the airline as at
the time of this report and therefore, the precise number of passenger
contacts is yet to be ascertained, especially as two flights were involved
(Monrovia-Lome and Lome-Lagos).”
He urged Nigerians not to entertain fears about Sawyer’s case as the state
and Federal Governments were doing everything possible to prevent any
outbreak in the country.
Idris said the deceased’s body had been decontaminated, using 10 per cent
sodium hypochlorite and cremated with the permission of the Government of
Liberia.
He said, “A cremation urn has been prepared for dispatch to the family.
The vehicle containing the remains have also been decontaminated while the
hospital in which he died on July 25 has been demobilised .”
Idris said the state Ministry of Health had designated an isolation ward
at the Infectious Disease Hospital, Yaba, for case management, adding
three other centres were under way.
The commissioner urged residents to report people with abnormal cases of
bleeding and fever to the appropriate authorities for intervention, as
high fever with bleeding from all body openings were symptoms of the
disease.
Idris also urged residents to always keep their environments clean and
maintain good personal hygiene as Ebola virus spreads easily in dirty
environments.
Also speaking, the Director, National Centre for Disease Control, Prof.
Abdul-Salami Nasidi, warned against the consumption of bats and monkeys as
these animals had been established to be the original sources of Ebola.
He said, “This is time for those bat-eating and monkey-eating communities
to be careful now. Ebola started from the eating of chimpanzees. How the
virus got to the monkey, nobody knows yet.
“But this is the time to be careful about the eating of monkeys and bats.
The Ebola threat is high in West Africa and people should start taking
precautions.”
President of the Nigerian Academy of Science, Prof. Oyewale Tomori, also
warned Nigerians against the unsupervised burial of people who died from
suspected Ebola case.
He said 40 per cent of cases in high risk countries were transmitted from
victims bodies, stressing that an Ebola corpse was deadlier than the
patient.
Special Adviser to the Governor on Public Health, Mrs Yewande Adeshina,
urged traditional healers to collaborate with the government in checking
Ebola threats by reporting suspicious cases for the right intervention

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