The National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) revealed that Nigeria has experienced 83 deaths and 836 confirmed cases of diphtheria since the beginning of this year.
The Executive Director of NPHCDA, Faisal Shuaib, addressed the press on the diphtheria outbreak response during a news briefing in Abuja on Monday.
He said, “From May 2022 to July 2023, an estimated 2,455 suspected cases have been reported in 26 states. As of July 27, 2023, 836 of these cases have been confirmed in 33 local government areas across eight states: Cross River, Kano, Katsina, Kaduna, Lagos, Osun, Yobe, and FCT.
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“Tragically, 83 deaths have been reported from these confirmed cases, making vaccination against this deadly disease critically important, especially for our children.”
He expressed concern that despite the efforts of the Federal Government to provide safe and cost-effective vaccines, a significant number of children remain unvaccinated or partially vaccinated, posing a threat to the country’s goal of achieving population immunity.
Response
Shuaib further said the government has rolled out response plan to the ongoing diphtheria outbreak, which would be carried out in two phases.
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According to him, the first phase 1 and immediate response would encompass 25 local government areas across Bauchi, Katsina, Yobe and Kaduna States.
He said this phase would begin on August 7 and end on August 11.
Shuaib said the second phase would cover outbreak response in 171 local government areas.
He said Kano, Katsina, FCT, Yobe, Kaduna, and Bauchi States would have a state-wide outbreak response; while there would be targeted outbreak responses in LGAs across Jigawa (8 LGAs), Borno (4), Osun (4), Lagos (3), Zamfara (3), Gombe (3), Plateau (1) and Nasarawa (1).
“This phase is planned to be conducted in three rounds. The first round will commence on 21st August 2023, followed by the second (2nd) and third (3rd) rounds tentatively set for 18th September 2023 and 16th October 2023, respectively. Each of these three rounds will span five days,” he said.
WHO Nigeria Country Representative, Walter Kazadi Mulombo said the NCDC requested it to procure Diphtheria Antitoxin and erythromycin IV for the case management of diphtheria cases.
He said 1800 vials of DAT were expected to arrive in country on August 2 and erythromycin in one to two weeks, pending government authorization.
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He said the WHO was working with the NPHCDA to organise the first phase of vaccination campaign targeting children from zero to 14 years old in four states and that WHO would support it with N92m.
Eduardo Celades, UNICEF Nigeria Chief of Health, said 70 percent of children affected by diphtheria in Nigeria were over two years old and 80 percent were either not vaccinated or had not completed vaccination.