By Chibuike Nwabuko
Abuja (Sundiata Post) – No fewer than 100 hospital workers who may have had contacts with Lassa fever patients have been put under surveillance at Lagos University Teaching Hospital.
This followed the death of two patients being treated for Lassa fever in one week, only days after they were hospitalized.
Both patients are said to have been hospitalized after the infection had gone on for too long.
The first of the patients is a 32-year-old pregnant woman who had bleeding problems after having a stillbirth. A post-mortem exam confirmed her positive for Lassa fever.
A pathologist who took part in her autopsy has also been confirmed positive and is hospitalized at LUTH’s isolation ward, where he is said to be responding to treatment.
The hospital’s chief medical director Chris Bode, who visited the patient on a morale-boosting tour yesterday, has called on staff to maintain “heightened level of alert” in the wake of the outbreak.
The hospital said it had notified the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control.
Humans infected with Laser fever must be isolated to avoid human to human transmission.
Close contacts of infected individuals and health workers who do not observe standard infection control practices are at increased risk of being infected.
There is a good chance of cure with an antiviral agent called Ribavirin when treatment starts within the first week of the illness. However, Ribavirin is avoided in pregnant women because of the risk to the foetus.
Health workers also provide supportive care with intravenous fluids, blood transfusion and medications for seizures as might be required.
Primary prevention involves avoidance of contact with rats. This tends to be heightened following bush burning. The rats are displaced from their natural habitat so they come close to homes in search of alternative abode.
Experts advise that bushes and clutter around homes must be cleared to make the surrounding unattractive to rats; food, cooking utensils and drinking water must be kept in rat-proof containers; and to avoid using rats as food sources.(Daily Post).
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