Every State In Nigeria Will Be Hit By COVID-19 — NCDC
Nigeria Centre for Disease Control has made a startling revelation concerning the spread of COVID-19 in the country.
The agency made this foreboding remark when its Director-general of NCDC, Chikwe Ihekweazu, says other states in the country who are yet to record any case of COVID-19 will soon be hit by the virulent infection.
Ihekweazu said this when he appeared on Channels TV on Thursday.
He said the disease, which has hitto 22 states, will soon spread to other states.
He said the country was not shut down during the lassa fever outbreak because the fever is not on the same scale as the coronavirus pandemic.
“We have responded to Lassa smoothly and nobody shut down the country because it wasn’t necessary, the response was fairly efficient,” he said.
“Now, COVID-19 is on a much larger scale – at the moment in 22 states but it will grow to every state in Nigeria, there is no reason why it won’t – it is a respiratory virus.”
The NCDC boss said the health agency has activated a testing centre in Kano state to boost testing capacity.
“We just activated the lab in Kano a few days ago. So, these are the results of the increased testing capacity that we are providing for the country,” he said.
“The tests are fairly robust; I can’t say 100 percent but they are as close to that as possible. We had the highest number of positive cases in a single day.
“Since the onset of the outbreak, we are testing a lot more (and) that is beginning to show. It is only so much we can do from NCDC; we are working with the state governments.
“They actually own the response at the state and local levels, and we need all of them now. We really have to face the reality that this is an outbreak, this is a virus.
“It will circulate in Nigeria, absolutely no doubt and our responsibility as a country is to prepare more, to be able to detect, isolate, treat, list contacts, and stop transmission.”
On March 30, President Muhammadu Buhari announced a lockdown in Lagos, Ogun and the federal capital territory for a period of 14 days to contain the spread of the virus.
The president later extended the lockdown by another two weeks. As of 11:20pm on April 15, Nigeria had recorded 407 cases of COVID-19. While 128 patients have been discharged, 12 persons have died from the disease.