Posted by Amarachi on Thu 19th Aug, 2021 - tori.ng
The cases were recorded in 19 local government areas of the state from April to August.
1,665 cases of cholera have been recorded in Kaduna State in the last five months.
The Commissioner for Health, Dr. Amina Mohammed-Baloni, said this during a press conference on Thursday in Kaduna.
Mohammed-Baloni said the
cases were recorded in 19 local government areas of the state from April to August.
The commissioner attributed the outbreak to poor hygiene and sanitation .
She identified the affected council areas as Soba, Makarfi, Giwa, Chikun , Sabo gari, Zaria ,Kaduna North, Kachia, Jaba.
Others, according to her are: Kubau, Lere , Sanga, Birin-Gwari, Kaduna South , Kadan, Igabi and Kajuru .
She said the state had been monitoring the situation and currently recording less active cases.
“In April this year we were informed of cases of vomiting and diarrhea in some local government areas where we sent our response teams and took samples for testing and it returned positive for cholera.
“Since then, we have been monitoring them . We treated 842 and discharged them while we still have 14 active cases now on treatment,” she said.
The commissioner said the state identified a secondary health facility in each of these LGAs for management of the disease while all patients had been evacuated to these facilities and were being managed.
She added that the ministry distributed drugs for management and chlorine for purification of water.
She added that ongoing sensitisation was being carried out on preventive measures in communities with contact tracing of all the affected people.
She also said ongoing active case search in communities and other health facilities and surveillance were also ongoing in other LGAs to identify more cases.
She urged residents to observe good hygienic practices and sanitation so as to avoid more outbreak.
“We know that cholera is seasonal and occurs mostly during rainy seasons, i urged residents to avoid building latrines close to their Wells and observed good hygiene and sanitation,” she said.
(NAN)