June 08, 2026
11 11 11 AM
FCT TEACHERS PROTEST PROLONGED CAPTIVITY OF ABDUCTED COLLEAGUES, STUDENTS
KANO STEPS UP FLOOD PREVENTION AHEAD OF RAINY SEASON
KANO CUTS MATERNAL DEATHS BY 45% IN THREE YEARS
REPS DEMAND SPECIAL SECURITY FORCE FOR SCHOOLS
TINUBU RETURNS TO ABUJA AFTER EID-EL-KABIR HOLIDAY
ONDO SHUTS SCHOOLS OVER BANDITRY FEARS
AKPABIO CALLS FOR UNITY IN RESCUE OF ABDUCTED OYO PUPILS, TEACHERS
NAIRA TRADES AT ₦1,373/$ IN OFFICIAL MARKET
LAGARDE URGES EUROZONE TO STRENGTHEN EURO’S GLOBAL INFLUENCE
ARMY RESCUES 23 ABDUCTED PASSENGERS AFTER KOGI HIGHWAY ATTACK

NCDC ACTIVATES A NATIONAL CHOLERA MULTI-SECTORAL EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTRE   

Share

 

NCDC ACTIVATES A NATIONAL CHOLERA MULTI-SECTORAL EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTRE                                                                                                                                        24-06-24

By Sadiq Aminu                                                                   The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, NCDC, has activated a National Cholera Multi-Sectoral Emergency Operations Centre to coordinate the cholera outbreak response in the country.

The Director General of NCDC, Dr. Jide Idris said the activation of the Centre was to underscore the gravity of the situation of cholera as well as to protect the health and wellbeing of citizens.

While briefing journalists in Abuja on the cholera epidemiological situation in the country, Dr. Idris disclosed that 53 deaths and 1,528 suspected cases of cholera had been recorded across 31 states in 107 local government areas with a case fatality rate of 3.5% since the beginning of 2024.

He urged citizens to practice proper hygiene and safety precautionary measures to ensure that they do not contact the disease.

“The time between infection and the appearance of symptoms is 2 hours to 5 days. It has a higher risk of transmission in areas that lack adequate sanitation facilities. Unsafe practices such as improper disposal of refuse and open defecation endanger the safety of water used for drinking and personal use.”

Dr. Idris also advised individuals and health workers to avoid self medication but report suspected cases of cholera to various health departments.

He maintained that the Centre would support affected states, facilitate rapid communication, data analysis, mobilise resources from partners and stakeholders at all levels of government.

Dr. Idris further stated that an incident manager had been appointed to coordinate day to day activities involving several pillars such as surveillance, case management, oral cholera vaccine issues, logistics and research.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Home
Magazines
Our Channel
About Us
Contact Us
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x