Strange illness kills 13 in Abuja

Abuja FCT

Executive Secretary of the FCT Primary Health Care Development Board, Dr. Rilwanu Muhammad, Tuesday said unknown disease suspected to be typhoid fever or shigella dysentery had killed 13 people in Saburi community of AMAC in Abuja.

Muhammad said the disease broke out on February 18.

He said 13 out of the 14 affected people died, while a five-year-old child survived the outbreak as at February 22.

The scribe said the victims of the disease are not from a single household.

According to him, the victims are experiencing fever, abdominal pain and diarrhoea, and sometimes bloody diarrhoea and they subsequently die.

“There is no good sanitation in the community and we suspect salmonella typhi and shigella dysentery in that community,” said Muhammad.

He explained that shigella dysentery is a bacterial specie causing dysentery in humans and in monkeys, found only in faeces of symptomatic individuals.

He said: “It is not food poisoning.

“It is not cholera or gastroenteritis.

“That is why we are suspecting typhoid.”

Muhammad said the board had taken the sample of the water from the well and three different boreholes in the community for analysis.

He said the community had about 20 boreholes and all of them are not looking neat.

Muhammad urged the community to embrace hand washing, good personal hygiene and good environmental management.

The scribe added that the sample was taken to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control laboratory to confirm the diagnosis.

He assured residents of the board’s efforts at controlling the situation and treating infected persons.

“Chicken pox is another problem that is affecting the FCT, especially in the Internally Displaced Persons camps,” Muhammad said.

He said 18 people were affected with Chicken pox in AMAC, stressing that chicken pox is the disease that has a vaccine but was yet to be included in the National Programme on Immunisation.

He said: “We also have reported cases of Measles in some general hospitals in the FCT.

“We are much worried that people are not doing routine immunisation well because if people adhere to it very well the outbreak will have gone down.

“We are going to embark on a follow-up campaign on measles to catch up those who have not received the vaccine.

“We did it recently and we are going to repeat it again.”

Besides, Muhammad urged residents to take measles vaccination as it reduces complications from the sickness such blindness, ear deafness, pneumonia and abdominal pains.