Daily Trust

‘Over 100 million Nigerians will suffer asthma in 2025’

- From Tony Adibe, Enugu

More than 100 million Nigerians would suffer from asthma by the year 2025, the Chairman, Board of Trustees, Amaka ChiwuikeUb­a Foundation , ACUF, Dr Chiwuike Uba has said.

He made the disclosure while briefing newsmen on the maiden annual asthma conference and launch of Amaka Chiwuike-Uba Foundation (ACUF) in Enugu .

He said estimates by internatio­nal health organizati­ons also show that over 15 million Nigerians have asthma and that about five percent of the figure are children.

Uba said that in spite of the availabili­ty of drugs, significan­t number of patients still suffer and die from asthma.

He said an estimated 75 per cent hospital admissions for asthma and as many as 90 percent of the asthma deaths were preventabl­e, adding that “painfully Nigeria has lost many gifted and illustriou­s sons and daughters including Mrs Amaka Chiwuike-Uba prematurel­y to asthma.”

According to him, the annual asthma conference slated for July 6th was organised by the foundation to create awareness about asthma.

The ACUF is organised and funded in collaborat­ion with the Nigeria Medical Associatio­n (NMA), Knowledge Policy Management Initiative (KAPOMI), Nigerian Thoracic Society (NTS) and Human Rights Volunteer Corps (HRVC), according to Uba.

Uba said that ACUF was set up in November 2016 in memory of Mrs Amaka Chiwuike-Uba, as a and charitable organisati­on to continue the very ideals she lived for and help asthma patients live a better life.

An Associate Professor/ Reader of Medicine and a Consultant Respirator­y Physician, Dr Cajethan C. Onyedum said that studies have shown that many Nigeria institutio­ns lack capacity to manage asthma.

Dr. Onyedum who is also the Chairman, Nigeria Medical Associatio­n (NMA), Enugu State

Chapter said that asthma was one of the noncommuni­cable diseases that was increasing in prevalence and mortality, despite all the medical knowledge about its management.

The NMA chairman explained that “most of the figures you have been given here are not our figures; some of them are done outside the country, and even those done within this country are hospital-based figures. What I’m saying is that this is a tip of the iceberg because when you do any community survey we are going to get increasing prevalence of asthma.”

National Coordinato­r, Human Rights Volunteer Corps of Nigeria (HRVC), Mr Larry Oguego assured that the corps would raise volunteers who will work both in the long term and short term in spreading the news that asthma is a battle that Nigerians can fight and win.

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