THISDAY

WHO Innoculate­s 894,744 IDPs in Borno, Adamawa, Yobe

- Kayode Fasua

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) has sensationa­lly revealed how it saved thousands of Internally Displaced Persons in the North-East from various killer diseases this year.

The WHO in its latest bulletin, recalled that on Day 5 of its Oral Cholera Vaccinatio­n exercise (OCV) across war-torn communitie­s of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states and especially at the IDPs camps, 894,744 persons had been vaccinated, out of the targeted 930, 602 people.

The WHO quoted an enthused beneficiar­y, Munakur Mahammed, as saying, “In addition to insecurity and despair, we are faced with shortages of food, we are homeless and worst still, cholera killed my husband last year in Muna IDPs camp, but thank God you came to our rescue early this year. My children and I have received the vaccine and we are protected now.”

Munakur lives with her four children as IDPs in Dusuman ward, having been displaced from Muna IDPs camp, where her late husband was killed by cholera in 2017.

An outbreak of cholera has been confirmed in Dusuman IDPs camp; hence, Dusuman is among the nine wards implementi­ng the OCV.

She is one of nearly one million beneficiar­ies targeted with OCV across nine high risk wards in Maiduguri Metropolit­an Council, Jere, Kala/Balge and Ngala Local Government Areas of Borno state in the recent campaign, the UN observed.

The WHO added that it was providing technical and financial support to prevent and control disease outbreaks in the crisis-affected states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe.

“The health system has been significan­tly disrupted, resulting in the rise of preventabl­e disease outbreaks of different magnitudes,” Dr Clement Peter Lasuba, WHO Nigeria Officer-in-Charge said.

He noted, “Whether it is cholera, meningitis, Lassa fever or any other disease outbreak, WHO is committed to improving access to the urgently needed basic healthcare services to the affected population­s in the northeast region, in collaborat­ion with government and other health sector partners.”

Since the declaratio­n of the Grade 3 emergency in north-east Nigeria, in August 2016, WHO has been filling a critical gap in

health services, through its innovative interventi­ons, including mobile health strategy, integrated community case-management, through community resource persons, special interventi­on teams and Reaching Every Child (REC) strategy in the three affected states.

“WHO had remained a partner to count on since the beginning of the insurgency in Borno state,” said the Director for Disease Control at the Borno state Primary Health Care Developmen­t Agency (BSPHCDA), Babagana Abiso. He observed that “WHO supported Borno state to establish a robust disease surveillan­ce system which is critical for timely detection, reporting and early response to outbreaks.”

Furthermor­e, Dr Collins Owili, the Emergency Manager, WHO Health Emergencie­s Programmes in the North-East, stated that WHO’s presence at State, LGAs and community levels was one of its greatest strengths, to promptly detect and respond to disease outbreaks.

According to him, “Aside from technical facilitati­on for the release of vaccine for the ongoing oral cholera vaccinatio­n campaign in Borno State, WHO had trained and engaged more than 150 volunteers who conducted active house-to-house search for cholera cases and delivered timely lifesaving messages on how to prevent it in the households.”

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