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ncdc setsThe Nigeria Centre for Disease Control on Tuesday said it had set up five new COVID – 19 testing laboratories in the country.

The new centres will be located at Edo Specialist Hospital, Benin; ATBU Teaching Hospital, Bauchi; Rivers Indorama Company Molecular Lab; State Specialist Hospital, Amachara, Abia; and University of Abuja, Gwagwalada GX Lab. The NCDC in a statement said the development brought the total number of laboratories in its Molecular Laboratory Network to 58.

be fairThe House of Representatives has told the World Health Organisation to be fair in its regulation of clinical trials for COVID-19 drugs and vaccines. Chairman, House Committee on Health Services, Mr. Tanko Sununu, said this in Abuja on Wednesday at a meeting with the new WHO Representative in Nigeria, Dr Walter Mulombo, and five health-related committees of the House. 

Sununu noted that the outgoing country representative maintained a healthy relationship with the National Assembly, especially the health committees, saying he hoped that Mulombo would relate with the parliament same way.

global fundsNigeria has received an $890 million grant from the Global Fund to reduce the burden of HIV, Tuberculosis and Malaria over an implementation period of three years, beginning from 2021 to 2023. The Minister of Health, Osagie Ehanire, announced the receipt of the grant at a news conference on Tuesday in Abuja.

The Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GF) is an innovative international financing mechanism established by the United Nations in 2002, with its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland.

vaccineTwo studies offered new hope of a potential vaccine for the novel coronavirus on Monday, as the World Health Organization warned about a possible acceleration of the disease in Africa.

Seven months after COVID-19 was first identified in China and has since killed more than 600,000 people worldwide and battered economies, there is growing alarm over fresh outbreaks of the disease. Until recently, Africa had remained relatively unscathed by the pandemic compared to other parts of the world.

more thanMore than 10,000 health workers in 40 African countries have been infected with the novel coronavirus, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Thursday. The pandemic is gathering pace in Africa, with some 750,000 cases and more than 15,000 deaths across the continent, according to the WHO.

“The growth we are seeing is placing an ever peg eater strain on health services across the continent,’’ WHO Africa Director, Matshidiso Moeti, said. “This has very real consequences for the individuals who work in them,’’ Moeti added.

tarabaTaraba State government, through the state Primary Health Care Development Agency (TSPHCDA), has Thursday begin the distribution of drugs worth N49 million to primary health care centres in the state. Dr Innocent VakKai, Commissioner for Health, who launched the distribution in Jalingo said, the gesture was to reintroduce the hitherto comatose Drug Revolving Programme in Taraba.

According to him, the programme was to address the challenge of perennial out of stock syndrome in both the urban and ruler primary health care centres in Taraba, and in complementing the administrative efforts of governor Ishaku toward improving health care service delivery in the state, and asked the primary health care development agency to ensure sustainable use of the drugs.

nigeria fourNigeria and four other countries have been identified as responsible for over 80 per cent of the COVID-19 cases in West Africa, the West African Health Organisation (WAHO) said.

Addressing Members of ECOWAS Parliament during the Second Extra Ordinary Session which is holding via video conference, WAHO, however said that the case fatality rate in the region is under control. The Director-General of WAHO, Stanley Okolo, while making a presentation to Parliament, said that as at July 16, the five countries recorded 84,118 cases out of the 96,936 cases in the region.

covid 19 hazardNo fewer than 33 states have yet to begin the implementation of the new hazard allowance for resident doctors, despite their risk of contracting  COVID-19. 

The Secretary of the National Association of Resident Doctors of Nigeria, Dr Bilqis Mohammed, in a WhatsApp message sent to   one of our correspondents, listed states that had started paying the   allowance as  Lagos, Ogun, Nasarawa and Enugu. But there was confusion over the payment of the hazard allowance in Ogun State.

fgThe Federal Government and the World Health Organization (WHO) Tuesday said that hepatitis B birth dose vaccination still remains the best way to reduce the numbers of new infections in the country, because the most vulnerable time for infection is in the first month of life.

They also revealed that people with hepatitis-related complications are at a higher risk of developing severe cases of COVID-19 and must continue to receive essential hepatitis prevention and treatment services during the pandemic and beyond.

pandemicThe Federal Government and the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Monday stressed that it is too early to declare that the country’s COVID-19 curve is flattening, as daily new infected cases fluctuate between 500 to 700.

Flattening of the curve simply means that the rate of spread or transmission of the virus has gradually started to slow down. There is still active community transmission of the virus in Nigeria and across Africa.

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