Nigeria’s Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu on Friday said
the clinic belonging to the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation
(NNPC) at Muri Okunola area of Victoria Island, Lagos, Nigeria has been
shut down over suspected case of Ebola Virus Disease, EVD, in a patient
admitted in the clinic.
The minister, who paid a visit on Governor
Babatunde Fashola at the State House, Ikeja, confirmed that the clinic
had been shut down over a suspected case of Ebola in the clinic, saying
that the situation is still under investigation and that by tomorrow,
the result would be out.
“The situation is still under
investigation and by tomorrow, the result will be out. We need to
confirm that. Normally, once someone has been managed and there is a
suspicion, there are precautions that will be taken.
“We want to decontaminate and when you are decontaminating, like what
we did to First Consultant Medical Centre, you close to enable you to
go in, decontaminate it and reopen. So, we are going to decontaminate
and reopen the place, so, it is temporary closed,” he said.
However, the NNPC issued a statement, saying that the clinic was shut down over suspected case of Ebola virus.
The
statement issued by the Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs
Division, Mr. Ohi Alegbe disclosed that a patient admitted in the
hospital was suspected to have traces of Ebola, which led to the closure
of the hospital.
“The management of the NNPC has announced the
indefinite shutdown of its clinic in the Muri Okunola area of Victoria
Island, Lagos, following a suspected case of Ebola virus on admission at
the clinic. It was discovered that the patient visited the First
Consultant Medical Centre during the period the first Ebola case was
reported at that clinic,” NNPC said in the statement, adding that people
that had contact with the patient were being traced.
Meanwhile,
the Minister, Chukwu said a team had been constituted treating people
for Ebola, saying that the next stage “is improving what we are doing at
the borders, those of you who have been at the Murtalal Muhammed
Airport (MMA) and Idiroko, they are now screening, they take the
temperature, you have forms to fill, they know your bio-data.
“When
you have increase in temperature, there is a procedure to investigate
you. This, we are doing. We have banned corpses coming into the country,
but if you think you have a good reason to have your relative brought
in, you seek for the waiver, if you think the person did not die of
Ebola and you have certificate, we allow you,” he said.
The
minister said government is going to procure more of the hand held
thermal detectors to be put round the borders, saying that “we have 49
land crossings, eight sea ports, eight international airports; it is not
easy to cover.”
Source:PM News
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