…Nigeria, WHO mobilise to ward off epidemic
Stories by Louis Ibah
The recent announcement by the World Health Organisation
(WHO) of a fresh Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) with
three deaths has sent shivers down the spine of managers of Nigerian airports,
regulatory agencies and many Nigerian air travelers.
“There is this fear within the Nigerian aviation industry of
a possible entrance into the country of an unsuspecting ebola patient, or carriers of the virus
since the news started making the rounds that there was a fresh outbreak of
ebola in Congo,” a top airline official told Daily Sun.
“The managers of the airports are unsettled, airlines are
particularly worried that theirs is not the one carrying the ebola passengers,
and you also find some passengers asking about the safety processes put in
place to detect the sick,” added the official who works for one of the foreign
African airlines flying into Nigeria and who wound not want to be named.
Why fear
The Nigerian aviation industry has every reason to be scared
given that the first reported case of ebola in the country occurred on 20 July
2014, through a Liberian lawyer and
diplomat, Mr. Patrick Sawyer who by air into Nigeria. On that fateful date,
Sawyer had flown into the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos from
James Springs Payne Airport in Monrovia, Liberia with an ASKY Airlines
aircraft. Airport officials who fist sighted him described him as having
appeared to be “terribly ill” and it took few minutes upon his disembarkation
from the aircraft and clearance from immigration before he collapsed at the b
Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja. A protocol officer of ECOWAS was
there to greet him. The officer drove Sawyer in an ECOWAS pool car to First
Consultant Hospital, Obalende, and Lagos, where he later died on 24 July.
Recall also that more than 11, 000 people died in the ebola outbreak which
ravaged the West African countries of Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, and
Nigeria between 2013 and 2015
FAAN response
Last week, as part of efforts to dispel fears on the safety of Nigeria’s
airports as regards the ebola virus, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria
(FAAN) announced it had reactivated screening infrastructure and personnel
previously used to combat the spread of the virus in 2014 when the Liberian
man, Sawyer first brought it into the country.
“We want to assure passengers and airport users of safety at
Nigeria’s airports as the World health Organisation announces the outbreak of
Ebola in Democratic republic of Congo,’ said spokeswoman for FAAN, Mrs.
Henrietta Yakubu.
“Adequate measures have been put in place to checkmate the
re-occurrence of any such outbreak in Nigeria. All measures adopted in 2014 to
curtail the dreaded virus is very much in place and has been fortified. There
is no outbreak of ebola in Nigeria or at any Nigerian airport,” she added.
Measures
The ebola virus is not found in Nigeria and given that it
was a porous screening system at the Lagos international airport that had
let-in Nigeria’s first ebola casualty, the Liberian man, Patrick Sawyer, every
institution concerned with the safety of airlines and passengers in Nigeria
should be on alert.
In fact, it behooves on FAAN, the Nigerian Civil Aviation
Authority, and the Federal Ministry of Health to take urgent steps to
reactivate the screening points at all the country’s airports hitherto
dismantled when the country was cleared by the WHO as free from ebola. FAAN
should not just rely on previous machines but should invest in the acquisition
and installation of the latest state-of-the-art machines in all the country’s airports to facilitate the speedy detection of persons that have contracted the virus. At present, a visit by daily Sun to the Lagos
airport revealed that only incoming passengers are screened at the country’s
international airports, but it would be better if the screening is extended to
cover both outgoing and incoming passengers.
This is so bearing in mind that on August 8, 2014, an emergency
committee convened by the Director-General of the World Health Organization
(WHO) under the International Health Regulations (2005) declared the Ebola
epidemic in West Africa a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.
Among the recommendations of the emergency committee were that countries with
Ebola transmission should conduct exit screening at international airports,
seaports, and major land crossings and that other countries should not
generally ban travel or trade. Fresh investments should also be made in
training and capacity building for port health workers for effective passenger screening
of departing travelers for acute illness or possible exposures.
Airlines
In the last three years, Nigeria has opened up its sky to
more foreign airlines who now fly in directly or with stopovers picking up
passengers from so many sub-Saharan African countries, including the Democratic
Republic of Congo. The NCAA and FAAN
should immediately demand that airlines report any deaths onboard or sick
travelers or those that develop serious contagious disease during a flight,
once they touch down any Nigerian airport. This way, upon the arrival of such a
passenger, the port health workers would be in a better position to isolate and
check if the traveler is infected with ebola.
Passengers’ roles
Persons who contract ebola usually show the following
symptoms, sudden fever that makes them shiver unnecessary, intense weakness,
muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhea, and bleeding.
Travelers to countries that experienced outbreaks of Ebola
should, as usual, avoid contact with sick people, dead bodies, blood, and body
fluids.
But on board an aircraft, passengers who sight fellow
passengers with the above symptoms have an obligation to stand up from their
seat and report such persons to cabin crew for prompt attention and possible
isolation. Above all, it is adviceable
for air passengers to make use of sanitizers to wash their hands at periods of
an outbreak of a viral infection such as ebola.
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