The death toll has also risen to 80 with a case-fatality
ratio of 10 per cent as of June 30, 2023.
The NCDC disclosed this on Thursday in a press statement
signed by its Director General, Dr. Ifedayo Adetifa, following the first
reported confirmed case of diphtheria in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.
The Federal Capital Territory Administration had on Monday
announced that the disease claimed the life of a four-year-old child in Deidei
District of the FCT.
The NCDC, however, said the FCT Health and Human Services
Secretariat has activated the diphtheria Incident Management System to
coordinate outbreak response activities.
It said as of July 3, 2023, only one confirmed case has been
detected in the FCT, with seven suspected cases testing negative while others
are awaiting laboratory results.
The public health institute noted that since December 2022,
diphtheria cases have been in Kano, Lagos, Yobe, Katsina, Cross River, Kaduna,
Osun states, and the FCT.
It said Kano state leads with 782 cases.
“The majority (71.7 per cent) of the 798 confirmed cases
occurred among children aged two to 14 years. So far, a total of 80 deaths have
been recorded among all confirmed cases (case fatality rate of 10.0 per cent),”
it said.
Diphtheria caused by a toxin produced by the bacteria
Corynebacterium diphtheriae, is a vaccine-preventable disease covered by one of
the vaccines provided routinely through Nigeria’s childhood immunisation
schedule.
Despite the availability of a safe and cost-effective
vaccine in the country, the majority, 82 per cent of the 798 confirmed
diphtheria cases in the ongoing outbreak were unvaccinated, the NCDC said.
“Unfortunately, this also includes this recently announced
FCT case. Historical sub-optimal vaccination coverage is the main driver of the
outbreak given the most affected age group (two-14-year-olds) observed, and a
national survey of diphtheria immunity that found less than half (41.7 per
cent) of children under 15 years old are fully protected from diphtheria.
“Just like in other States reporting cases, we are working
with the FCT Health and Human Services Department to implement control measures
and avert the further spread of the disease,” the agency noted.
The PUNCH reports that the NCDC activated a multi-sectoral
national Diphtheria Technical Working Group as a mechanism for coordinating
surveillance and response activities across the country in December 2022.
“We urge the public to remain vigilant and ensure persons
with symptoms of diphtheria present early to health facilities for prompt
diagnosis and treatment. Early diagnosis and institution of effective treatment
are key predictors of a favourable outcome. Healthcare workers are urged to
immediately notify LGA disease surveillance officers once they see a suspected
case,” it added.