NCDC confirms 454 new COVID-19 cases, as total infections hit 227,564

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) on Friday night, confirmed additional 454 new cases of Coronavirus  (COVID-19) in the country, bring the total cases to 27,564.

Advertisements

The NCDC made this disclosure on its official Twitter page.

With the latest cases, Nigeria’s total infections now stands at 27,564.

Advertisements

The health agency said that no new state reported a case in the last 24 hours.

According to it, till date, 27,564 cases have been confirmed, 11,069 cases have been discharged and 628 deaths have been recorded in 35 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

Advertisements

The NCDC said that the 454 new cases were reported from 19 states,  namely: Lagos (87), Edo (63), FCT (60), Ondo (41), Benue (32), Abia (31), Ogun (29), Oyo (19), Kaduna (17), Delta (16), Enugu (15), Borno (14), Plateau (9), Nasarawa (8), Kano (5), Bauchi (4), Gombe (2), Katsina (1), Kogi (1).

READ ALSO: WHO reacts to a video of TB Joshua healing COVID-19 patient

Meanwhile, the health agency said that at least, one out of every 10 persons over 50 years old who had COVID-19 died from it in the country.

The NCDC urged Nigerians to take responsibility to protect themselves, their loved ones and the elderly around them and in the society “because COVID -19 is real”.

NCDC announced that it also served as co-lead of Africa Center for Disease Control’s COVID-19 Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) Working Group.

Advertisements

It explained that “our responsibility is to work with Africa CDC  to train frontline health workers across Africa and provide guidance based on evidence to protect them from COVID-19 infection.

“With support from the World Health Organisation (WHO)  and West Africa Healh Organisation (WAHO), the Africa CDC IPC Working Group trained over 3,000 healthcare workers in four months on public health safety measures

Advertisements

“We’ve developed guidance on proper use of face masks, Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) and environmental decontamination.”

It emphasised that health workers were critical to the COVID-19 response.

The NCDC also stated that the team recognised the work done in often difficult circumstances, with concurrent outbreaks happening in some African countries.

It added that the agency was committed to working with the Africa CDC to empower health workers and prioritise their safety.

Advertisements

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.