The National Council on Health has
banned the transport of corpses and critically ill persons on both
local and international routes with immediate effect.
It said only dead bodies with waivers
granted by the Federal Ministry of Health would be transported within
and into Nigeria . Such corpses must be conveyed only in
ambulances.
To show its seriousness on the movement
of corpses, the council advised state governments to enact legislation
for its effective compliance .
The NCH which is the highest policy making body in the health sector reached the decision after a meeting in Abuja on Tuesday.
Members of the council are the
Minister of Health, the Minister of State for Health; state Health
commissioners ; the Secretary of Health and Human Services in the
Federal Capital Territory , and the Permanent Secretary, Federal
Ministry of Health.
As the Minister of Health, Onyebuchi
Chukwu, briefed journalists on the outcome of the meeting, the World
Health Organisation said it had approved the use of trial drugs such as
the ZMapp serum by persons infected with the Ebola Virus Disease.
Chukwu explained that the council
deliberated extensively on strategies to contain the spread of the EVD
beyond those who had primary contact with the late Liberian, Patrick
Sawyer, who brought the virus to Nigeria.
He said since it had been established
that the disease could only be spread through contact with either the
corpse of someone who died of the virus or anyone who became sick as
result of the viral infection, necessary steps had to be taken .
The minister added, “The corpses of all persons confirmed to have died of EVD must be buried according to WHO standard protocol.
“Council further directed that the
transport of corpses into Nigeria as well as inter-state transport be
banned until further notice except with approved waivers that may be
issued by the Federal Ministry of Health”
To ensure immediate compliance with
the ban, Chukwu briefed the leadership of the National Union of Road
Transport Workers and the National Road Transport Owners on the
council’s decisions.
He told those whose vehicles ply
international routes to demand medical reports from sick passengers
before accepting to carry them to Nigeria.
Chukwu added that corpses from other nations must have waivers from the FMW and must be carried in only ambulances.
He said, “From today, don’t allow any
sick person to enter your vehicle again except he or she produces a
medical report which should contain the nature of the ailment and the
fact that other passengers will not be infected. Only the dead and the
sick can transmit the(Ebola) disease
“Secondly, don’t carry any corpse unless
you have the waiver which is obtainable only from the Federal Ministry
of Health, duly signed by the Minister. So you must demand to see a
waiver from anybody who may ask you to carry a dead person .
“Find out from the ministry, the
authenticity of the waiver in case you are in doubt. Without a waiver,
we will not allow you to enter Nigeria and your vehicle will be
impounded because Ebola disease is transmitted mainly by someone who
died of the virus and infected persons .”
The minister also advised drivers and
owners of commercial vehicles to insist that passengers must henceforth
fill correctly, their names, next of kins, phone numbers and their seat
numbers in manifests.
He said that a protocol officer who
obliged the late Sawyer the use of his mobile telephone contacted the
virus while 10 members of a family died of EVD in Sierra Leone after
they had buried an infected person.
Representatives of the two transport
bodies, Ayoola Sadiku of NARTO and Alhaji Dansaki Sulaiman of the NURTW,
pledged to convey the minister’s message to their members.
They assured the minister of immediate compliance with the directives .
Meanwhile, the NCH has urged the
Nigerian Medical Association to suspend its strike and contribute to
the ongoing response to the national health emergency.
It directed state governments to institutionalise communication strategies to ensure mass awareness of the EVD.
The council also wants particular
attention to be paid to vulnerable groups such as market women and
other women groups, patent medicine vendors, road transport workers,
fishermen, hunters and bushmeat sellers, schoolchildren, morticians and
mortuary attendants as well as traditional healers and faith based
groups.
It also noted that Emergency Operation Centres remained the responsibility of the Federal Government.
In Geneva, Switzerland, WHO said on
Tuesday that the approval for the use of the trial drugs was the most
ethical thing to do considering the fact that Ebola had killed over
1,000 persons in West Africa in seven months.
The global health body added in a
statement released after scientists met to discuss the threat of the
disease to humanity at its headquarters in Geneva on Monday, however,
warned that there were very limited supplies of potential treatments for
infected persons.
The scientists also discussed how some
protocols that pharmaceutical companies needed to go through before
giving the drugs to patients could be waived.
A WHO official, Dr Marie-Paule Kieny,
said the medical experts voted overwhelmingly in support of giving the
trial drugs to affected persons.
The organisation noted that where
experimental treatments were used, scientists must get the consent of
the patient and the results of the treatment must be collated and shared
among the medical community.
The statement read ,”In the particular
circumstances of this outbreak, and provided certain conditions are met,
the panel reached consensus that it is ethical to offer unproven
interventions with as yet unknown efficacy and adverse effects, as
potential treatment or prevention.”
The statement was however silent on who would bear the cost of the treatment.
The Nigerian and Liberian governments
had earlier requested that Zmapp, which was given to two American
health workers infected with the Ebola virus be offered affected
victims in their countries.
However, there are only 12 doses of the serum, according to WHO.
But in Lagos, doctors in public
hospitals called on the state government to equip all its hospitals with
adequate Personal Protective Equipment to prevent the spread of the
virus .
The doctors under the aegis of the
Medical Guild, said infection control equipment should not be limited to
the Infectious Disease Hospital in Yaba as any patient could present
the disease in any other hospital in the state.
Their Chairman, Dr. Biyi Kufo, said a
news conference on Tuesday that adequate facilities would help to
protect workers from contracting the virus.
He said,“We are not sure there is
adequate Personal Protective Equipment on ground from what we are
gathering from our colleagues at the IDH.
“It is the foot soldiers who feel the
battle. We work in these facilities and we are aware of the situation on
the ground. If adequate protective measures are put in place, doctors
can treat patients without fear.”
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