Wednesday, 20 January 2016

$2.1BN: COLONEL EXPOSES ILLICIT LOOTING DEALS

ABUJA — Indications emerged last night that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has received some  lead on how some of the indicted top serving and retired military officers looted the nation through fraudulent arms contract and direct diversion of funds meant for arms procurement.

Findings revealed that the arrest and detention of a serving Colonel in the Nigerian Army in relation to the diversion of $2.1 billion meant for arms purchase in the Office of the National Security Adviser, exposed the illicit deals undertaken by the indicted officers.

Findings also showed that the Colonel, who hails from Delta State and served as a Personal Assistant to the embattled ex-NSA, Col. Sambo Dasuki, has been telling the anti-graft operatives all that he knows about the arms deals and those who masterminded the looting of the nation’s resources in the name of arms purchase.

It was on the strength of the revelations by the detained military officer and others, that the EFCC, last week, wrote to the Defence Headquarters to release the affected officers and their retired counterparts, for immediate questioning.

INDICTED OFFICERS ALREADY ON OUR RADAR —EFCC

A top EFCC official, who spoke in anonymity,  last night, confirmed that some of the indicted men were already under their radar.

The officer, who declined to give details of what they were doing about the indicted officers, said that EFCC would take immediate steps to carry out the Presidential directive arising from the indictment of the military officers by a panel, which looked into the arms deals.

The official said: “We intend to carry out the Presidential directive in accordance with our extant rules. Don’t forget that before the directive came, we had already moved to fish out some in the military top brass whose names came up in the course of investigation into the $2.1 arms deals.

“We also have a serving military officer, who has been telling us some of the things that took place in the name of arms purchase in the ONSA. All these will certainly advance our work.”

It will be recalled that President Muhammadu Buhari, last week, ordered the EFCC to prosecute many top military officers and companies indicted by a Presidential panel that probed the procurement of arms for the country between 2007 and 2015.

THOSE TO BE  INVESTIGATED
Among those mentioned in the panel report as having cases to answer were the former Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh (retd); former Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Mohammed Dikko Umar (retd), and former Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Adesola Nunayon Amosu (retd).

The others are Major-General E.R. Chioba (retd), Air Vice Marshal I.A. Balogun (retd), Air Vice Marshal A.G. Tsakr (retd), Air Vice Marshal A.G. Idowu (retd), Air Vice Marshal A.M. Mamu, Air Vice Marshal, O.T. Oguntoyinbo, Air Vice Marshal T. Omenyi, Air Vice Marshal J.B. Adigun, Air Vice Marshal R.A. Ojuawo, and Air Vice Marshal J.A. Kayode-Beckley.

Others are: Air Commodore Sa Yushau (retd), Air Commodore A.O. Ogunjobi, Air Commodore G.M.D. Gwani, Air Commodore S.O. Makinde, Air Commodore A.Y. Lassa, Colonel N. Ashinze, and Lt. Colonel Mohammed Sambo Dasuki (retd).

Also to be investigated are: Himma Aboubakar, Aeronautical Engineering and Technical Services Limited, Messrs Syrius Technologies and Sky Experts Nig Ltd, among others.

According to the statement, the procurement processes were arbitrarily carried out and characterized by irregularities and fraud, while in many cases, the items procured failed to meet their required purposes, especially the counter insurgency operations in the north east.

NIGERIAN AIR FORCE OPENS APPLICATION FOR RECRUITMENT

The Nigerian Air Force has announcement the commencement of recruitment of Airmen and Airwomen.
The Service in a statement signed by Air Vice Marshal C. N. Chukwu on behalf of the Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, gave the details of the procedures for applying.
The statement by Chukwu reads in full:
APPLICATION FOR NIGERIAN AIRFORCE AIRMEN/AIRWOMEN RECRUITMENT EXERCISE (BMTC 2016).

GUIDELINES:
1.All applicants must be Nigerians not less than 1.68m tall for male and not less than 1.65m for female.
2. Interested applicants are to apply free of charge online at www.careers.nigerianairforce.gov.ng.
3. Applicants are to print out the underlisted documents after completion of application online:
a. Local Government Attestation Form.
b. Parents/Guardian Consent Form.
c. Acknowledgement Form.

QUALIFICATIONS
4. Non Tradesmen/Women.
a. Applicants must be between the ages of 17 and 22 years by 31 December 2016.
b. Applicants must possess a minimum of 3 credits including Maths and English in SSCE/NECO/GCE.

5. Tradesmen/Women: a. Applicants applying as tradesmen and women must be between 17 and 24 years by 31 December 2016.

b. Applicants must possess a minimum of 3 pasess including English in SSCE/NECO/GCE and must possess at least a lower credit in ND/NCE or any relevant trade certificate from reputable and approved government institutions/organisations.
NOTE
6. Online registration starts on 8 February 2016 and closes on 25 March 2016.

7. Zonal recruitment exercise will start from 11 – 29 April 2016.

8. NAF Online registration and all other recruitment processes are free of charge and no payment should be made.

9. The Local Government Attestation/Indigeneship certificate must be accompanied by the passport photograph and photocopy of the signees drivers licence or international passport. The signee is also to authenticate the passport photograph of the applicant behind.

10. For further information see the instruction page on the website as from 8 February 2016 or e-mail: airforce.support@swglobal.com

Tuesday, 19 January 2016

LASSA FEVER PATIENT ESCAPES FROM HOSPITAL

EBONYI: A male patient who tested positive to LASSA FEVER was reported to have escaped from a hospital in Ebonyi state to an unknown destination.

The minister of health, Prof Isaac Adewole who expressed dismay concerning the situation stated that the patient could not have absconded on his own without the help of some of the healthcare givers in the hospital and has so far directed‎ that the patient must be looked for and treated immediately.

“He should be traced and taken back to the facility. He should be reassured that he will live if the treatment is done promptly as he could not have absconded on his own without the support of the health officers.

He lamented that so much is been expected from the Ebonyi state government as it has not done enough. He said there was no need for patients to be transferred to‎ Irrua in Edo state when the state has a functional healthcare centre

In curbing the wide spread of the dreaded Lassa fever‎, the federal government has cleared the air concerning the handling of dead bodies by relatives of the deceased by stating that they would be allowed to do so as religious and cultural beliefs must be respected. 

The Chief Executive Officer of the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Dr Abdusalam Nasidi, made the views and observations on Tuesday at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs during the emergency National Council on Health on Lassa fever outbreak. He said relatives of the deceased must oblige to disinfect dead bodies which should be carried before and after in double body bags as well as ensuring that graves are dug very deep. “Families will not be denied the bodies of their deceased relatines because there must be respect for religious and cultural beliefs. 

The real problem is that the culture of some people to wash dead bodies before burial. However, we warn against contact with the bodies as a bid towards curtailing the virus. “Relatives will have to ensure that the bodies of the deceased are disinfected with chlorine and it is recommend that the bodies should be packaged in double body bags. We also advise that graves must be dug very deep.”

NNPC: CRUDE FLOWS TO TWO NIGERIAN REFINERIES SHUT AFTER ATTACKS

Report reaching our news desk indicates that the NNPC may have ordered a shut down of crude oil flows to two of its four refineries after  the weekend's attacks on pipelines, a company spokesman said on Monday, frustrating government hopes to start weaning the country from expensive imports.

The refineries in the northern city of Kaduna and Warri, in the southern Niger Delta, were affected, said Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation spokesman Ohi Alegbe.

"We have shut down flows for now, the military are on top of the matter," he said, without offering details of the attacks.

Nigeria is plagued by violence, corruption and poor infrastructure. Despite being Africa's largest crude exporter, it imports almost all its gasoline but officials had hoped national refineries would produce up to 30 percent of its gasoline needs in the first quarter of 2016.

The 125,000 barrel per day (bpd) Warri refinery and the 110,000 bpd Kaduna refinery had resumed output in December after several months of maintenance. The Kaduna refinery receives its feedstock oil via the Warri refinery.

Nigeria also has a third refining complex with two plants in the southern oil hub of Port Harcourt, although only the newer of the two plants is currently functioning.

No group claimed responsibility for the weekend attacks, which follow last week's arrest warrant for former militant leader turned businessman Government Ekpemupolo, known as Tompolo, as part of a crackdown on corruption. Several former top government officials have been charged with fraud.

A statement issued by the military's operation Pulo Shield in the oil-rich Niger Delta region vowed to hold "community leaders responsible for any act of sabotage".

"This warning is coming as a result of recent, multiple attacks on oil facilities and platforms by suspected militants in the Niger Delta region," the statement issued on Sunday said, without offering further details.

The attacks follow years of relative calm in the country's oil-producing region after an 2009 amnesty halted frequent attacks on oil installations and kidnappings of expatriate workers.

OPEC member Nigeria is facing an economic crisis and dwindling foreign reserves as a result of the sharp drop in global oil prices.

President Muhammadu Buhari, elected last year, wants to revamp the country's long-neglected refining system and produce enough fuel, particularly gasoline, to reduce expensive imports.

Monday, 18 January 2016

PDP IN FRESH CRISIS AS NATIONAL OFFICERS ASK MESSRS MOHAMMED , METUH, SECONDUS TO STEP DOWN.

There appears to be a fresh round of crisis in Nigeria’s major opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party, with some elected national officers calling on the acting chairman of the board of trustees, Bello Mohammed and the national publicity secretary, Olisa Metuh, to step down from their offices.

The call, which was made in a statement signed by four of the national officers, which they also said represented the views of all deputy national officers and some members of the National Executive Committee of the party, was sequel to the ongoing trial of Messrs. Mohammed and Metuh over corruption allegations.

Messrs Metuh and Mohammed are being tried for receiving monies from the embattled former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, out of the $2.1 billion meant for arms procurement but which was diverted to political spending.

The statement, made available to the press on Monday, was signed by Dennis Alonge-Niyi, the deputy national youth leader; Bashir Maidugu, the deputy national legal adviser; Okey Nnaedozie, the deputy national organizing secretary and Abdullahi Jalo, the deputy national publicity secretary.

The national officers called on all relevant members and organs of the party to rescue it “from fortune hunters who have hijacked its very soul.”
They said, “We hereby strongly dissociate the Peoples Democratic Party from the ongoing trials of Dr. Bello Halliru Mohammed ( Acting Chairman of Board of Trustees) and Chief Olisa Metuh ( National Publicity Secretary) on various charges anti graft agencies.

“They are said to have received funds using accounts of their private companies without the knowledge and instructions of any organ of the party. All those mentioned in the ongoing corruption trial are, therefore, on their own and the party was not involved financially or in anyway with the office of the National Security Adviser, ONSA, or any organ of the federal government in the last regime.
“They must bear full responsibility for their actions and must henceforth refrain from dragging the name of the party into the mud.”


STEP DOWN PLEASE 

The national officers also said that sequel to the wide public interest the trial of Messrs. Mohammed and Metuh has generated, they would call on the national caucus of the PDP, the BoT and the PDP Governors’ Forum “to prevail on the two accused persons to honorably step down until they clear their names thereby saving the party from further damage.”

They said their call was not a pronouncement of guilt on the two officers of the PDP, but a “passionate appeal to halt the erroneous concept that the party tolerates corruption.”

They also called on the NEC of the party to convene a meeting immediately to formalize the appointment of a new spokesperson in line with the party’s constitution.

The officers also called on the NEC not to continue with the reign of impunity, which they said characterized the PDP in the past and led it to its current position, to respect the Abuja High Court ruling of December 15 last year.
The Court had in a ruling delivered in a suit filed by a former political adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan, Ahmed Gulak, directed the PDP acting national chairman, Uche Secondus, to step down and allow either Mr. Gulak or any qualified person from the north east to take over.
Mr. Secondus became acting chairman after Ahmadu Muazu resigned his position following the defeat of the party in the last general election.

“This is a declaratory ruling where no order of stay of execution from any other court has been granted. The NEC must do the needful by selecting a suitable national chairman from the north east to complete their tenure in accordance with our tradition and the party’s constitution.
“In pursuance of this therefore, Prince Uche Secondus should revert back to his constitutional position of Deputy National Chairman of the party as a matter of urgency,” they said.
The national officers also argued that in the light of the court ruling and other matters related to it, the timetable recently released by the National Working Committee, without recourse to the NEC, for the forthcoming national convention of the party should be considered null and void.

They said aside from the offices of the National Chairman, National Secretary, National Financial Secretary and the National Auditor, the national convention that produced the other national officers was held on August 30, 2013.
They said based on the four-year tenure envisaged by the constitution of the party, all the remaining officers’ tenure of office would terminate on August 30, 2017.

They also called on the NEC to order a proper audit of the finances of the PDP by certified external auditors. They said the audit period should be from March 2012 to date.
“All committees set up by the irregularly constituted national working committee should be dissolved and new committees constituted by NEC in good faith and the general interest of the party.
“Finally, we urge the National Caucus and the Board of Trustees as a matter of urgency to convene a meeting of NEC to address all these burning issues. Any further delay will exacerbate the situation,” they said.

Tuesday, 12 January 2016

GOVERNOR WIKE'S FORMER SPECIAL ADVISER ON MEDIA AND PUBLICITY DEFECTS TO APC.


PORT HARCOURT:  The former Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the incumbent governor of Rivers State,  Mr. Opunabo Inko-Tariah, has defected to the All Progressives Congress.
Inko-Tariah expressed his support for the governorship candidate of the APC in the 2015 general elections, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, adding that it was natural for him to reciprocate gestures.

Speaking through a statement he signed and issued on Thursday, Inko-Tariah also commended the immediate past governor of the state and Minister of Transport, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, for coming to his aide when he took ill.

Inko-Tariah said that although he had criticised Amaechi in the past, he pointed out that it was reinvigorating to note that the same Amaechi called to sympathise with him.

Inko-Tariah added that to reciprocate the former governor’s gesture, he would do his best to ensure that Peterside emerge as the governor of the state should there be a rerun.

He said, “It was surprising that a man I censured, His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, CON, the Hon. Minister of Transport, was the same person who showed unsolicited love and care.

“It was reinvigorating when he called to sympathise and also gave his widow’s mite while I was already in the United States for medical treatment after reading my resignation letter. How compassionate can a man be!

“On my support for Hon. (Dr.) Dakuku Peterside, it is only natural that one reciprocates gestures. Therefore, I state my support for Rt. Hon. Amaechi and Dr. Peterside for the love they have shown.

“More so, Dr. Peterside is a man whose refreshing initiatives and articulated policy options will help refuel the ethos of good governance in Rivers State.” On why he resigned as the special adviser to the governor, Inko-Tariah recalled how he sustained head injuries after falling in a bathroom and how he escaped assassination, adding that the governor did not show concern over his plight.

He said, “As the special adviser to the governor, I fell in the bathroom and sustained serious head injuries. Two days later, I went to the office with the injury and all that the governor said was ‘thank God, you are alive’. Nothing after that.

“I had a close shave with death as my car was riddled with bullets. The governor did not bother to, at least, ask what happened. Even when I puked blood and he was informed, he showed no concern.”

He, however, stated that contrary to the insinuation that he was sacked by the Wike’s administration, he resigned as the special adviser to the governor.

GOV. WIKE'S EX AIDE, OPUNABO INKO-TARIAH, DUMPS PDP FOR APC

PORT HARCOURT: Mr. Opunabo Inko-Tariah, the erstwhile Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to Governor Nyesom Wike has defected to the All Progressives Congress

Inko-Tariah , who issued a statement on Thursday expressed his appreciation to the immediate past governor of the state and Minister of Transport, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, who was there for him when he was sick.

Inko-Tariah noted that although he had condemned Amaechi previously but he did something that really took him by surprise by calling to check on him when he had challenges with his health. He added that he would give his support to Peterside and ensure that he wins should there be any rerun.

In his words, “It was surprising that a man I censured, His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, CON, the Hon. Minister of Transport, was the same person who showed unsolicited love and care.

“It was reinvigorating when he called to sympathise and also gave his widow’s mite while I was already in the United States for medical treatment after reading my resignation letter. How compassionate can a man be!

“On my support for Hon. (Dr.) Dakuku Peterside, it is only natural that one reciprocates gestures. Therefore, I state my support for Rt. Hon. Amaechi and Dr. Peterside for the love they have shown.

“More so, Dr. Peterside is a man whose refreshing initiatives and articulated policy options will help refuel the ethos of good governance in Rivers State.”

Speaking on why he resigned as the special adviser to the governor,he said that when he fell in the bathroom and sustained a head injury and when he escaped assasination attack, the governor did not show any atom of care.

UPDATE!: ALL ABOUT LASSA FEVER

                   LASSA FEVER

DESCRIPTION.  

Lassa fever is an extremely virulent, often fatal, Old-World, viral hemorrhagic illness.  Lassa fever, an arenavirus, is an enveloped, single-stranded, bisegmented RNA virus. As with other arenaviruses, Lassa virus does not have a conventional negative-strand coding arrangement.  

Lassa fever occurs more often in the dry season, rather than in the rainy season.  It is the most commonly "exported" hemorrhagic fever;  its victims carry the disease from Africa to the United States, to the United Kingdom, tp the Netherlands, Israel, and Japan.

Lassa fever is named after the town (in the Yedseram River valley) in which the first cases were isolated in 1969, during a nosocomial outbreak at a local hospital.  (A clinical description of Lassa fever was published in Sierra Leone over a decade earlier, but received little or no attention.)

LOCATION.  

Parts of West Africa, including Guinea, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and Liberia.  However, sporadic Lassa infections may have also occurred in Senegal and Mali.  One host genus has been identified as spreading at least one Lassalike virus in central Africa.

VECTOR.:  

The rat species Mastomys, in particular, M. natalensis is a consistent host reservoir for the Lassa virus due to the congenital neonatal infection, which results in rats with long-lasting and/or lifelong infection.  
Because of the mechanism of infection, there is no break in the natural chain from virus to host species.  The rats themselves might show no symptoms of the disease, but they shed the virus freely in urine and droppings, and secrete the virus in their saliva.  

Because certain varieties of Mastomys often live in human homes, the virus is easily transmitted to humans.  Transmission occurs via direct contact with rat urine, feces, and saliva; via contact with excretion- or secretion-infected materials; or via ingestion of excretion-contaminated food.  Victims can also become infected via skin breaks, and via mucous membranes from aerosol transmission from dust-borne particles.  In some areas, the rodents are used as a food source, thus providing additional exposure to the infected rat blood, as well as allowing ingestion of potentially contaminated meat.  Laboratory workers become infected usually from contact with rodent saliva.

Unlike other arenaviruses, Lassa virus can be fairly easily transmitted from human to human.  Humans can contract the disease from other humans via aerosol transmission (coughing), or from direct contact with infected human blood, urine, or semen.  Lassa virus has been isolated from semen 6 weeks after acute illness;  the virus can be transmitted to sexual partners by convalescent men.

MECHANISM.:  

The virus enters the human body through the bloodstream, lymph vessels, respiratory tract, and/or digestive tract.  It then multiplies in cells of the reticuloendothelial system.  Virus replication in the reticuloendothelial cells causes capillary lesions.  These capillary lesions lead to erythrocyte and platelet loss, with mild to moderate thrombocytopenia and a tendency toward bleeding.  Capillary lesions also cause increased vascular permeability and hemorrhage in various organs, such as the stomach, small intestine, kidneys, lungs, and brain.

INCUBATION PERIOD:  

Usually about 10 days.  Can range from 1-24 days.  Most patients display symptoms for 4 to 5 days before seeking hospital treatment.

SYMPTOMS. 

 Gradual onset of fever and malaise.  Increased fever (which can last 2-3 weeks) and myalgia, with severe prostration, accompanied by involvement of specific organs and serosa.  Patients frequently present with pain behind the sternum and with coughing.  

Additional common symptoms include:  abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, or constipation; also:  conjunctivitis, pharyngitis (inflammation of mucous membranes and the underlying parts of the pharynx), increased vascular permeability (such as pleural effusions), and proteinuria (protein in the urine).  About 10-30% of patients present with facial and neck swelling.  Approximately 2/3 of patients present with sore throat, usually accompanied by objective inflammatory or exudative (oozing) pharyngitis.  Some patients experience adult respiratory distress syndrome.   Skin rashes and jaundice are rare.

Some patients experience bleeding from the gums.  In addition, capillary lesions cause hemorrhaging in the stomach, small intestine, kidneys, lungs, and brain.  Less than 1/3 of patients present with bleeding; however, bleeding is a predictor of a significantly higher risk of death.  In severe cases of Lassa fever, shock and vascular collapse occur, followed by death.  Research suggests that the shock results from platelet and endothelial dysfunction, which cause hemorrhage and allow fluid to leak into the intravascular system.

Patients who will survive begin to defervesce 2-3 weeks after onset of the disease.  In contrast, patients who are at the greatest risk of dying usually develop shock, clouded mental status, agitation, rales, pleural effusion, and sometimesgrand mal seizures.  The four symptoms associated with a 2.5-fold or higher risk of mortality are:  vomiting, sore throat, tachypnea (rapid breathing), or bleeding.

During convalescence, although the virus may no longer be found in the blood, pericarditis can occur, especially in males.  The following conditions may also occur during convalescence:  aseptic meningitis, encephalitis, global encephalopathy with seizures, cerebellar ataxia (uncommon), and deafness (common).  Temporary or permanent deafness in one or both ears occurs in 29% of Lassa fever patients.

Experiments on guinea pigs have shown that Lassa virus can manifest differently, with significantly varying symptoms.  It is suspected that subtle genetic changes in tissue-specific variants of the disease create the differences in disease manifestation.

DIAGNOSIS.:

Lassa virus can be diagnosed in three ways:  
     1.  Isolating the virus from blood, urine, or throat washings.
     2.  Demonstrating the presence of immunoglobuline M (IgM) antibody to Lassa virus.
     3.  Showing a fourfold rise in titer of IgG antibody between acute- and convalescent-phase serum.

The virus can be isolated from the blood or serum during the febrile phase of the disease, up to 2 weeks postonset.  Antibody can be detected by CF, IFA, or ELISA.  In severe cases, patients can die before the appearance of antibodies.  

Other laboratory results: 
     •  Leukocyte count can be low, normal, or moderately elevated.
     •  Platelet counts are usually normal, but might be slightly low.  
     •  AST  (SGOT) and ALT (SGPT) are usually elevated (10x normal).
     •  Chest x-rays are usually normal, but may show pleural effusions or basilar pneumonitis.
     •  Albuminaturia (excessive amounts of albumin proteins in the urine) is common.
     •  ECGs are usually abnormal.

Initial possible diagnoses of the Lassa-infected patient may include malaria, shigellosis, and typhoid.

MORTALITY (DEATH) RATES:

 Prognosis for Lassa patients has a direct correlation to levels of viremia.  However, prognosis does not correlate with the patient's development of IgM or IgG antibodies.  The antibodies do not seem to neutralize the Lassa virus.

The mortality rates for Lassa virus are typically estimated at 15% to 20%.  Some studies estimate mortality as high as 45%.  One survey of Lassa infection vs. mortality rates indicates that less than 1% of all Lassa-virus infections in West Africa will eventually result in fatal disease.  The mortality rates for Lassa appear to be much higher in people of non-African stock.

Lassa virus also causes high fetal mortality and high mortality in pregnant women.  The mortality rate is 92% for fetuses in early pregnancy, 75% for fetuses in the third trimester, and 100% in the neonatal period for full-term babies.  High concentrations of the virus have been found in both fetal tissue and in the placenta.  It is suspected that maternal T cells cannot attack the concentrations of virus in the placenta because placental cells cannot express class I or class II  MHC antigens.

The mortality rate for gravid women is 7% in the first two trimesters, 30% in the last trimester, and 50% for pregnant women who delivered within 1 month.  In contrast, the general mortality rate for nonpregnant women only is 13%.

TREATMENT/ PREVENTION

 For adults, ribavirin:  2-gm loading dose, followed by 1 gm every 6 hours for 4 days;  followed by 0.5 gm every 8 hours for 6 days.  There is no treatment for the deafness (which resembles idiopathic nerve disease) associated with Lassa fever.  Antibiotics may also be administered to patients to ward off or treat secondary and/or opportunistic bacterial infections.

Severely ill patients may receive treatment before the diganosis is confirmed.

Currently, there is no effective prophylactic (preventive) treatment for Lassa fever.  However, some sources recommend prophylactic doses of Ribavirin for people coming in high-risk contact with viremic patients.

OUTBREAKS AND HISTORY OF INFECTION. 

Lassa fever was first recognized in 1969 in Lassa, Nigeria.  Subsequent outbreaks occurred in Nigeria, Liberia, and Sierra Leone.  In some parts of Sierra Leone and Liberia, 10% to 16% of all patients admitted to hospitals have Lassa fever.  Some Lassa fever cases have been "imported" into the U.S. and U.K. through viremic travelers who acquired the disease elsewhere.  

A few notes on outbreaks:
   - 1969, northern Nigeria - first recognized outbreak of the disease.
   - 1970 to present, Liberia.  Most cases were hospital workers who acquired the disease in the hospital from the index patient.
   - 1970 to present, Sierra Leone.  It is estimated that 6% of all residents in the initial endemic area have antibodies to Lassa Fever, even though only 0.2% were recognized as clinically ill.
   - Estimated 100,000-300,000 infections per year in West Africa.

 About 2/3 of all reported cases are women, but this might be a result of exposure, rather than a tendency toward greater susceptibility in women to the disease

VACCINE:
 No vaccine is currently available.  However, the most promising approach to developing a vaccine appears to be via vaccinia-vectored Lassa genes.  These have been protective in both guinea pigs and nonhuman primates.

HOWEVER, Studies with rodents have shown that infection with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) or Tacaribe can confer protection against normally lethal attacks of Lassa virus.

NOTE:  This file/post is for information only.  It is not intended for diagnosis.