CHOLERA OUTBREAK: HOUSING, TRANSPORT, ECONOMIC CHALLENGES MUST BE ADDRESSED – MINISTER OF HEALTH

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A multidisciplinary strategy has been recommended by Prof. Muhammad Ali Pate, the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, to prevent the spread of infectious diseases like cholera, typhoid fever, and tuberculosis.

He noted that many diseases are socially dictated and that, therefore, the proper public policies must be put in place to provide social safety nets for vulnerable and impoverished people. He emphasized that the approach should not merely be biological, which is curative.

ā€œThere are many diseases that are socially determined; they are diseases of largely the population that are vulnerable and poor who live in inadequate housing, with low sanitation, who donā€™t have enough food, who are malnourished or whose occupation exposes them to certain disease conditions,ā€ the minister said on Channels Televisionā€™sĀ The Morning BriefĀ show on Wednesday.

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ā€œSo, to address population health, there is the biomedical which are certain diseases that we handle but there are some that go beyond that, and are multi-sectorial in terms of the determinant of why those diseases occur and how to respond to them.

ā€œAt the end of the day, we need to grow our economy, we need to translate that growth into incomes for households, we need to also build infrastructure; the base for the urbanisation that we are seeing so that people will have good housing, good nutrition, safe spaces, proper mental health, in addition to access to health facilities they can afford to get proper mental services.

ā€œSo, health is one thing that is not just a biomedical issue; there is health in almost all public policies, whether it is on housing, transportation, agriculture, environment, youths, even the gender dimension of it to ensure the women are not left behind, and there are vulnerabilities that will have to be addressed through social protection mechanism to ensure that there are safety nets for those who are left behind.

ā€œItā€™s a whole of government and whole of society efforts that is necessary to improve the health and wellbeing of any population.ā€

The federal government has mobilized resources, according to the health minister, to stop the cholera outbreak in the nation.

According to Prof. Pate, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) established a technical working group to assist states in limiting the spread of the infectious disease and providing treatment to individuals who have already contracted it.

ā€œWe had anticipated the seasonal outbreak and months ago, the President approved contingency financing for the NCDC and that is what has been used so far, in addition to technical financing. The state also have a role to play to release their own funding,ā€ he said.

ā€œ31 states are affected, 107 local governments are affected,ā€ the health minister said, adding that about 1,500 Cholera cases have been recorded so far in the country.

Prof Pate assured Nigerians that the Cholera outbreak would be minimised from spreading to more states and local government areas.

ā€œWe have to deal with open defecation,ā€ he said, ā€œso that faeces will not come in contact with food and waterā€.

ā€œThe Cholera outbreak is part of a global phenomenon. Cholera is a public health crisis and a disease that comes within the contact of contamination of food, water, poor sanisation, developmental challenges and deficit in infrastructure, open defecation prevalent in many parts of the country is fueling the outbreak,ā€ he said.

He called for multi-sectorial approach to prevent infectious diseases in the country. He said all stakeholders ā€“ the citizens as well as federal, state and local government administrations ā€“ all have preventive roles in ensuring waste management and hygiene sanitation to ā€œsee less and less of this issue in years to comeā€.

ā€œIt is not only Cholera by the way, there are other infectious diseases like Typhoid Fever, Tuberculosis, and others. So as we improve the physical infrastructure, the urbanisation and the utilities that are backing that up, we should begin to see healthier population,ā€ the minister said.

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