The Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, said this in a statement signed by the Director, Media and Public Relations at the ministry, Mrs. Boade Akinola, on Thursday.
Adewole said the disease neither had a cure nor a vaccine. He, however, said there was no cause for alarm as it was mild.
The statement read in part,
“He said that the virus was mild and there was no known treatment and no preventive vaccines hence the public should be at alert and avoid crowded places as much as possibleThe minister also revealed that test samples had been sent to the World Health Organisation in Senegal but the result was not yet out.
“He advised the public to avoid eating dead animals, bush meat and particularly bush monkeys.”
“Prof. Adewole said although Monkeypox could not be confirmed until laboratory investigations by WHO referral laboratory in Dakar, Senegal, he noted that Monkeypox was milder and had no record of mortality.
“The symptoms include headache, fever, back pains and in advanced cases, rashes bigger than those caused by chicken pox.
He said the disease was a viral illness by a group of viruses that included chickenpox and smallpox.
“Investigation is still ongoing and our partners are working with us on this reported outbreak’ while the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control team in Bayelsa State would give support,” the statement said.
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