Five deaths from cholera were reported in Kano State, according to the government of the state.
Additionally, it stated that the outbreak had been addressed with highly effective preventive measures.
At a news conference in Kano on Tuesday, the state’s commissioner for health, Dr. Aminu Tsanyawa, revealed this.
On April 16, 2022, a case of vomiting and watery diarrhea in the Dambatta Local Government region of the state was reported and swiftly investigated, according to Tsanyawa.
He claims that since then, 189 cases in 20 LGAs have been registered, of which 184 have completely recovered, 0 cases are active, and 5 deaths.
He claimed that feco-oral transmission, which is also the disease’s causal agent, is still a problem in Nigeria, especially during the rainy season, due to inadequate personal and environmental hygiene, sanitation, poor waste management, and open defecation.
“You may wish to know that cholera outbreak is seasonal and is a bacterial infection of humans caused by v.cholerae, which is a Gram-negative bacillus and any resident of a community under investigation, aged two years and above, with acute watery diarrhoea with or without vomiting should be immediately evaluated for suspected cholera disease,” he said.
The commissioner also commended the governor of the state, Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje, for his dedication to delivering quality medical care to the state’s good citizens in order to end the cholera outbreak and other ailments in the state.