| 11 Février 2019
 
8 February 2019, Brazzaville – With five countries in  Western Africa reporting outbreaks of Lassa fever, the World Health  Organization (WHO) has scaled up its efforts to support the region’s  response to the disease.
 
 While these outbreaks are occurring during the Lassa fever season in  countries where the disease is endemic, the speed of escalation is of  concern.
 
 The largest outbreak thus far has affected 16 states in Nigeria. The  Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) declared an outbreak of Lassa  fever on 22 January 2019. The 213 confirmed cases to date, including 42  deaths, mark a significant increase – already a third of the total cases  for all of last year, when Nigeria experienced its worst outbreak of  Lassa fever. Four health workers have been infected so far in this  latest outbreak.
 
 In Nigeria, WHO is scaling up its efforts to support the Federal  authorities, NCDC and the affected Nigerian states in responding to the  outbreak. An important focus is on early detection and confirmation of  suspected cases, providing optimal supportive care and ensuring  infection prevention and control measures in designated health care  facilities in the affected states. WHO has intensified its technical  assistance and is supporting coordination, enhanced surveillance,  epidemiological analysis and risk communication. WHO is also mobilizing  experts to support case management and infection prevention and control.
 
 A total of 12 cases have been confirmed to date in Benin, Guinea,  Liberia and Togo, including two deaths, with more suspected cases being  investigated. WHO is assisting health authorities in these countries  with contact tracing and providing medical and non-medical supplies and  technical and financial resources as needed for case management, risk  communication and logistics.
 
 “We are concerned by the high number of cases so early in the Lassa  fever season, which is expected to last another four more months,” said  Dr Ibrahima Socé Fall, Regional Emergencies Director at WHO Regional  Office for Africa. “WHO is working with the health authorities in the  five-affected countries to ensure health workers have the capacity to  detect cases and we are monitoring the regional spread of the disease.”
 
 WHO has set up a regional coordination mechanism for countries to report  any suspected case of Lassa fever to expedite the flow of timely  information and to assess the situation, recommend actions and help  organize assistance. WHO has also reached out to the six other at-risk  countries – Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Ghana, Mali, Niger and Sierra Leone –  and is supporting prevention and readiness activities as needed.
 
 “WHO continues to advise all countries in the Lassa fever belt to  enhance their preparedness and response capacities, especially for early  case detection, laboratory confirmation, case management under  recommended barrier nursing, risk communication and community  engagement,” said Dr Fall.
 
 Lassa fever is an acute viral haemorrhagic illness that occurs  predominantly in West Africa, after human exposure to the urine or  faeces of infected Mastomys rats. More than 80% of Lassa fever cases are  rodent-to-human transmission. Person-to-person transmission occurs in  both community and health-care settings.
 
 Prevention of Lassa fever relies on promoting good “community hygiene”  to discourage rodents from entering homes by storing grain and other  foodstuffs in rodent-proof containers, disposing of garbage far from the  home, maintaining clean households, keeping cats and the safe handling  of anyone who may have died of the disease. In health-care settings,  health-care workers should always apply standard infection prevention  and control precautions when caring for patients.
https://afro.who.int/news/who-supports-five-countries-fight-lassa-fever-outbreaks









