Thursday, November 21, 2024
HomeHealthNigeria Records 11 COVID-19 Deaths In 24 Hours

Nigeria Records 11 COVID-19 Deaths In 24 Hours

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
  • 444 New Infections, 32 Delta Variant Cases

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has registered 11 coronavirus-related deaths in the last 24-hours, following a recent surge in infections driven by the spread of the Delta variant in the country.

NCDC, which made this known via its verified website on Tuesday, said the country also reported additional 444 infections as at August 2, 2021.

The new infections indicated an increase from the 407 cases announced a day earlier.

Cases of infections had been on the rise in the past few weeks since the discovery of the Delta strain of the disease, raising fears of renewed pressure on the health system.

NCDC said the 11 new deaths recorded on Monday, August 2,  brought the total number of fatalities in the country to  2,160, including deaths in Lagos State reported on July, 31 2021.

It noted that the new figures for confirmed cases had also raised the total number of confirmed infections in the country to 174,759  as at August 2, 2021.

See also  COVID-19: Nigeria Records 459 New Cases In 18 States, FCT

Apart from Lagos State with 275 cases of infection, the highest daily figure, Rivers ranked second with 63 cases, followed by Akwa Ibom with 62 reported cases, Gombe had 22, while Ogun and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) registered eight and four cases respectively.

Edo recorded three and Imo had two infections, while Kano, Nasarawa, Sokoto, Jigawa and Ebonyi  registered one each, respectively.

The NCDC said six states – Ekiti, Oyo, Osun, Ondo, Kaduna and Bauchi – reported no cases.

It noted that 32 people had recovered and were discharged from various isolation centres in the country on Monday, adding that total recoveries recorded nationwide stood at 165,037 as the multi-sectoral national emergency operations centre (EOC), activated at Level 2, continued to coordinate national response activities.

The health agency said the country’s active cases were over 7, 000, having tested more than 2.5 million samples for the virus, out of the country’s roughly 200 million population.

See also  FG Begins COVID-19 Vaccination in Abuja

It placed the country’s COVID-19 average test positivity rate at six per cent, saying the increase in cases across states demonstrated that its surveillance system was working.

“We’ve built up our genomic sequencing capacity to detect emerging variants,” the NCDC said. 

Meanwhile, the NCDC has also confirmed that 32 Delta variant cases of COVID-19 have been reported in five states across the country.

The Director-General, Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu, who gave the confirmation at the resumed briefing of the Presidential Steering Committee, on Monday, in Abuja, said Akwa Ibom State has nine of the cases.

The NCDC boss listed Lagos, Rivers, and Oyo states as well as the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), as the other places where at least one case of the Delta variant of COVID-19 had been confirmed in the country.

Ihekweazu said the agency had scaled up its sequencing capacity to have a better understanding of the burden of the variants of concern in the country.

See also  Nigeria Records 153 New Cases of COVID-19

He noted that the country had capacity for sequencing the variants, noting that Lagos state alone had three laboratories with capacity to do that, alongside the ACEGID lab in Ede and the National Reference Lab at the NCDC.  

 “We will continue to scale the weekly number of samples sequenced as part of our surveillance”, Ihekweazu said, stressing that the risk of virus mutation was higher when there was a high transmission of the virus. 

“While sequencing is important for us to understand the situation, hand washing, physical distancing and the proper use of face masks are very important to prevent the spread of the virus,” he noted.

He emphasized that Nigerians must continue to adhere to all preventive guidelines to stay protected from getting infected with the COVID-19 virus and deaths, while herd immunity can only be achieved when over 50 percent of the population was vaccinated.

- Advertisement -

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -

Most Popular