Monday, 25 August 2014

Tonto dikeh champions the washyourhands challenge


This was a chat between tonto dikeh and I a few days ago. After this chat see the pictures of what happened next. I wrote to others but they were busy with the ALS challenge. Charity begins at home.





#washyourhandschallenge
The challenge begins....




And julius agwu also joined in.. Click on the link below to see julius agwu in the washyourhandschallenge 

Thursday, 21 August 2014

My Naija celebrities and the ICE BUCKET CHALLENGE.

My naija celebrities have gladly joined the ice bucket challenge like say they really know what ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, motor neuron disease, charcot's disease) is all about. I have only read it in medical text books to pass my exams and never seen a patient with one. Don jazzy has been called out (by who?), Dencia the owner of whitenecious was called out by who? And she gladly did hers on top of her pink range rover! To raise money for ALS. 
I simply think these my naija celebs are joining the ice bucket challenge just as a show off of their status cos I guess it's a big deal to be called out by Oprah, Tyler perry, or mark zuckerberg!!! Even when u don't know what the hell the ice bucket challenge is all about!
Why don't  we just start a challenge to raise awareness for Ebola virus that is silently becoming an epidemic in a country that lacks the facilities to deal with such disease. This is currently killing hundreds and infecting thousands daily in Africa. 
We need to start a simple challenge " washyourhands challenge" in order to simply raise awareness for Ebola. It's simple make a video washing your hands and call out on your Facebook friends to do the same. At least you and I know what Ebola is. 
#washyourhandschallenge

Saturday, 9 August 2014

The Ebola Joke



 We "happy" people of nigeria pride ourselves in making jokes of very serious situations. Since the rise in the incidence of Ebola virus, I have sadly read jokes from different social media about this deadly virus. The latest I just saw on someone's update was E.B.O.L.A "Ebola   Blessing Of The Lord Almighty". Then the salt and water cure, the kolanut cure. Some ignorant Nigerians who just want a quick route to everything in life ignorantly followed the salt and water instructions. 
The first outbreak of Ebola was in 1976 and the developed world took note and started working and researching towards a cure, discovered one and locked it away until two Americans got infected in far away Africa, and although it's still called an experimental drug, these American patients are still alive and well while we die in dozens and make senseless jokes out of it. 
Since we have collectively agreed to remain third world and undeveloped, why don't we all help ourselves with the most simple medical advice that is way more effective than the new Ebola drug Zmapp, "PREVENTION". Instead of making jokes try AWARENESS. 
Let people know what to watch out for, if you catch am for Lagos no enter bus say you dey go village to die, you are only going to spread it to your loved ones. Please let us all take this disease serious and do what we can do as a chronic third world nation and simply preach prevention which we all know for ages, is way better than cure. 

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

All you need to know about the dreaded EBOLA VIRUS


Ebola virus disease

 http://www.fireground360.com/uploads/2/0/4/6/20460392/9783426_orig.jpg?223


Key facts

  • Ebola virus disease (EVD), formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever, is a severe, often fatal illness in humans.
  • EVD outbreaks have a case fatality rate of up to 90%.
  • EVD outbreaks occur primarily in remote villages in Central and West Africa, near tropical rainforests.
  • The virus is transmitted to people from wild animals and spreads in the human population through human-to-human transmission.
  • Fruit bats of the Pteropodidae family are considered to be the natural host of the Ebola virus.
  • Severely ill patients require intensive supportive care. No licensed specific treatment or vaccine is available for use in people or animals.

Ebola first appeared in 1976 in 2 simultaneous outbreaks, in Nzara, Sudan, and in Yambuku, Democratic Republic of Congo. The latter was in a village situated near the Ebola River, from which the disease takes its name.
Genus Ebolavirus is 1 of 3 members of the Filoviridae family (filovirus), along with genus Marburgvirus and genus Cuevavirus. Genus Ebolavirus comprises 5 distinct species:
  • Bundibugyo ebolavirus (BDBV)
  • Zaire ebolavirus (EBOV)
  • Reston ebolavirus (RESTV)
  • Sudan ebolavirus (SUDV)
  • Taï Forest ebolavirus (TAFV).
BDBV, EBOV, and SUDV have been associated with large EVD outbreaks in Africa, whereas RESTV and TAFV have not. The RESTV species, found in Philippines and the People’s Republic of China, can infect humans, but no illness or death in humans from this species has been reported to date.

Transmission

Ebola is introduced into the human population through close contact with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected animals. In Africa, infection has been documented through the handling of infected chimpanzees, gorillas, fruit bats, monkeys, forest antelope and porcupines found ill or dead or in the rainforest.
Ebola then spreads in the community through human-to-human transmission, with infection resulting from direct contact (through broken skin or mucous membranes) with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected people, and indirect contact with environments contaminated with such fluids. Burial ceremonies in which mourners have direct contact with the body of the deceased person can also play a role in the transmission of Ebola. Men who have recovered from the disease can still transmit the virus through their semen for up to 7 weeks after recovery from illness.
Health-care workers have frequently been infected while treating patients with suspected or confirmed EVD. This has occurred through close contact with patients when infection control precautions are not strictly practiced.
Among workers in contact with monkeys or pigs infected with Reston ebolavirus, several infections have been documented in people who were clinically asymptomatic. Thus, RESTV appears less capable of causing disease in humans than other Ebola species.
However, the only available evidence available comes from healthy adult males. It would be premature to extrapolate the health effects of the virus to all population groups, such as immuno-compromised persons, persons with underlying medical conditions, pregnant women and children. More studies of RESTV are needed before definitive conclusions can be drawn about the pathogenicity and virulence of this virus in humans.

Signs and symptoms

EVD is a severe acute viral illness often characterized by the sudden onset of fever, intense weakness, muscle pain, headache and sore throat. This is followed by vomiting, diarrhoea, rash, impaired kidney and liver function, and in some cases, both internal and external bleeding. Laboratory findings include low white blood cell and platelet counts and elevated liver enzymes.
People are infectious as long as their blood and secretions contain the virus. Ebola virus was isolated from semen 61 days after onset of illness in a man who was infected in a laboratory.
The incubation period, that is, the time interval from infection with the virus to onset of symptoms, is 2 to 21 days.

Diagnosis

Other diseases that should be ruled out before a diagnosis of EVD can be made include: malaria, typhoid fever, shigellosis, cholera, leptospirosis, plague, rickettsiosis, relapsing fever, meningitis, hepatitis and other viral haemorrhagic fevers.
Ebola virus infections can be diagnosed definitively in a laboratory through several types of tests:
  • antibody-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)
  • antigen detection tests
  • serum neutralization test
  • reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay
  • electron microscopy
  • virus isolation by cell culture.
Samples from patients are an extreme biohazard risk; testing should be conducted under maximum biological containment conditions.

Vaccine and treatment

No licensed vaccine for EVD is available. Several vaccines are being tested, but none are available for clinical use.
Severely ill patients require intensive supportive care. Patients are frequently dehydrated and require oral rehydration with solutions containing electrolytes or intravenous fluids.
No specific treatment is available. New drug therapies are being evaluated.

Natural host of Ebola virus

In Africa, fruit bats, particularly species of the genera Hypsignathus monstrosus, Epomops franqueti and Myonycteris torquata, are considered possible natural hosts for Ebola virus. As a result, the geographic distribution of Ebolaviruses may overlap with the range of the fruit bats.

Ebola virus in animals

Although non-human primates have been a source of infection for humans, they are not thought to be the reservoir but rather an accidental host like human beings. Since 1994, Ebola outbreaks from the EBOV and TAFV species have been observed in chimpanzees and gorillas.
RESTV has caused severe EVD outbreaks in macaque monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) farmed in Philippines and detected in monkeys imported into the USA in 1989, 1990 and 1996, and in monkeys imported to Italy from Philippines in 1992.
Since 2008, RESTV viruses have been detected during several outbreaks of a deadly disease in pigs in People’s Republic of China and Philippines. Asymptomatic infection in pigs has been reported and experimental inoculations have shown that RESTV cannot cause disease in pigs.

Prevention and control

Controlling Reston ebolavirus in domestic animals
No animal vaccine against RESTV is available. Routine cleaning and disinfection of pig or monkey farms (with sodium hypochlorite or other detergents) should be effective in inactivating the virus.
If an outbreak is suspected, the premises should be quarantined immediately. Culling of infected animals, with close supervision of burial or incineration of carcasses, may be necessary to reduce the risk of animal-to-human transmission. Restricting or banning the movement of animals from infected farms to other areas can reduce the spread of the disease.
As RESTV outbreaks in pigs and monkeys have preceded human infections, the establishment of an active animal health surveillance system to detect new cases is essential in providing early warning for veterinary and human public health authorities.
Reducing the risk of Ebola infection in people
In the absence of effective treatment and a human vaccine, raising awareness of the risk factors for Ebola infection and the protective measures individuals can take is the only way to reduce human infection and death.
In Africa, during EVD outbreaks, educational public health messages for risk reduction should focus on several factors:
  • Reducing the risk of wildlife-to-human transmission from contact with infected fruit bats or monkeys/apes and the consumption of their raw meat. Animals should be handled with gloves and other appropriate protective clothing. Animal products (blood and meat) should be thoroughly cooked before consumption.
  • Reducing the risk of human-to-human transmission in the community arising from direct or close contact with infected patients, particularly with their bodily fluids. Close physical contact with Ebola patients should be avoided. Gloves and appropriate personal protective equipment should be worn when taking care of ill patients at home. Regular hand washing is required after visiting patients in hospital, as well as after taking care of patients at home.
  • Communities affected by Ebola should inform the population about the nature of the disease and about outbreak containment measures, including burial of the dead. People who have died from Ebola should be promptly and safely buried.
Pig farms in Africa can play a role in the amplification of infection because of the presence of fruit bats on these farms. Appropriate biosecurity measures should be in place to limit transmission. For RESTV, educational public health messages should focus on reducing the risk of pig-to-human transmission as a result of unsafe animal husbandry and slaughtering practices, and unsafe consumption of fresh blood, raw milk or animal tissue. Gloves and other appropriate protective clothing should be worn when handling sick animals or their tissues and when slaughtering animals. In regions where RESTV has been reported in pigs, all animal products (blood, meat and milk) should be thoroughly cooked before eating.
Controlling infection in health-care settings
Human-to-human transmission of the Ebola virus is primarily associated with direct or indirect contact with blood and body fluids. Transmission to health-care workers has been reported when appropriate infection control measures have not been observed.
It is not always possible to identify patients with EBV early because initial symptoms may be non-specific. For this reason, it is important that health-care workers apply standard precautions consistently with all patients – regardless of their diagnosis – in all work practices at all times. These include basic hand hygiene, respiratory hygiene, the use of personal protective equipment (according to the risk of splashes or other contact with infected materials), safe injection practices and safe burial practices.
Health-care workers caring for patients with suspected or confirmed Ebola virus should apply, in addition to standard precautions, other infection control measures to avoid any exposure to the patient’s blood and body fluids and direct unprotected contact with the possibly contaminated environment. When in close contact (within 1 metre) of patients with EBV, health-care workers should wear face protection (a face shield or a medical mask and goggles), a clean, non-sterile long-sleeved gown, and gloves (sterile gloves for some procedures).
Laboratory workers are also at risk. Samples taken from suspected human and animal Ebola cases for diagnosis should be handled by trained staff and processed in suitably equipped laboratories.

WHO response

WHO provides expertise and documentation to support disease investigation and control.
Recommendations for infection control while providing care to patients with suspected or confirmed Ebola haemorrhagic fever are provided in: Interim infection control recommendations for care of patients with suspected or confirmed Filovirus (Ebola, Marburg) haemorrhagic fever, March 2008. This document is currently being updated.
WHO has created an aide–memoire on standard precautions in health care (currently being updated). Standard precautions are meant to reduce the risk of transmission of bloodborne and other pathogens. If universally applied, the precautions would help prevent most transmission through exposure to blood and body fluids.
Standard precautions are recommended in the care and treatment of all patients regardless of their perceived or confirmed infectious status. They include the basic level of infection control—hand hygiene, use of personal protective equipment to avoid direct contact with blood and body fluids, prevention of needle stick and injuries from other sharp instruments, and a set of environmental controls.

Table: Chronology of previous Ebola virus disease outbreaks


Year Country Ebolavirus species Cases Deaths Case fatality
2012 Democratic Republic of Congo Bundibugyo 57 29 51%
2012 Uganda Sudan 7 4 57%
2012 Uganda Sudan 24 17 71%
2011 Uganda Sudan 1 1 100%
2008 Democratic Republic of Congo Zaire 32 14 44%
2007 Uganda Bundibugyo 149 37 25%
2007 Democratic Republic of Congo Zaire 264 187 71%
2005 Congo Zaire 12 10 83%
2004 Sudan Sudan 17 7 41%
2003 (Nov-Dec) Congo Zaire 35 29 83%
2003 (Jan-Apr) Congo Zaire 143 128 90%
2001-2002 Congo Zaire 59 44 75%
2001-2002 Gabon Zaire 65 53 82%
2000 Uganda Sudan 425 224 53%
1996 South Africa (ex-Gabon) Zaire 1 1 100%
1996 (Jul-Dec) Gabon Zaire 60 45 75%
1996 (Jan-Apr) Gabon Zaire 31 21 68%
1995 Democratic Republic of Congo Zaire 315 254 81%
1994 Cote d'Ivoire Taï Forest 1 0 0%
1994 Gabon Zaire 52 31 60%
1979 Sudan Sudan 34 22 65%
1977 Democratic Republic of Congo Zaire 1 1 100%
1976 Sudan Sudan 284 151 53%
1976 Democratic Republic of Congo Zaire 318 280 88%

Sunday, 3 August 2014

Lets talk about SEX and african parents.

I just met a 16yrs old girl and her parents told me that they just started her on contraceptives, and i asked (from my naija boy mind) ...ermm any other reason for starting her on this, apart from unwanted pregnancies? the parents looked at me and said no ...just for  contraceptive sake...like they just started her on some multivitamins. My mind flashed back to the first time my parents tried to muster the courage to discuss sex with me i was in my late 20's about to live for England, you know that final talk before u leave for the airport the next morning. I come from a very strict catholic background with both parents rooted deeply in both traditional Igbo values and catholic doctrines, so somehow the word SEX was deleted from our vocabulary while growing up in my family...well dating was a no go area its either ur books, cathechism or you are just playing with your friends.
 So as we sat in the living room, with the candle lights trying to illuminate the room as NEPA no gree give us light and fuel was scarce. After the morning prayers my Dad give me the usual pep talk about chasing your dreams,and the values of hardword and the power of prayers we came to a point when he exhausted all his inspirational talk and was hit with silence but the crackles of the the candle wick trying to avoid being put off by its melted wax...they looked at each other like ...yeah its time to tell him...and if it was a movie the soundtrack will be some beethoven moonlight sonata.. (check am for youtube)...my mom now cleared her throat, not looking me, but pointing at me...she said.. obinna e garuo England...hapukwa umunwanyi aka (leave women alone)..and face your books...when it is time to marry you find someone beautiful (which i did) and marry...u hear???? and that was it...i had to understand what they meant by this parable because it simply meant no sex before marriage and my father finished it up with...when u reach find a catholic church near you and make sure you go to confession when you need to...and that meant just incase u commit...... go for confession.
Ok thats was my thoughts for today...its 03:32am got to work in the morning. Tell me how your parents tried to advice you on sex or safe sex if they did.
Have a happy month and make sure you all achieve you goals this month. Peace and one luv..if you notice any typo..or grammatical error abeg no worry i don tire.