| 13 Février 2018
13 February 2018, ABUJA - The World Health Organization is scaling up  its response to an outbreak of Lassa fever in Nigeria, which has spread  to 17 states and may have infected up to 450 people in less than five  weeks.
 
 From the onset of the outbreak, WHO Nigeria deployed staff from the  national and state levels to support the Government of Nigeria’s  national Lassa fever Emergency Operations Centre and state surveillance  activities. WHO is helping to coordinate health actors and is joining  rapid risk assessment teams travelling to hot spots to investigate the  outbreak.
 
 Between 1 January and 4 February 2018, nearly 450 suspected cases were  reported, of which 132 are laboratory confirmed Lassa fever. Of these,  43 deaths were reported, 37 of which were lab confirmed.
 
 The acute viral haemorrhagic fever is endemic in Nigeria but for the  current outbreak the hot spots are the southern states of Edo, Ondo and  Ebonyi.
 
 “The high number of Lassa fever cases is concerning. We are observing an  unusually high number of cases for this time of year.” said Dr.  Wondimagegnehu Alemu, WHO Representative to Nigeria.
 
 Among those infected are 11 health workers, four of whom have died. WHO  is advising national authorities on strengthening infection, prevention  and control practices in healthcare settings. Healthcare workers caring  for Lassa fever patients require extra infection and control measures,  including the use of personal protective equipment to prevent contact  with patients’ bodily fluids.
 
 With the increase in the number of cases, WHO initially donated personal  protective equipment to the Nigeria Center for Disease Control and to  the affected states and procured laboratory reagents to support the  prompt diagnosis of Lassa fever. WHO is deploying international experts  to coordinate the response, strengthen surveillance, provide treatment  guidelines, and engage with communities to raise awareness on prevention  and treatment.
 
 Lassa fever is endemic to several West African countries. Benin, Liberia  and Sierra Leone have all reported cases in the past month. WHO is  working with countries in the region to strengthen coordination and  cross-border cooperation.









