Saturday, April 25, 2026
FB X LI YT
Breaking
“Stay out of Oyo affairs” β€” Think Yoruba First fires warning at Nonentity Igbo group over comments on Olubadan stool, political matters “Genocidal and diabolical” β€” Think Yoruba First blasts Farooq Kperogi over claims that Ilorin, Shao, Jebba are not Yoruba towns πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ“š Ridwan Ajayi emerges new NANS JCC Lagos chairman after 5-5 tiebreaker vote β€” 10 tertiary institutions participated πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ“œ 130 CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS PETITION KWARA GOVERNOR OVER DELAY OF BAALE’S UPGRADE LETTER β€” ACCUSE COMMISSIONER OF BLOCKING ELEVATION ON OBAS’ ORDERS! πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸŽ€ RIHANNA WEARS YORUBA GELE β€” A Global Icon Embraces Our Heritage, Proving Gele Will Never Be Reduced to a Slur! πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ”₯ FAVORITISM UNMASKED: Seyi Tinubu Empowers Imo Youth With Freezers, Gives Yorubaland Rice and Foodstuffs That Will Finish in a Week β€” Is It Because His Wife Is Igbo? The first revelation landed like a thunderbolt. Ella, the face of the campaign against Omotoso, had privately apologized to him. That apology never made it online. According to the Commissioner, it was omitted because it did not serve what he described as a calculated clout-chasing agenda. The public was fed a version of events designed to provoke outrage, not inform discourse. πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ’” 2000 KADUNA RELIGIOUS CRISIS: When Sharia Introduction Sparked Bloodshed β€” Over 500 Feared Dead, Churches, Mosques, Businesses Razed!
HEALTH

Beverages Prepared with Unclean Water Can Spread Cholera – NCDC

June 18, 2024 3 min read

June 18, 2024

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention has said that beverages, ice, and drinks prepared with unclean or contaminated water can spread cholera.

Cholera is a food and water-borne disease caused by the ingestion of the bacteriaβ€” Vibrio choleraeβ€” in contaminated water and food.

Symptoms of cholera include acute profuse, painless watery diarrhoea (rice water stools) of sudden onset, with or without vomiting. It may be associated with nausea, profuse vomiting, and fever.

Experts say severe cases of cholera can lead to death within hours due to dehydration.

However, about 80 per cent of infected people may only show mild symptoms or have no symptoms at all.

In Nigeria, cholera is an endemic and seasonal disease, occurring annually, mostly during the rainy season and more frequently in areas with poor sanitation.

The 10 states contributing 90 per cent to the current cholera outbreak burden include Bayelsa, Zamfara, Abia, Cross River, Bauchi, Delta, Katsina, Imo, Nasarawa, and Lagos states.

So far, from January 1 to June 11, 2024, cholera cases have been reported from 96 LGAs in 30 states, according to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention.

Experts say cholera is prevalent in areas with high density populations, poor water supply, and poor personal and environmental hygiene.

Earlier, the Director-General of the NCDC, Dr Jide Idris, disclosed that the agency was conducting a risk assessment, and assisting states to respond to the outbreak.

On Tuesday, the NCDC, on its X handle, NCDCgov, warned, β€œBeverages, ice and drinks prepared with unclean or contaminated water can spread #cholera.

β€œProtect yourself and your loved ones; do not buy or consume foods or drinks prepared with water from unreliable sources.”

On how to prevent the spread of the infection, the agency advised Nigerians to make water safe and use water from reliable sources.

It said: β€œUse water from reliable sources, boil water before drinking, store water in properly covered containers, ensure bottled water and pure water sachet is properly sealed before you drink it.”

On its website, the agency said the disease was easily treatable if detected early.

β€œMost infected people can be treated successfully through prompt administration of Oral Rehydration Solution to replace lost fluids and electrolytes, and appropriate antibiotics.

β€œThe ORS solution is a powder that can be reconstituted in boiled or bottled water. Cholera can be deadly when infected people do not access care immediately.

β€œCholera can be prevented through ensuring access to safe, potable drinking water; proper sanitation and waste disposal; and appropriate hygiene including handwashing. Raw fruits and vegetables, food from street vendors, and raw or undercooked seafood should be avoided,” it added.

It urged state governments to prioritise action for solutions that ensure access to and use of safe water, basic sanitation, and proper hygiene practices in communities.