Coronavirus outbreak in Nigeria: Burden and socio-medical response during the first 100 days
•This paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria, with a focus on the first 100 days after the index case.•The incidence of COVID-19 grows steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission, spreading across the states of the f...
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Published in | International journal of infectious diseases Vol. 98; pp. 218 - 224 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
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Elsevier Ltd
01.09.2020
The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of International Society for Infectious Diseases Elsevier |
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Abstract | •This paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria, with a focus on the first 100 days after the index case.•The incidence of COVID-19 grows steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission, spreading across the states of the federation.•The paper presents a concise response framework to highlight the various multisectoral responses to the pandemic.•The response is not without some challenges, including inadequate testing laboratories, under-testing, inadequate palliatives and economic stimuli.•The potential of an overwhelming COVID-19 upsurge is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy.•A most important lesson is the impossibility of the usual medical tourism among Nigerian elites.
The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shocked the world, overwhelming the health systems of even high-income countries. Predictably, the situation has elicited social and medical responses from the public and governments, respectively. Nigeria recorded an imported case from Italy on February 27, 2020. Hence, this paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria in the first 100 days after the index case. The paper employs analytical methods and collates data from various media reports and official sources.
The incidence of COVID-19 grew steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission. The case fatality stood at 2.8%. The country recorded an upsurge (52% of total cases) in the transmission of COVID-19 during the short period the lockdown was relaxed. This paper presents a concise response framework to highlight some specific multisectoral responses to the pandemic. A combination of social and medical responses to a large extent helped Nigeria curtail the spread of the virus.
The potential of overwhelming COVID-19 is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy, which could sacrifice public health gains for temporary economic gains. |
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AbstractList | The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shocked the world, overwhelming the health systems of even high-income countries. Predictably, the situation has elicited social and medical responses from the public and governments, respectively. Nigeria recorded an imported case from Italy on February 27, 2020. Hence, this paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria in the first 100 days after the index case. The paper employs analytical methods and collates data from various media reports and official sources.BACKGROUNDThe coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shocked the world, overwhelming the health systems of even high-income countries. Predictably, the situation has elicited social and medical responses from the public and governments, respectively. Nigeria recorded an imported case from Italy on February 27, 2020. Hence, this paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria in the first 100 days after the index case. The paper employs analytical methods and collates data from various media reports and official sources.The incidence of COVID-19 grew steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission. The case fatality stood at 2.8%. The country recorded an upsurge (52% of total cases) in the transmission of COVID-19 during the short period the lockdown was relaxed. This paper presents a concise response framework to highlight some specific multisectoral responses to the pandemic. A combination of social and medical responses to a large extent helped Nigeria curtail the spread of the virus.FINDINGSThe incidence of COVID-19 grew steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission. The case fatality stood at 2.8%. The country recorded an upsurge (52% of total cases) in the transmission of COVID-19 during the short period the lockdown was relaxed. This paper presents a concise response framework to highlight some specific multisectoral responses to the pandemic. A combination of social and medical responses to a large extent helped Nigeria curtail the spread of the virus.The potential of overwhelming COVID-19 is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy, which could sacrifice public health gains for temporary economic gains.CONCLUSIONThe potential of overwhelming COVID-19 is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy, which could sacrifice public health gains for temporary economic gains. • This paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria, with a focus on the first 100 days after the index case. • The incidence of COVID-19 grows steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission, spreading across the states of the federation. • The paper presents a concise response framework to highlight the various multisectoral responses to the pandemic. • The response is not without some challenges, including inadequate testing laboratories, under-testing, inadequate palliatives and economic stimuli. • The potential of an overwhelming COVID-19 upsurge is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy. • A most important lesson is the impossibility of the usual medical tourism among Nigerian elites. •This paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria, with a focus on the first 100 days after the index case.•The incidence of COVID-19 grows steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission, spreading across the states of the federation.•The paper presents a concise response framework to highlight the various multisectoral responses to the pandemic.•The response is not without some challenges, including inadequate testing laboratories, under-testing, inadequate palliatives and economic stimuli.•The potential of an overwhelming COVID-19 upsurge is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy.•A most important lesson is the impossibility of the usual medical tourism among Nigerian elites. The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shocked the world, overwhelming the health systems of even high-income countries. Predictably, the situation has elicited social and medical responses from the public and governments, respectively. Nigeria recorded an imported case from Italy on February 27, 2020. Hence, this paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria in the first 100 days after the index case. The paper employs analytical methods and collates data from various media reports and official sources. The incidence of COVID-19 grew steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission. The case fatality stood at 2.8%. The country recorded an upsurge (52% of total cases) in the transmission of COVID-19 during the short period the lockdown was relaxed. This paper presents a concise response framework to highlight some specific multisectoral responses to the pandemic. A combination of social and medical responses to a large extent helped Nigeria curtail the spread of the virus. The potential of overwhelming COVID-19 is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy, which could sacrifice public health gains for temporary economic gains. Background: The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shocked the world, overwhelming the health systems of even high-income countries. Predictably, the situation has elicited social and medical responses from the public and governments, respectively. Nigeria recorded an imported case from Italy on February 27, 2020. Hence, this paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria in the first 100 days after the index case. The paper employs analytical methods and collates data from various media reports and official sources. Findings: The incidence of COVID-19 grew steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission. The case fatality stood at 2.8%. The country recorded an upsurge (52% of total cases) in the transmission of COVID-19 during the short period the lockdown was relaxed. This paper presents a concise response framework to highlight some specific multisectoral responses to the pandemic. A combination of social and medical responses to a large extent helped Nigeria curtail the spread of the virus. Conclusion: The potential of overwhelming COVID-19 is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy, which could sacrifice public health gains for temporary economic gains. The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shocked the world, overwhelming the health systems of even high-income countries. Predictably, the situation has elicited social and medical responses from the public and governments, respectively. Nigeria recorded an imported case from Italy on February 27, 2020. Hence, this paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria in the first 100 days after the index case. The paper employs analytical methods and collates data from various media reports and official sources. The incidence of COVID-19 grew steadily in Nigeria, moving from an imported case and elitist pattern to community transmission. The case fatality stood at 2.8%. The country recorded an upsurge (52% of total cases) in the transmission of COVID-19 during the short period the lockdown was relaxed. This paper presents a concise response framework to highlight some specific multisectoral responses to the pandemic. A combination of social and medical responses to a large extent helped Nigeria curtail the spread of the virus. The potential of overwhelming COVID-19 is still imminent in Nigeria as the country is attempting to hurriedly open the economy, which could sacrifice public health gains for temporary economic gains. |
Author | Amzat, Jimoh Kolo, Victor I. Ogundairo, Janet A. Danjibo, Maryann C. Aminu, Kafayat Akinyele, Ayodele A. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Jimoh surname: Amzat fullname: Amzat, Jimoh email: jimoh.amzat@udusok.edu.ng organization: Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Department of Sociology, Sokoto, Nigeria – sequence: 2 givenname: Kafayat surname: Aminu fullname: Aminu, Kafayat email: bolkaf@yahoo.com organization: University of Ibadan, Department of Sociology, Ibadan, Nigeria – sequence: 3 givenname: Victor I. surname: Kolo fullname: Kolo, Victor I. email: vikolo33@gmail.com organization: University of Ibadan, Department of Sociology, Ibadan, Nigeria – sequence: 4 givenname: Ayodele A. surname: Akinyele fullname: Akinyele, Ayodele A. email: ayogideon2002@yahoo.com organization: University of Ibadan, Department of Sociology, Ibadan, Nigeria – sequence: 5 givenname: Janet A. surname: Ogundairo fullname: Ogundairo, Janet A. email: janetogundairo@gmail.com organization: University of Ibadan, Department of Sociology, Ibadan, Nigeria – sequence: 6 givenname: Maryann C. surname: Danjibo fullname: Danjibo, Maryann C. email: monwueme5@gmail.com organization: University of Ibadan, Department of Sociology, Ibadan, Nigeria |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32585282$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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License | This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license. Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active. |
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Snippet | •This paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria, with a focus on the first 100 days after the index case.•The incidence of... The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shocked the world, overwhelming the health systems of even high-income countries. Predictably, the... • This paper assesses the early socio-medical response to COVID-19 in Nigeria, with a focus on the first 100 days after the index case. • The incidence of... Background: The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shocked the world, overwhelming the health systems of even high-income countries. Predictably,... |
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SubjectTerms | Adult Betacoronavirus Community transmission Coronavirus Infections - epidemiology COVID-19 Disease Outbreaks Female Humans Imported case Incidence Italy - epidemiology Male Middle Aged Multisectoral response Nigeria Nigeria - epidemiology Pandemics Pneumonia, Viral - epidemiology SARS-CoV-2 Social Adjustment |
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Title | Coronavirus outbreak in Nigeria: Burden and socio-medical response during the first 100 days |
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