Health
400,000 Nigerian children may die from malnutrition – UNICEF
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The United Nations Children’s Fund, on Tuesday, said 3.5 million children in Nigeria are suffering from severe acute malnutrition.
It also said 400,000 children risk preventable deaths in one month and eight days due to severe malnutrition.
UNICEF Nigeria’s Chief of Field Operations and Emergencies, Judith Leveille, stated this during a joint press briefing held in Abuja, focused on the European Union’s support for victims of the Yelewata crisis in Benue State and the nutrition emergency in the North-East and North-West.
Leveille said that with the development, the country faced a stockout of its essential nutrition commodities.
“So, we need to call on all forces to prevent a stockout of essential nutrition commodities used to treat severe acute malnutrition. As we speak, we can expect a stockout by September 1.
“So, we have one month and eight days to avoid the preventable deaths of over 400,000 children. That’s a lot of children.
“I’m sure that among them, there could be a Nobel Prize winner, a brilliant scientist who invents a life-saving solution, a great Nigerian musician, or a great actor.
“Nigeria has the potential to produce such individuals. A lot can be done to prevent this situation. By essential commodities, I’m talking about ready-to-use therapeutic food.”
The UNICEF chief added, “Today, we are gathered because we have a common understanding. More can be done to ensure that all severely acute malnourished children, and we are talking about a burden of 3.5 million children in Nigeria, are treated.
“The situation is dire. Over the weekend, we met over 100 children who needed urgent treatment. We met little Memunah, little Aisha, their mothers, and of course, my colleagues—Médecins Sans Frontières, Action Against Hunger- were there at the stabilisation centres.
“We met with committed nurses and doctors who work around the clock with Nigerian medical teams to save children’s lives. That is truly commendable.”
She, however, said more needed to be done, adding that the nutritional stabilisation centres were already overstretched.
“We still haven’t reached the peak of the lean season, we will reach that in about three weeks, and the peak season will last for over a month. What we saw in some communities in Sokoto is not unique.
“It can also be seen in many other states, particularly in the northern parts of Nigeria,” she said.
Leveille stressed the need not only for funding, but also for skilled personnel and essential medicines.
The Nigeria INGO Forum Director, Camilla Higgins, reiterated that an estimated 3.5 million children were suffering from severe acute malnutrition in the country.
She said: “That’s the equivalent of the national stadium here in Abuja times 60. You would have to fill it 60 times to capture that number of children, and they are all at risk of increased death.
“This demands urgent and coordinated action by the government, and we are very ready to support such an effort in coordination with international actors like UNICEF and our member organisations.
“In addition to what we’ve heard about the level of needs this year, we want to highlight that a major contributory factor to this worsening situation is the reduction of resources across the board, particularly from major international donors.
“We all know what happened earlier this year with the United States’ funding cuts and other major donors reducing their capacity as well.
“I have to highlight that international response capacity is collapsing in the Northeast and Northwest. The response system is stretched beyond its limits.
“We’ve seen severe acute malnutrition admissions surge up to 40 per cent in the Northeast and 73 per cent in some cities. Malnutrition is now visibly affecting adults, not just children. So, we have even more needs this year and more limited resources, just as we are approaching the peak of the lean season,” Higgins said.
She called on the government to take full leadership in coordinating the response, stating that INGOs were ready to collaborate.
The Head of Mission at MSF, Bilal Ahmad, said the organisation was concerned about the alarming situation of malnutrition, especially in Sokoto State.
“If we look at our site and our observations, what we were supposed to expect at the end of the rainy season, we’re just witnessing now at the start of the rainy season.
“For example, MSF is supporting 32 ambulatory therapeutic feeding centre sites and 11 inpatient sites where children come with complications in addition to malnutrition. Our bed capacity is 1,600, which is now not enough.
“In Katsina, we normally have 450 beds, but now we are increasing to 900 beds because we were putting two patients on one bed, and every day the number is increasing.
“From another state, where we planned for 60 beds during the lean season, we had to increase to 90 beds for the rainy season.
“Now, the rainy season has just started, and we’re already at 120 beds, and the team is asking for more. We cannot turn patients away. Malnourished children are coming from far away in critical condition, and it is very difficult. I’m really concerned about mortality,” he said.
He gave the mortality ranges from project to project, location to location.
“From 3.7 per cent to 7.7 per cent. These could be the children of families who waited a long time to have them, and now they are dying due to malnutrition. We are deeply concerned,” he highlighted.
He noted that many children arrived at the centre after travelling long distances, often too late to be saved.
With patient numbers rising, he warned that the situation would worsen unless immediate actions were taken.
He called for more treatment centres, especially to reduce travel distances, and emphasised the urgent need to increase the supply of therapeutic food.
The Minister of State for Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Dr Yusuf Sununu, said President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s agenda focused on strengthening local and international collaboration, particularly in humanitarian efforts.
He stated that the ministry’s goal was to enhance transparency, accountability, and trust so that international partners would feel confident in supporting Nigeria’s humanitarian response.
Dr Sununu reiterated the government’s commitment to ensuring that all collaborative efforts were transparent, traceable, and effective, expressing hope that the partnership would yield positive outcomes for humanitarian governance in Nigeria.
Health
DR Congo Ebola outbreak tops 1,000 cases, kills 254
More than 1,000 Ebola infections have been recorded in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the latest outbreak has killed more than 250 people, official figures showed Monday.
The country’s National Institute of Public Health (INSP) confirmed 1,003 cases and 254 deaths, with a fatality rate of 25 percent.
The latest outbreak of the deadly haemorrhagic fever was declared on May 15.
Almost all cases are in Ituri province in the northeast, a conflict-weary region plagued by armed groups.
In total, three provinces have been affected: Ituri, neighbouring North Kivu and South Kivu, home to around 15 million people.
The virus has also spread to neighbouring Uganda, where the World Health Organization has recorded 20 cases and two deaths, though Kampala said the situation was “under control” earlier this month.
The outbreak is caused by the rare Bundibugyo strain of the virus, for which there is no vaccine or specific treatment.
Existing Ebola vaccines, developed between 2018 and 2019, are only effective against the Zaire strain, which caused previous major outbreaks.
The World Health Organization has declared an international public health emergency, warning the outbreak could last months.
“The outbreak was declared around two months after the first suspected deaths were reported… During that time, the disease spread unchecked in ways we still don’t fully understand,” an international aid group representative told AFP, speaking anonymously.
AFP
Health
Fed govt moves to prevent Ebola outbreak, sets up presidential task force
The federal government on Thursday inaugurated a Presidential Task Force on Ebola Virus Disease Preparedness, declaring that Nigeria would not wait for an outbreak before taking action and vowing to prevent a repeat of the 2014 Ebola scare.
Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, said the task force was established as a proactive measure to ensure the country is fully prepared against any possible outbreak of the deadly disease, even as he confirmed that no case of Ebola has been reported in Nigeria.
Speaking with State House correspondents after inaugurating the task force at the State House, Abuja, Gbajabiamila said the government’s focus is on prevention rather than response, stressing that authorities were determined not to be caught unprepared.
“We did the inauguration today on the preparedness of Nigeria for the Ebola virus disease. We’ve covered a lot of ground. Right now, there’s no reported case, which is good news, and that’s why all hands have to be on deck to make sure the measures we are taking are preventive, not curative.
“We don’t want to be in the situation we were last time, where we had a carrier in the country and we’re all running helter-skelter”, he said.
He disclosed that the task force had established several subcommittees to coordinate critical areas of preparedness, including surveillance, border control, immigration management and emergency response.
According to him, one of the key lessons from the 2014 outbreak is the need for stronger coordination among all stakeholders, particularly between the Federal Government and states with international points of entry.
Gbajabiamila noted that governors and representatives of states hosting international airports, including Lagos, Rivers, Enugu and the Federal Capital Territory, participated in the meeting, describing the collaboration as essential to preventing the virus from entering the country.
He said special attention was also being given to Nigeria’s extensive land borders, warning that disease transmission through informal migration routes posed a significant risk.
“Normally, when people talk about emergency preparedness and cross-border diseases such as this, they think about airports. But now we’re covering not just airports; we’re placing greater emphasis on land borders.
“We have a lot of cross-migration through the land borders, and the Border Control Development Agency is involved, immigration is involved, and a lot of the border communities are involved”, he said.
The Chief of Staff said the government had drawn valuable lessons from the country’s successful containment of the Ebola outbreak in 2014 and was building stronger structures to eliminate gaps in preparedness.
“What we want is a zero case, as we have now. We want to maintain a zero case”, he added.
Also speaking, Director-General of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC), Dr. Jide Idris, said surveillance systems had already been strengthened at major points of entry across the country, particularly airports.
He confirmed that Nigeria currently has no recorded case of Ebola but stressed that preparedness remained critical given recent developments in parts of Africa.
“The focus is to be prepared. We don’t have any Ebola case here now, but we need to be prepared. We need to ensure that we don’t get that Ebola virus here.
“However, just in case one slips in, we want to be prepared nationally to identify and deal with the case”, Idris said.
The NCDC boss explained that existing disease surveillance and emergency response structures were being upgraded and adapted specifically to address Ebola-related threats.
He said the preparedness framework brings together multiple government institutions, including the ministries of health, interior and education, as well as immigration, border control agencies and state governments.
According to him, emergency preparedness requires a coordinated national response built on teamwork, clearly defined responsibilities and an effective command-and-control structure.
“The bottom line is that the objective is that we do not allow Ebola to come in. If it does come in, we are prepared to rapidly identify and manage the case nationally”, he said.
Idris added that state governments across the federation had already been mobilised as part of the preparedness strategy, with efforts focused on surveillance, early detection, rapid response and public health coordination.
The inauguration of the task force comes amid heightened vigilance across several African countries following renewed concerns over Ebola outbreaks in parts of the continent.
Health
NARD Issues 21-Day Ultimatum To FG Over Attacks On Doctors
The Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has issued a 21-day ultimatum to the Federal Government to start implementing a national framework for the protection of healthcare workers, following a growing wave of attacks on medical personnel across the country.
NARD issued the ultimatum at a press briefing to end its Ordinary General Meeting (OGM), which took place in Kano. It also declared an industrial dispute with the government over 14 unresolved demands affecting the health sector.
According to the union’s president, Mohammad Suleiman, the rising cases of assault, intimidation, harassment and violent attacks on doctors pose a serious threat to Nigeria’s already fragile healthcare system.
“The OGM observed with grave concern the disturbing rise in cases of assault, harassment, intimidation and violent attacks against doctors across the country while discharging their professional duties.”
Suleiman described the trend as “barbaric, unacceptable and a dangerous threat” to the survival of the health system.
As part of its resolutions, the association demanded the immediate investigation, arrest, and prosecution of perpetrators of attacks on health workers, while urging the government and security agencies to strengthen protection for medical personnel and facilities nationwide. He further added that,
“Consequently, the OGM gives the Federal Government a 21-day window to commence concrete actions towards the development and implementation of a National Healthcare Workers Assault Prevention and Response Protocol, as well as the initiation of the necessary legislative process to address this menace.”
These include the immediate release and payment of the 2026 Medical Residency Training Fund (MRTF), which the association noted remains unpaid despite repeated assurances.
“The OGM demands the release and payment of the 2026 Medical Residency Training Fund to all eligible resident doctors nationwide within the next 21 days,” Suleiman said.
The association also demanded payment of outstanding 25/35 per cent CONMESS arrears, settlement of 19 months of unpaid professional allowance arrears, and clearance of salary and promotion arrears across federal and state health institutions.
It called for correction of discrepancies in professional allowance payments made in May 2026 and settlement of all related arrears.
Welfare and Recruitment Concerns
NARD raised concerns over worsening welfare conditions for house officers, including salary delays, unpaid arrears, and challenges in internship placement and onboarding.
It also demanded full implementation of outstanding provisions in the Medical and Health Workers’ Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) and urged government action on excessive workload, prolonged call-duty hours, casualisation of doctors, and abusive locum appointments.
Suleiman criticised delays by the Federal Character Commission (FCC) in issuing compliance letters, saying it has stalled recruitment and worsened manpower shortages in the health sector.
“The OGM demands the immediate issuance of a letter of compliance by the Chairperson of the FCC within the next 21 days to facilitate employment of healthcare workers and avert further worsening of the brain drain crisis,” the NARD chief said.
The association also called on federal and state tertiary health institutions to urgently address welfare, remuneration, infrastructure, and staffing challenges.
It specifically highlighted unresolved disputes at the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals Complex (OAUTHC), Ile-Ife, and the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), including provision of call meals and alleged victimisation of doctors.
Industrial Dispute Declared
While commending the governors of Osun and Kano states, Ademola Adeleke and Abba Kabir Yusuf, respectively, for interventions in the health sector, NARD warned that failure to meet its demands could trigger further industrial action.
“The Association hereby declares an industrial dispute with the Federal Government on the outlined matters above and cannot guarantee industrial harmony after the 21-day window,” it said.
He added that the association’s National Officers Committee would engage stakeholders during the ultimatum period, after which the National Executive Council would determine the next line of action.
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