WATCH: Nigerian virus hunters in race against Covid-19

Published Jul 14, 2020

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Lagos/Abuja - Early one evening, Folasade

Fadare and her team of four disease hunters piled into a van and

headed for Okegun, a rural community down a narrow potholed road

in eastern Lagos state.

A coronavirus patient had visited the area, and it was their

task to find anyone exposed, isolate them and trace their

contacts. The team quickly realised the job was too big: more

than 100 people needed to be interviewed and tested.

Ultimately, only the two sickest people, feverish and

gasping for air, were sent to hospital to be isolated and

tested. The rest were told what symptoms to watch for and urged

to stay home for two weeks.

"We are not enough," said Fadare, an epidemiologist who has

battled Ebola and Lassa fever for more than 20 years.

Members of the contact-tracing team are seen at the Primary Healthcare Centre, amid the spread of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19), in Lagos. Picture: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters

Contact tracers like Fadare are among the few safeguards

standing between Africa's fragile public health systems and a

pandemic that could quickly overwhelm them. Infections are

rising, but many governments have been easing lockdowns to save

their economies.

In Nigeria, medics who do tracing say they are near breaking

point.

Confirmed cases of Covid-19 have increased tenfold to over

32,000 since the government began easing restrictions in May,

the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) says. At least 740

have died.

Folashade Fadare, head of the contact-tracing team, speaks with members as they prepare for the task at the Primary Healthcare Centre in Lagos. Picture: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters

Lagos, Nigeria's largest state and epicentre of its

outbreak, has 200 tracers for a population of 25 million. That

is fewer than one per 100 000 people, compared to around 14 per

100 000 in Turkey.

The state's health commissioner, Akin Abayomi, dismissed

concerns about the scale of its tracing efforts.

"We recruit contact tracers as necessary. We have a large

pool of primary health care staff and volunteers to select

from," he said in a text message, adding there were 1 000 people

in the pool.

A security staffer uses a thermal scanner to check the temperature of a member of the contact-tracing team at the Primary Healthcare Centre in Lagos. Picture: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters

POLIO NETWORK

Nigeria's experience with infectious diseases meant it could

quickly mobilize veteran epidemiologists like Fadare along with

hundreds of medics and community volunteers already embedded in

remote communities to fight polio.

But nothing prepared them for this epidemic, Fadare said.

More than 12,400 cases have been confirmed in Lagos state alone

- any one potentially infecting scores of others, she said.

Members of her team say they are overwhelmed, receiving updates

about infected people as late as midnight.

Unlike South Korea and Singapore, which used contact tracing

apps, Nigeria has had to resort to more labour-intensive

methods. Only a quarter of the population uses smartphones.

A team of medics is tasked to visit each contact to verify

symptoms, identify contacts and ask them to stay at home for 14

days. The team then checks in with the person each day by phone,

to monitor compliance. If the person reports symptoms, they will

be referred to another team for testing.

However, the stigma associated with Covid-19 means many are

keen to avoid tracers, Fadare said. People commonly turn off

their phones, deny their identity and lie about when they last

saw coronavirus patients.

Members of the contact-tracing team are seen at the Primary Healthcare Centre, amid the spread of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19), in Lagos. Picture: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters

Such fears can be justified. In Abuja, one man's neighbours

moved out after he was tested. Others suspected of being

infected have been told to leave, said Ramatu Abdu-Aguye, head

of tracing in the capital.

So the teams keep a low profile, using unmarked vans to

visit homes.

Nigeria's low testing rates are making the tracers' job

harder, they say. Just over 183 000 tests have been conducted in

a country of 200 million, according to the NCDC. A government

target announced in April was for 2 million tests by the end of

July.

Olujimi Oyetomi, a Nigerian health ministry spokesman, said

more testing machines and materials were being deployed.

Adding to the challenges, 10 tracers working for Fadare

contracted Covid-19 and had to take up to three weeks off.

A security staff member uses a thermal scanner to check the temperature of a member of the contact-tracing team at the Primary Healthcare Centre in Lagos. Picture: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters

As lockdowns ease, many Nigerians are moving around and

ignoring safety measures.

Traffic jams have returned to Lagos, increasing the time it

takes tracers to reach contacts, many of whom are already hard

to find because their homes have no formal address.

Outside the Lagos clinic where Fadare's teams meet, life

goes on as normal. Men sit around on plastic chairs, women sell

instant noodles, and yellow minibuses weave through the streets.

Nobody keeps their distance, and those who wear masks pull them

down to speak.

Fadare fears they don't realise the danger: "The truth is

that we are all at risk now."

Reuters

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coronavirus