The World
Health Organisation says pesticide poisoning is the probable cause of
mysterious deaths of over 18 people in Ode Irele, in Irele Local Government
Area of Ondo State.
Those who
died suffered from blurred vision and headaches, and then lost consciousness
before dying within 24 hours.
The “current
hypothesis is cause of the event is herbicides,” WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl,
said in a tweet.
“Tests done
so far are negative for viral and bacterial infection,” he added.
The WHO
spokesman said the current theory was that the deaths were caused by
weedkiller.
All of those
affected started showing symptoms between April 13 and 15.
The tests
were carried out at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, the WHO said.
Meanwhile,
the WHO officials have visited Irele town in Ondo State to trace some victims
with symptoms of the unknown disease that has killed over 18 persons.
The Ondo
State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Dayo Adeyanju, said this at a news briefing
in Akure on Saturday.
The
commissioner added that five victims of the disease, who were still alive as of
Saturday had been moved to the University College Hospital, Ibadan on Saturday
night.
Adeyanju and
other state government officials also visited Irele to get first hand
information from some of the victims who are still alive and their relations.
The
commissioner, however, revealed that the two victims discharged themselves from
the hospital against medical advice.
He stated
that medical personnel had begun tracing the address of the two victims and
others who he said the state government would move to the UCH, Ibadan for
further treatment.
He said, “We
were together with the WHO officials on active case search. We are looking for
people with the disease. We have been calling on the people of the town who are
down with the disease to come out and it is working. Five patients have been
moved to the UCH and I know that their cases will be well-handled. The
attention of the whole world is on it.
“The Ondo
State Government will pay the bill, the patients are not going to pay, we just
want them to come out so that we can find a solution to the disease.
“The disease
is not contagious and it is not infectious. If it is contagious those treating
them would have come down with the symptoms.”
The Ondo
State Chairman of the Nigerian Medical Association, Dr. Betiku Bamidele, told
one of our correspondents that fresh blood and urine samples had been taken
from the cases and they had been sent to two separate laboratories outside the
state.
Bamidele
said, “Fresh blood samples have been taken from these cases for further
toxicology studies in two separate laboratories. Also, some sample of the
drinks they took have also been taken for analysis. It is not infectious.
Toxicity of some sort is likely to be the cause.”
Earlier, the
Health commissioner had explained that four of the drinkers had died while one
of them was alive but down with the sickness.
The
commissioner urged members of the public to discountenance the terrifying
photos of some persons with bumps all over their bodies saying those in the
photographs did not die of the disease.
Some
residents of the town, who also corroborated Adeyanju’s claims, told one of our
correspondents that the WHO officials visited the General Hospital at Ode Irele
where two of the victims were admitted.
A resident
of the town, Mr. Jobi Enimade, who is an accountant with the Ministry of Niger
Delta at Igbokoda office, said that the WHO officials came to his residence and
asked him questions about the disease.
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