COVID-19 Pandemic as a mass killer and existential public health emergency in Nigeria remains unproven: A viewpoint
Sahel medical journal (Print)
; 25(1): 1-8, 2022. figures, tables
Artigo
em Inglês
| AIM (África)
| ID: biblio-1379214
Biblioteca responsável:
CG1.1
ABSTRACT
Framing COVID19 pandemic as mass killer and existential public health emergency/threat in Nigeria with 2,120 COVID19related deaths in over 14 months of the pandemic in the country is problematic, especially as other public health conditions kill more Nigerians annually. In 2018, for example, malaria and road traffic accident caused 97,200 and 38,902 deaths, respectively, while HIV/AIDS caused 43,000 deaths in 2019. Therefore, rushing into an extensive vaccination campaign projected to cost 540 billion naira when 76.03 billion naira was allocated for primary health services nationwide including other major immunization programs in the 2021 federal health budget could raise question of priority/effective spending. Especially with COVID-19 deaths relative to reported cases(case fatality ratio) declining to 1.30% by June 30, 2021 from 3.45% in April 2020 and daily mass deaths non-evident. Temporizing to understand how the pandemic evolves especially in jurisdictions with higher need could be costeffective.
Texto completo:
Disponível
Contexto em Saúde:
ODS3 - Saúde e Bem-Estar
/
Doenças Negligenciadas
/
ODS3 - Meta 3.3 Acabar com as doenças tropicais negligenciadas e combater as doenças transmissíveis
/
ODS3 - Meta 3.4 Reduzir as mortes prematuras devido doenças não transmissíveis
/
ODS3 - Meta 3.6 Reduzir as mortes e traumatismos por acidentes de transito
Problema de saúde:
Meta 3.6: Reduzir as mortes e traumatismos por acidentes de transito
/
Malária
/
COVID-19
/
Pneumonía
/
Outras Doenças Respiratórias
/
Resposta Pós-Acidente
Base de dados:
AIM (África)
Assunto principal:
Saúde Pública
/
Emergências
/
Vacinas contra COVID-19
/
COVID-19
Aspecto:
Determinantes sociais da saúde
Idioma:
Inglês
Revista:
Sahel medical journal (Print)
Ano de publicação:
2022
Tipo de documento:
Artigo
Instituição/País de afiliação:
Behavioral Sciences, University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital/NG
/
Department of Jurisprudence and International Law, Delta State University/NG
/
Department of Medicine, University of Ilorin, PMB 1515/NG