Federal Government says COVID-19 vaccines may not arrive “soon enough” in Nigeria.
Minister of State for Health, Olorunnimbe Mamora, disclosed this on Thursday while urging Nigerians not to be complacent in containing the COVID-19 pandemic at the joint national briefing of the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19.
Mamora, who was represented by the Director, Hospital Services, Federal Ministry of Health, Dr Adebimpe Adebiyi, assured Nigerians of FG’s determination to reduce the spread of COVID-19 in the country.
He said, “We are working very hard to get vaccines for our people. It may not come soon enough, therefore we need to be alive to get the vaccines when they come.
“We need to be alive to get the vaccines when they come. I have brought this up to underscore the importance of compliance with non-pharmaceutical measures as advised to reduce transmission.”
Mamora added that as of Wednesday, new cases recorded were 1,354 with one death; while the total number of cases tested was 1,004,915.
He said, “Number of confirmed cases is 94,369. Active cases stand at 15,764. Discharged cases till date are 77,299. Number of deaths till date is 1,324 with case fatality rate of 1.4 per cent.
“The Federal Government is determined to ensure morbidity due to COVID-19 is reduced to the barest minimum while improving on the fatality rate.”
He said that appropriate measures were being taken to achieve these objectives.
The minister said a second phase assessment of the isolation and treatment centres country-wide to verify challenges was to be carried out immediately.
This, he said, would enable the government to provide appropriate intervention measures required to strengthen these centres.
“We will continue to appeal to states to increase testing and contact tracing. The cooperation of the states with the federal authorities is critical to our collective objective of defeating COVID-19,” he added.