Tag: covid-19 cases

  • Abuja Night clubs remain shut; religious, social gatherings limited to 50% attendance over surge in new COVID-19 cases

    Abuja Night clubs remain shut; religious, social gatherings limited to 50% attendance over surge in new COVID-19 cases

    The Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) on Wednesday restated that night clubs in the capital city remain shut.

    It said all religious and social gatherings remain limited to 50 per cent of the hall capacity.

    It urged worship centers planning New Year eve religious activities, popularly called “crossover night” to adhere strictly to the recommended COVID-19 preventive measures and health guidelines.

    Senior Special Assistant (SSA) to the FCT Minister on Monitoring, Inspection and Enforcement, Ikharo Attah said the surge in new cases of COVID-19 was alarming.

    Attah noted that 80 new cases were recorded in the nation’s capital on Tuesday.

    According to him, FCT ministers had met with religious leaders and other stakeholders.

    He said the ban on nightclubs and other social gatherings remains in force.

    He disclosed that on December 26 alone, the city recorded an alarmingly disturbing 806 new cases.

    He appealed to religious leaders and residents to ensure complete compliance with all the COVID-19 guidelines issued by the Health and Human Services Secretariat.

    An enforcement team, he said, would be mobilised to to monitor compliance.

  • UK Records Highest Number Of COVID-19 Cases Since January

    UK Records Highest Number Of COVID-19 Cases Since January

    The UK on Friday saw the highest number of Covid infections since January, a senior minister said Friday, as the government seeks to slow the spread of the new variant.

    Communities Secretary Michael Gove said that the country faces a “deeply concerning situation” as the Omicron variant spreads rapidly, with case numbers doubling every two to three days in England.

    The UK said it had a total of 58,194 cases on Friday.

    “We know that we have the highest number of Covid infections across the UK recorded today since January 9,” when there were 59,937 cases, Gove told journalists after meeting leaders of UK regions.

    He added that 30 percent of reported cases in London are now the Omicron variant, while the virus was only identified in the UK two weeks ago.

    Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon warned that “we may be facing — indeed we may be starting to experience — a potential tsunami of infections”.

    The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said that if the trend continues, it expects Omicron to become the dominant variant in the UK by mid-December, with over one million infections by the end of this month. So far there have been 1,265 confirmed Omicron cases.

    The UKHSA also said that early analysis of around 500 people confirmed to be infected with Omicron showed that AstraZeneca and Pfizer jabs “provided much lower levels of protection against symptomatic infection”, in comparison to the Delta variant.

    A booster dose appeared to considerably increase this protection to 70 to 75 percent, it said, while cautioning such small sample sizes should be treated with caution.

    The UK has one of Europe’s highest death tolls from the virus, at 146,255, while death rates have not risen in the last week.

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday announced a range of tougher restrictions he called “Plan B”, including compulsory mask-wearing in museums, theatres and cinemas from Friday and guidance to work from home from Monday.

    From Wednesday, people will have to show Covid passes with proof of two jabs or a lateral flow test in order to attend events in crowded settings such as nightclubs and stadiums.

    The new regulations will be put to a debate and vote in the House of Commons next week but are expected to be approved despite opposition from some Tories.

  • Nigeria confirms three more COVID-19 deaths, 565 new cases

    Nigeria confirms three more COVID-19 deaths, 565 new cases

    Three more persons died from COVID-19 and 565 new cases were confirmed in Nigeria on Friday, as the country continues its race to contain the third wave of the pandemic.

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control said the new were spread across 17 states with Lagos accounting for most of them, followed by Rivers.

    Lagos, the epicentre of the pandemic in Nigeria, recorded 348 cases, almost five times more than the 70 fresh cases confirmed for Rivers.

    Akwa Ibom, where at least 19 Delta Variant cases have been confirmed, reported 45 new cases with Oyo State and the Federal Capital Territory recording 36 and 24 cases, respectively.

    Other states with new cases are Ekiti (15), Kwara (7), Ogun (7), Gombe (3), Anambra (2), Kaduna (2), Bayelsa (1), Cross River (1), Edo (1), Plateau (1), Kano (1), and Sokoto (1).

    The new cases take Nigeria’s total confirmed cases to 177,142. In all, 165,409 of those infected have recovered, while 2,181 people have died.

    Globally, more than 200 million cases of the pandemic have been confirmed with the death toll topping four million.

    A third wave of the pandemic, spurred by the more infectious Delta variant, has limited efforts by governments across the world to ease restrictions and boost economic activities which were grounded for the most part of last year. It has also hurt the global vaccination drive with the efficacy of some vaccines less when it comes to the variant.

    The resurgence of the pandemic has been more pronounced in the Asia-Pacific region where Thailand, Indonesia and Japan continued to see new records and the city of Melbourne entered yet another lockdown.

    Nigeria has, fortunately, continued to witness a low fatality rate, a development noted by experts.

    On Thursday, the World Health Organisation’s Country Representative for Nigeria, Dr Walter Kazadi, said the country’s fatality rate, which he put at 1.3 percent, was encouraging.

    Dr Kazadi commented on the country’s efforts in Abuja when he presented 26 ventilators and other items donated by WHO to Nigeria.

At 1.3 percent, the fatality rate is less than half the regional average.

    But the Federal Government, health authorities and experts remain concerned about the third wave of the pandemic, especially the Delta strain, which has been detected in five states and the FCT already.

    Their concerns are largely based on widespread COVID-19 protocol violations by citizens. The ongoing strike by resident doctors in the country has also increased concerns about personnel to combat the pandemic and other ailments in the country.

  • Nigeria records 155,417 COVID-19 cases in one year

    Nigeria records 155,417 COVID-19 cases in one year

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has recorded 341 new cases of Coronavirus (COVID-19, bringing the total number of infected people in the country to 155,417.

    The NCDC disclosed this on its official Twitter handle on Saturday.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that on February 27, 2020, Nigeria recorded its COVID-19 index case, believed to be the first in Sub-Saharan Africa.

    Till date, 155417 cases of the disease have been confirmed, while 133,256 patients have been discharged and 1,905 COVID-19 related deaths recorded in the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    In the past 24 hours, the NCDC has recorded three COVID-19 deaths, raising the total fatalities in Nigeria to 1,905.

    The Nigerian health agency said that the new infections were reported from 20 states and the FCT.

    According to the agency, the new cases were reported in Lagos-96; Rivers-41; Kaduna-33; Edo-21; Osun-20; Akwa Ibom 17 and the FCT-17.

    Ondo reported 15; Gombe-11; Kano-11; Imo-10; Ekiti and Kebbi had nine each; Kwara and Oyo state recorded eight each, while Borno had six; Enugu and Plateau. three each; Delta, Niger, and Ogun had one each.

    The NCDC stated that Saturday’s discharged cases included 319 community recoveries in Lagos State, 121 in Kaduna State and 38 in Rivers.

    The agency said that a multi-sectoral national Emergency Operations Centre (EOC), activated at Level 3, had continued to coordinate the national response activities in the country.

    The public health agency said that the number of active COVID-19 cases in the country currently stood at 20,183 in the last 24 hours.

  • Another six dead as Nigeria records 1588 fresh COVID-19 cases

    Another six dead as Nigeria records 1588 fresh COVID-19 cases

    Nigeria announced 1,588 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday, a few dozens fewer than the 1624 reported on Friday.

    According to the

    “>Nigeria Centre for Disease Control,

    918 people were discharged, while six died.

    Out of the discharged, 498 were community recoveries in Lagos, 64 in Kano and 54 in Plateau, NCDC said.

    The number of confirmed cases in Nigeria is now 139,242, out of 1,302,410 samples tested.

    Data released by NCDC also put the discharged at 112,557.

    The death toll increased to 1647, after five states reported six deaths in total.

    Oyo state reported two deaths to take its death toll to 89. Rivers with one fatality, now has 86 deaths.

    Plateau also reported one death, with its total death tally now 56.

    The death toll in Kano also crept up by one, to reach 90.

    Benue reported the sixth death, increasing overall death figure to 21.

    By sheer coincidence, Lagos reported 535 cases, the same number of infections it reported on Friday.

    It now has a total of 51,663 cases, more than a third of the national figure.

    Here is a breakdown for Saturday’s COVID-19 cases:

    Lagos-535
    Anambra-218
    Oyo-155
    FCT-150
    Kano-124
    Gombe-60
    Kaduna-49
    Ebonyi-48
    Plateau 46
    Akwa Ibom-39
    Niger-37
    Edo-33
    Katsina-23
    Rivers-18
    Taraba-15
    Nasarawa-14
    Ogun-11
    Delta-9
    Ekiti-2
    Jigawa-2

    139,242 confirmed
    112,557 discharged
    1,647 deaths

  • Second wave: Lagos records highest ever daily COVID-19 cases

    Second wave: Lagos records highest ever daily COVID-19 cases

    Lagos has set a new record in its COVID-19 grim statistics, posting a humongous 1,040 cases on Saturday.

    It was the highest daily count ever posted by the state that has been the epicentre of the pandemic since February last year.

    According to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, NCDC, Lagos has now registered 48,919 cases till date, while the national total stands at 130,557.

    In the breakdown of the cases, Lagos recorded 157 more cases than the combined total for 21 states and Abuja.

    Abuja that posted the second highest daily cases on Saturday registered 298, to take its tally to 16,863.

    As the NCDC reported, there was just one death from Ogun state, which took its toll to 43.

    The nation’s death toll went up to 1578.

    In sharp contrast, 27 deaths were posted for the country on Friday.

    The number of discharged also increased to 103,712, leaving 25, 617 active cases.

    On Saturday, 932 were discharged, 461 of them being community recoveries in Lagos.

    Here is the breakdown of the cases for Saturday:

    Lagos-1040
    FCT-298
    Anambra-86
    Rivers-54
    Taraba-45
    Ogun-42
    Oyo-40
    Akwa Ibom-38
    Sokoto-30
    Ebonyi-30
    Imo-28
    Kaduna-28
    Osun-27
    Kano-21
    Benue-19
    Edo-17
    Gombe-15
    Ekiti-9
    Delta-8
    Jigawa-3
    Kwara-2
    Bayelsa-2
    Plateau-1

  • Second wave: Lagos faces alarming Covid-19 infections, breaks daily record again

    Second wave: Lagos faces alarming Covid-19 infections, breaks daily record again

    Lagos State on Thursday posted 807 new cases of COVID-19, to break its former record and setting a new one.

    The Nigerian Centre for Disease Control, NCDC, had reported 1,565 new COVID-19 cases in Nigeria, with Lagos reporting 807 cases.

    The State broke the COVID-19 record in single day infections it set on January 5, 2021, when it reported 712 cases.

    Thursday’s cases in Lagos are the highest recorded by any state in a single day since the pandemic broke out in February 2020.

    Lagos posted more than half of the entire cases posted on Thursday, with Abuja coming a distant second with 236 cases.

    However, Nigeria’s 1,565 new cases of the virus on Thursday represented a little drop from the 1,664 cases posted on Wednesday, the highest so far by the nation since the onset of the pandemic.

    With today’s infections, total confirmed COVID-19 cases in Nigeria stood at 95,934 with 77,982 survivors discharged so far.

    The nation reported six deaths on Thursday, taking the national death toll to 1,330.

    Fresh cases were reported in 24 States and the Federal Capital Territory.

    See figures below

    Lagos-807
    FCT-236
    Kaduna-79
    Oyo-57
    Plateau-47
    Rivers-37
    Katsina-35
    Edo-30
    Sokoto-30
    Delta-26
    Kebbi-23
    Ondo-20
    Enugu-18
    Abia-17
    Ogun-17
    Benue-16
    Bayelsa-15
    Bauchi-14
    Niger-13
    Kano-10
    Borno-6
    Imo-5
    Ekiti-4
    Osun-2
    Jigawa-1

  • Second wave: Nigeria breaks daily record for Covid-19 cases; seven dead

    Second wave: Nigeria breaks daily record for Covid-19 cases; seven dead

    Nigeria posted a new level of daily COVID-19 cases on Monday, with record-setting 1,204 cases.

    Nigeria’s previous record was the 1,145 cases registered on 18 December, 2020.

    Till date, 91351 cases have been confirmed, 75699 cases have been discharged and 958,911 tests conducted.

    The new cases also saw Lagos, breaking its daily grim chart with 654 cases. The cumulative total for Lagos is 31,975.

    Lagos previous record was 642 cases, set on 1 January.

    According to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control the 1,204 cases came from 21 states and the Federal Capital of Abuja.

    Seven deaths were also recorded, with new death toll now 1,318.

    Three of the deaths occurred in Lagos, two in Sokoto, while Kebbi and Abia recorded one fatality each.

    Nigerian officials have warned citizens to observe all the necessary precautions as the second wave of COVID-19 goes on the rage.

    Here is a breakdown of the cases on Monday:

    Lagos-654
    FCT-200
    Plateau-60
    Kaduna-54
    Kano-40
    Rivers-30
    Edo-28
    Nasarawa-25
    Kebbi-19
    Bauchi-18
    Oyo-13
    Akwa Ibom-12
    Bayelsa-11
    Ogun-11
    Delta-9
    Abia-8
    Benue-5
    Imo
    Borno-2
    Sokoto-1
    Osun-1

  • U.S. records 277,000 COVID-19 cases in 24 Hours, sets new record

    U.S. records 277,000 COVID-19 cases in 24 Hours, sets new record

    The United States on Saturday saw its highest number yet of coronavirus cases recorded in one day, with more than 277,000 infections.

    The hardest-hit country in the world by the pandemic, the United States has marked 20.4 million cases overall and just under 350,000 deaths.

    Infections have been surging in recent months, with top US government scientist Anthony Fauci warning just days after Christmas that the worst of the pandemic may be yet to come, driving the country to a “critical point” as holiday travel spreads the virus.

    The country has floundered in its efforts to quell Covid-19, with its vaccination program beset by logistical problems and overstretched hospitals.

    More than 4.2 million people in the US have already received their first jabs, with 13 million doses distributed, but that falls well behind the 20 million inoculations that President Donald Trump’s administration promised by the end of 2020.

  • Nigeria’s COVID-19 cases surpass 50,000 with 593 new infections

    Nigeria’s COVID-19 cases surpass 50,000 with 593 new infections

    Nigeria’s COVID-19 caseload surpassed 50,000 mark on Wednesday as the nation records 593 new cases.

    The Nigerian Centre for Disease Control, NCDC, puts the nation’s overall infection at 50,488, with 37,304 recoveries and 985 deaths.

    In the last four days Nigeria has been recording increasing cases after more than two weeks of downturn.

    In the 593 infections recorded on Wednesday, Plateau State topples Lagos, ramping up 186 cases, with Lagos raking in 172 new cases.

    Plateau and Lagos record more than half of the cases churned in on Wednesday.

    According to NCDC, “till date, 50,488 cases have been confirmed, 37304 cases have been discharged and 985 deaths have been recorded in 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory.”

    It added that “the 593 new cases are reported from 16 states- Plateau (186), Lagos (172), FCT (62), Oyo (27), Delta (25), Rivers (20), Ondo (19), Edo (18), Kaduna (17), Enugu (12), Akwa Ibom (10), Ogun (7), Abia (6), Gombe (6), Kano (3) and Osun (3)”

    The total confirmed COVID-19 cases were derived from 363,331 tests conducted nationwide.

    Currently, the nation has 12,452 active cases of the virus to manage.

    How the States stand on Wednesday

    Plateau-186
    Lagos-172
    FCT-62
    Oyo-27
    Delta-25
    Rivers-20
    Ondo-19
    Edo-18
    Kaduna-17
    Enugu-12
    Akwa Ibom-10
    Ogun-7
    Abia-6
    Gombe-6
    Kano-3
    Osun-3

    50,488 confirmed
    37,304 discharged
    985 deaths