“This year, as of 29th May 2022, a total of 21 confirmed cases with one death have been reported from 9 states and the FCT - Adamawa (5), Lagos (4), Bayelsa (2), Delta (2), Cross River (2), FCT (2), Kano (2), Imo (1), Rivers (1),” NCDC said.
“The death was reported in a 40-year-old patient who had underlying co-morbidity and was on immunosuppressive medications,” the agency added.
An ongoing outbreak of monkeypox was confirmed on May 6, beginning with a British resident who, after traveling to Nigeria, where the disease is endemic, presented symptoms consistent with monkeypox on April 29. The resident returned to the United Kingdom on 4 May, creating the country's index case of the outbreak.
From 18 May onwards, cases were reported from an increasing number of countries and regions, predominantly in Europe, but also in North and South America, Western Asia, and Australia. 334 cases had been confirmed as of May 26.
The origin of several of the cases of monkeypox in the United Kingdom is unknown. Some monitors saw community transmission taking place in the London area as of mid-May. Further cases of the virus were reported in North East and South East England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
Monkeypox is a viral infection that manifests a week or two after exposure with fever and other non-specific symptoms, and then produces a rash that can last for a couple of weeks before usually clearing up. In infections before the current outbreak, between one and three people out of a hundred known infections have died. Cases in children are more likely to be severe. (ILKHA)