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NCDC reveals when Kano, Kaduna, Jos, Maiduguri testing centres will be ready for operations

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The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has revealed when four new molecular diagnostic laboratories for testing the COVID-19 in Kano, Kaduna, Jos and Maiduguri will be ready for operations.

Director-General of the (NCDC), Chikwe Ihekweazu, during the sixth joint national briefing of the Presidential Taskforce Force (PTF) on COVID-19 on Monday in the city of Abuja said that the laboratories will be ready by the end of this week.

He said: “We are working to activate two labs in Kano and Kaduna at the same time from tomorrow (Tuesday), and two labs in Jos and Maiduguri from Thursday. By the end of this week, we will have four new laboratories in Kano, Kaduna, Jos and Maiduguri fully active. We are solely assessing every state in the country, but we are starting with states that we already know have a baseline capacity to build on.

“The five key targets we are setting for our teams in Abuja and Lagos are to make sure that the collection of samples from symptomatic individuals happens within eight hours of notification of the state team.

READ ALSO: NCDC apologises for error in coronavirus report, says total cases 209, not 210

“Secondly, that the turnaround time for testing and resulting will be less than 24 hours. This is the case because sometimes samples come in late in the evening and have to be resulted the next day. The third is we plan to test 200 samples today in Lagos and 100 samples today in Abuja by the end of this week.

“Number four is to isolate patients in less than six hours after they have received a positive result at the state level and we plan to isolate every confirmed case. So, we will measure ourselves with percentages on each of these indicators and use that to improve the effectiveness of the response.

“In addition to case finding, the second most important thing is contact tracing, that is, listing all the contacts and making sure we find all of them. There used to be a lot more when the flights were still coming in but now each case would have about 30 to 40 contacts to follow up,” the DG of the NCDC added.

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