Health
World AIDS Day: 45,000 Persons on Anti-retroviral Drugs in Delta

Executive Secretary, Delta State Agency for Control of HIV and AIDs (DELSACA) Dr John Osuyali, yesterday said no fewer than 45, 000 HIV/AIDS patients were placed on treatment in the state.
Osuyali stated this at a ceremony in Asaba to mark this year’s World AIDs Day with the theme, “United to End AIDS in the midst of COVID-19.
”He said with 45,000 people placed on treatment as at Nov.
30, the agency had covered over 75 per cent of HIV positive persons in the state.He said that the result of the 2018 survey indicated that no fewer than 63,000 persons were HIV positive in the state.
Osuyali said that the agency attained th feat of 75 per cent coverage due to the commitment of the state government and support from partner agencies and organisations.
The executive secretary said the agencies and organisations worked assiduously during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic lockdown to achieve result.
He said that from the rate of the coverage, there would be no new cases of HIV in Delta by 2030, adding that before then, every person in the state was expected to have known his/her status.
Osuyali called on the people to explore the opportunity provided by the agency to get tested, adding that testing centres had been provided in all the 25 Local Government Areas of the state.
The executive secretary said that the agency and its partners adopted a proactive strategy which made it possible to test and treat people at home during the lockdown.
“December 1, is a day set aside to create awareness among the population to remind them that HIV is still with us and to identify with people living with the virus.
“On the theme, you are all aware of the COVID-19 pandemic that ravaged the world and is still ravaging the world this year. In the midst of it, we are still trying to survive managing the HIV/AIDs,” he said.
He said that COVID-19 lockdown provided the agency the opportunity to reach people at their homes and adopt strategies that really worked for it.
Osuyali said DELSACA had exceeded the target set for it by Gov. Ifeanyi Okowa to find all the people that have contracted HIV in the state and place them on treatment.
“As at Dec. 31, 2019, we have 22,700 people on treatment, it took us close to 15 years to generate this figure.
“As I speak to you now, in less than 11 months (January to November 2020) we had 45, 000 people on treatmen., That is 100 per cent achievement.
“The beauty of it is that all those on treatment now are all virally suppressed; they cannot transmit the virus to any other person,” he said.
On his part, Dr Eugene Onu, State Team Lead, CARITAS, a partner organisation, said Delta was placed on red state with high HIV prevalence of about 1.9 per cent.
He, however, said that due to the support from the state government and other partners, a significant success had been recorded in checking the menace.
“We are hopeful that the next survey in Delta state will witness significant reduction,” he said.
Also, Hope Nwadishi, Coordinator, Koyenum Immalah Foundation, a partner, said despite COVID-19 pandemic, there was need to preach the message of prevention and to help those who already tested positive.
“This is why we have all gathered here today united and in one voice to sensitise people to know the status not just here in Delta but across the world,” he said.
Health
NAFDAC Intensifies Regulatory, Sensitization Activities in Yobe

The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) says it intensified regulatory and public sensitization activities across Yobe in the first half of 2025.
Mr. Lawan Dadingelma, Yobe Coordinator of NAFDAC, made this known in an interview on Wednesday in Damaturu.
Dadingelma said the agency embarked on various campaigns and enforcement actions to ensure public safety and compliance with regulatory standards.
He said that the office carried out sensitisation exercises at the fruit and vegetable markets in Damaturu and Gashua, warning against the use of calcium carbide for ripening fruits and vegetables.
He said that the public was also sensitised on the dangers of using harmful chemicals to preserve agricultural produce such as beans, groundnuts, millet, and other food items.
Dadingelma said that the agency equally held meetings with associations of water and bakery producers to promote adherence to safety standards.
He added that the agency conducted awareness sessions on good warehousing practices for drinks and soft drinks.
“NAFDAC intensified regulatory monitoring activities in Damaturu, Potiskum, Gashua, and Geidam Local Government Areas, focusing on water production and bakeries.
“We also held an engagement with herbal product manufacturers in the state and sensitised local rice millers in Potiskum on best practices.
“Sanctions were imposed on patent medicine vendors found violating regulations, while drug hawkers across the state were similarly penalised.
“The agency also engaged NGOs, including the Society for Family Health, to enhance collaborative public health advocacy,” he said.
Dadingelma pointed out that the efforts were part of their mandate to safeguard public health and ensure that all regulated products met required safety standards. (NAN)
Health
Flooding: Monarch Introduces Weekly Environmental Sanitation

The Paramount Ruler of all Awori-speaking people, Oba Sulaiman Adekunle Bamigbade, Ayodele III, has directed residents of estates and communities within his domain to commence weekly environmental sanitation to mitigate the risk of flooding.
In a letter dated June 11, 2025, addressed to leaders and residents of various estates and communities under his jurisdiction, Oba Bamigbade stated that the decision was in response to predictions of heavy rainfall and potential flooding in the coming months.
According to the letter, which was made available to newsmen and signed by the monarch himself, the move aligns with recent warnings by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMET), which forecasted flooding in several states across the country due to expected intense rainfall.
“In light of the recent flooding predictions issued by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMET), it has become imperative for communities within our domain to take proactive steps towards safeguarding our environment and the wellbeing of our residents,” the monarch stated.
“To this end, I am calling for a mandatory weekly sanitation exercise across all estates within the Isheri Estates Community,” he added.
During the weekly exercise, residents are expected to clear drains, de-silt gutters, and properly dispose of domestic waste, among other activities to ensure a clean and flood-free environment.
Oba Bamigbade emphasized that there would be strict monitoring to ensure compliance, noting that he would personally visit estates and communities to assess adherence.
He further stated that the palace and its surrounding areas would take the lead in the exercise and that information regarding the sanitation directive would be disseminated to the grassroots to ensure widespread awareness.
The monarch’s initiative is part of a broader community effort to promote environmental responsibility and prevent avoidable disasters during the rainy season.
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Health
Foundation Sponsors Urology Surgery for 3,000 Vulnerable Patients in Katsina

No fewer than 3,000 vulnerable patients have benefited from the Alhaji Dahiru Mangal Foundation’s urology surgery intervention in Katsina State.
Alhaji Mangal, a philanthropist, has spent about N80 million since inception of the sponsored surgery project in the state.
Husaaini Kabir, a Board of Trustees (BOT) member of Mangal Foundation disclosed this during the launch of the exercise in Katsina on Saturday.
He explained that urology was part of healthcare that deals with diseases of the urinary tract (kidneys, ureters, bladder and urethra).
Kabir said that since the commencement of the exercise, no fewer than 3,000 vulnerable patients have benefited in about 10 exercises conducted previously in the state.
According to him, about N20 million has been earmarked to sponsor no fewer than 100 patients during the second quarter of the year.
He noted that drugs would be provided free for those whose condition did not require surgery after being checked.
Kabir disclosed that the exercise was part of the foundation’s Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), aimed at giving back to the society, especially to the less privileged.
The BOT member added that people from different villages within the state, neighbouring states and also from Niger Republic, were equally benefiting from the gesture.
He said that the objective was to alleviate the burden of healthcare costs on the most vulnerable people, as many of them struggled to meet basic needs.
Kabir said the foundation had engaged the best medical team, adding that patients could also be screened at the Amadi Rimi Orthopaedic Hospital, in Batagarawa Local Government Area of the state.
He said: “The foundation has engaged the best medical team and procured high quality drugs and medical equipment for the surgery.
“The foundation is exclusively for empowerment, development, educational, charitable purposes and for supporting the poor and vulnerable in the area of healthcare and economic skill.”
He revealed that the foundation, which was established in 2016, had sponsored eye, hernia, and hydrocele surgical operations for thousands of vulnerable patients.
Responding, a beneficiary and staff of Katsina State Polytechnic, Malam Adamu Aliyu, commended the sponsor, saying that he was happy to be one of the beneficiaries.
He said that it was quite a relief as his meagre salary could not afford him the surgery.
Aliyu and other beneficiaries called on government, private organisations, and other wealthy individuals to emulate the gesture extended by the foundation.