Health
COVID-19: FG Guided by Safety, Transparency in Mass Vaccination — Minister

The Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH), has says it is guided by principles of safety, efficacy, transparency and accountability in the COVID-19 mass vaccination campaign in the country.
The Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, gave the assurance on Monday in Abuja.
Ehanire spoke at the launch of the SCALES 3.
0 strategy for COVID-19 vaccination in the country organised by the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA).Newsmen, report that in November 2021, NPHCDA, introduced the SCALES strategy to rapidly increase COVID-19 vaccine coverage.
It was designed to expand access to COVID-19 vaccines outside the health facility.
The SCALES is an acronym for Service-delivery, Communication, Accountability, Logistics, Electronic reporting, and supportive Supervision for the ongoing COVID-19 vaccination.
Mass vaccination sites were established at all public places such as markets, parks, shopping malls, schools, mosques, and churches.
Although the government said that the strategy has proven to be effective in shoring up COVID-19 vaccination coverage, the proportion of fully vaccinated Nigerians is still low.
This is partly because the country is using two-dose vaccines.
Most Nigerians are reluctant to take their second dose for various reasons including fear of a repeat of the mild side effects they may have experienced with the first dose.
The SCALES strategy is using COVID-19 vaccination structures and resources to improve Routine Immunization (RI) coverage, with improved efficiency and reduced duplication of efforts by health care workers.
This is to ensure that controlling the transmission of COVID-19 does not become a fertile ground for the outbreak of childhood vaccine-preventable diseases.
It became imperative for the government to launch the SCALES 2.0 Strategy.
It entails the integration of COVID-19 vaccination with childhood routine Immunisation for eligible adults and children, leveraging mass vaccination campaigns, routine immunisation fixed sessions, outreach services and Mobile services.
The SCALES 2.0 was aimed at providing an opportunity for the single dose COVID-19 vaccine to be rolled out in the states.
The SCALES 3.0 strategy is an intensive campaign focused on ramping up uptake of COVID-19 vaccines, childhood vaccines and other primary health care services at public and private health facilities.
According to Ehanire, no vaccine will be allowed to enter any vaccination site without due authentication and safety verification.
He said that the government would never compromise on vaccine safety and vaccination standards.
“Let me assure all Nigerians that the Federal Government remains committed to the provision of safe and efficacious COVID-19 vaccines in the country backed with accountability and transparency.
“Every COVID-19 vaccine in Nigeria is tracked by National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), to ensure quality and potency across the supply chain,” he said.
The minister said that the campaign can only succeed if there was mass mobilisation of Nigerians.
“We are therefore calling on state governors, local governments chairmen, traditional and religious leaders, the media, and every Nigerian to lend their support in mobilising the unvaccinated eligible individuals.
“They should register and get vaccinated or walk into the nearest vaccination centres and get vaccinated.
“However, total performance still falls short of our desire, because as of Wednesday, only 24.4 per cent of eligible population had been fully vaccinated.
“Only three states: Nasarawa, Jigawa and Kano have a vaccination coverage of over 50 per cent, leaving 34 states performing sub-optimally in vaccination coverage,” he said.
The minister added that there was need for the team to refine the current SCALES 2.0 strategy to accelerate COVID-19 vaccination.
He advised them to identify enablers that were unique to each state and deploy them as state-specific strategies to be termed, “SCALES 3.0.
“The strategy will be anchored on an intensive three months campaign,” he said.
Ehanire said that the strategy was poised to curb the spread of the COVID-19 virus and gain the desired herd immunity as quickly as possible.
“While we are glad that Nigeria is ranked among the high-performing countries in terms of COVID-19 vaccine roll out, we cannot but acknowledge the fact that we still have a lot of work to do.
“Taking the COVID-19 vaccine is not just an act of self-protection, but also a civic duty to curtail the spread of the virus.
“Every one of us has a critical role to play in the effort to stop the virus from spreading.
“I, therefore, urge you to get vaccinated and ensure every eligible person around you is vaccinated,” he urged.
Meanwhile, the Executive Director, NPHCDA, Dr Faisal Shuaib, said all of the COVID-19 vaccines administered in the country were safe.
Shuaib said that 25 million eligible Nigerians had received their full doses and 40 million had received at least a single dose.
According to him, ”that is enough evidence of the safety of the vaccine.”
Shuaib urged Nigerians to get vaccinated against COVID-19, saying, ”it is the best way to avoid severe infection and the risk of spreading to others.”
NAN recalls that more than 12.4 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses had been administered worldwide, a gain of 100 million, with the world’s population of 7.9 billion, according to Bloomberg tracking.
China leads with 3.4 billion doses administered and a 92.4 per cent one-shot vaccination rate among the 1.5 billion population, the most in the world.
India is second with 2 billion among the 1.4 billion population and a 74.1 per cent.
Broken down by world regions, Asia-Pacific, Latin American and U.S.-Canada have administered at least one dose to 80 per cent of the population.
Europe is at 69 per cent, Middle East at 57 per cent and Africa at 26 per cent, according to the New York Times tracking.
Newsmen report that as at Monday, Nigeria’s total confirmed infections were 261,885, 255,481 discharged and 3,147 deaths.
(NAN)
Health
Experts Seek Unified Action against Cervical Cancer

Torough David, Abuja
Stakeholders across health sectors have called for urgent, coordinated investment in prevention, equitable HPV vaccine access and harmonized health data to accelerate progress towards elimination of cervical cancer across Africa.
They made the call on Wednesday, during a panel session with the Theme ”Accelerating Cervical Cancer Elimination in Nigeria, From Policy to Practice”.
Head of Division, Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health, Africa CDC, Dr Fidele Ngabo Gaga, highlighted its efforts to harmonise and aggregate health data across all 55 African Union (AU) Member States.
“We are developing a continent-wide data-sharing agreement and centralised repository to support data upstreaming and policy development.
“The goal is to present unified data at AU Summits, helping countries make evidence-based decisions,” Gaga said:
Prof. Imran Morhason-Bello, a leading gynaecologic oncologist from the University College Hospital, Ibadan, made a compelling financial case for prioritising prevention over treatment.
“Screening just between 2023 and 2027 will cost Nigeria N351 billion.
“But treating 10,000 women with invasive cervical cancer from 2027 to 2030 could cost us N1.4 trillion. Prevention is not only more humane, it is far more cost-effective,” he said.
Morhason-Bello also addressed innovations such as self-sampling for HPV testing, already being implemented in Nigeria through implementation science.
“Women receive a self-sampling kit, return it the same day, and positive results are treated before noon.
“It is happening in markets and schools. It is not a pilot, it is real.
“We have even developed a mobile app (available in multiple languages and offline) to guide women through the self-sampling process, increasing accessibility in low-resource settings,” he said.
External Affairs Director for MSD, Sub-Saharan Africa, Vuyo Mjekula, addressed one of the most common myths around the HPV vaccine rollout.
“Let me be clear, there is no shortage of HPV vaccines. If anyone tells you otherwise, call me directly. The real issue is equity and strategic allocation,” she said.
Mjekula recalled early proposals that included boys in HPV vaccination efforts, but warned that without careful planning, some countries would be left out entirely.
She called for one national policy that ensures equitable access to vaccines and services, especially for the most vulnerable girls.
“This is not about science alone. A dose costing N125,000 may be affordable to some, but to a woman in a rural village, it is like N10 million.
“If she must choose between survival and feeding her children, the answer is obvious,” she said.
She applauded Nigeria’s progress, noting that since the national rollout, the number of vaccinated girls across the continent has more than doubled, driven primarily by Nigeria’s leadership.
Mjekula also made an appeal for multi-sectoral collaboration, urging the involvement of private sector giants, from banks to telecoms and philanthropic foundations.
“Health is not just the government’s responsibility. We need to imagine beyond the healthcare we can afford with public funds and work toward the healthcare we want as a society,” she said.
She also called for a business case for investment in HPV prevention and cancer control, saying the task force must work hand-in-hand with all stakeholders.
“Let us go far together. If you want to go quickly, go alone. But if you want to go far, go together,” she said.
The symposium concluded with a call to integrate cancer screening into primary health care services.
It also called for the deployment of cost-effective technologies like self-sampling, addressing myths around vaccine shortages, and ensuring gender-sensitive, data-informed policies.
As Nigeria and the continent advance towards achieving the WHO 90-70-90 cervical cancer elimination targets, the message from experts was clear: “Let us do big and let us do it together”.
Health
89% of Infants Vaccinated Globally in 2024, WHO, UNICEF Warn of Risks

The United Nations agencies have reported that in 2024, approximately 89 per cent of infants worldwide, about 115 million children, received at least one dose of the diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTP) vaccine.This update comes from new national immunisation coverage data released on July 14 by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
Compared to 2023, an additional 171,000 children received at least one vaccine dose, and one million more completed the full three-dose DTP series. While these gains are modest, they reflect ongoing global efforts to protect children in spite of rising challenges.However, nearly 20 million infants still missed at least one DTP vaccine dose in 2024, including 14.3 million “zero-dose” children who never received any vaccine.This figure exceeds the 2024 target by four million, putting global immunisation goals outlined in the Immunisation Agenda 2030 at risk.WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus emphasised the life-saving power of vaccines, stating, “It’s encouraging to see an increase in children vaccinated, but we still have much work to do. “Cuts in aid and vaccine misinformation threaten to reverse decades of progress.”He highlighted factors contributing to under-vaccination, including limited healthcare access, supply disruptions, conflict, and misinformation.“Data from 195 countries show 131 have consistently reached at least 90 per cent coverage with the first DTP dose since 2019. Yet, progress is stalling in 47 countries, with 22 nations seeing declines after previously meeting this target.”Tedros warned that conflict and humanitarian crises significantly undermined vaccination efforts.“A quarter of the world’s infants live in 26 fragile or conflict-affected countries, which account for half of all unvaccinated children globally.“In these areas, unvaccinated children rose from 3.6 million in 2019 to 5.4 million in 2024, highlighting an urgent need for integrated immunisation in humanitarian responses.“Immunisation coverage in 57 low-income countries supported by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, improved in 2024, reducing the number of under-vaccinated children by about 650,000.“Yet, some upper-middle- and high-income countries face early signs of declining coverage, which increases the risk of disease outbreaks.”UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell welcomed the progress but warned millions of children remained vulnerable to preventable diseases.She called for urgent action to overcome barriers such as shrinking health budgets, fragile systems, misinformation, and conflict-related access issues.Russell noted encouraging expansions in vaccines against HPV, meningitis, pneumococcal disease, polio, and rotavirus.“Global HPV vaccine coverage among eligible adolescent girls rose from 17 per cent in 2019 to 31 per cent in 2024, although it remains far below the 90 per cent target set for 2030.”Gavi CEO Dr Sania Nishtar added that while lower-income countries protected more children than ever, population growth, fragility, and conflict continued to hamper equity in vaccination efforts.She highlighted improvements in measles coverage but cautioned that it still fell short of the 95 per cent threshold required to prevent outbreaks.“Measles outbreaks nearly doubled from 33 countries in 2022 to 60 in 2024.”Nishtar stressed that funding shortfalls, instability, and rising misinformation threaten to stall or reverse progress, risking increased deaths from vaccine-preventable diseases.WHO and UNICEF called on governments and partners to close funding gaps for Gavi’s 2026–2030 strategic cycle to protect millions of children.They also urged strengthening immunisation efforts in conflict-affected and fragile settings, and prioritising locally led strategies and increased domestic investment in primary healthcare systems.Additionally, the agencies emphasised the need to counter vaccine misinformation through evidence-based campaigns.They also called for greater investment in robust data collection and disease surveillance systems to guide effective immunisation programmes. (NAN)Health
Nigeria Records 145 Lassa Fever Deaths, as Fatality Rate Increases

Nigeria has recorded 145 deaths from Lassa fever as of 2025 Epidemiological Week 25, with a case fatality rate (CFR) of 18.6 percent.
The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC), disclosed this in its latest report via its official website during the weekend in Abuja.
The NCDC said the week 25 figure marks an increase from 17.
6 percent reported for the same period in 2024.The report, which covered the week of June 16–22, revealed that 781 confirmed cases were reported out of 5,943 suspected cases across 20 states and 101 Local Government Areas (LGAs).
In the current reporting week, 10 new confirmed cases were reported in Ondo and Edo states with a slight increase from the eight cases recorded the previous week.
According to NCDC, 91 per cent of all confirmed cases in 2025 were reported from five states of Ondo (31%), Bauchi (24%), Edo (17%), Taraba (16%) and Ebonyi (3%).
It said that the disease continues to affect young adults predominantly, within the 21 to 30 age group most impacted. Males were slightly more affected, with a male-to-female ratio of 1:0.8.
The Nigerian public health agency, said that despite a decline in the overall number of suspected and confirmed cases compared to 2024, the rise in CFR is raising concerns among health experts.
The agency highlighted late presentation of cases, high treatment costs, and poor health-seeking behaviour as contributing factors to the increased fatality.
It said that no new infections among health workers were recorded in the reporting week, though 23 healthcare workers have been affected cumulatively this year.
The NCDC said it is currently in collaboration with partners, such as the World Health Organisation (WHO), the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (US CDC), ALIMA, the Institute of Human Virology Nigeria (IHVN) and others.
The collaborations, it stated further, have intensified multi-sectoral response efforts to combat the spread of Lassa fever.
It said that, as part of these efforts, Integrate clinical trials are currently ongoing in Ondo State, with After Action Reviews (AARs) conducted in both Ondo and Ebonyi to evaluate the response to the outbreak.
The agency said that clinician sensitisation, community engagement activities and environmental response campaigns have been carried out in identified hotspot areas.
In addition, the NCDC said that it has deployed 10 national rapid response teams to various states, adopting a one health approach to disease control.
To further strengthen infection prevention and control (IPC), the agency launched an IPC e-learning platform and distributed updated Viral Hemorrhagic Fever (VHF) guidelines to health facilities across the country.
The agency said that other efforts also included active contact tracing, surveillance, media engagement and geospatial risk mapping, alongside regular webinars for clinicians and capacity-building sessions nationwide.
The NCDC identified key challenges including poor environmental sanitation and low community awareness, particularly in high-burden LGAs.
It also said that sustained efforts were needed to curb the fatality rate, ensure early detection, and improve public health outcomes.
The NCDC advised Nigerians to maintain proper hygiene, avoid contact with rodents, and seek medical help promptly when experiencing symptoms such as fever, sore throat, vomiting, or unexplained bleeding.
Lassa fever, which was first identified in 1969 in Lassa, Borno, is endemic in Nigeria, with outbreaks occurring annually.
Symptoms range from mild fever and joint pain to severe bleeding from the nose, mouth, and gastrointestinal tract.
The disease is fatal in about 20 percent of cases, particularly when treatment is delayed.
Across West Africa, hundreds of thousands are infected annually, experiencing symptoms such as fever, vomiting and, in severe cases, bleeding.
One of the most troubling complications is hearing loss, which affects about 25 percent of survivors.
The estimated fatality rate is one per cent, but during outbreaks, mortality can rise significantly, particularly among pregnant women and healthcare workers.
In spite of its significant health impact, Lassa fever remains one of the most neglected diseases, with limited resources allocated to its preventions and treatments.
Currently, no licensed vaccines exist, although around 20 candidates are in development, with the most advanced in Phase IIa clinical trials.