Serveur d'exploration COVID et hydrochloroquine

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The COVID-19 era: the view from Nigeria.

Identifieur interne : 000107 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000106; suivant : 000108

The COVID-19 era: the view from Nigeria.

Auteurs : O O Oleribe [Nigeria] ; P. Oskouipour [États-Unis] ; O. Nwanyanwu [États-Unis] ; S D Taylor-Robinson [Royaume-Uni]

Source :

RBID : pubmed:33118021

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

If we were told that one day the entire world would take its guidance for managing a health crisis from empirical thought, nobody would have believed it. However, with the December 2019 arrival of COVID-19 in China, the world subsequently went into a frenzied state that resulted in the widespread adoption of untested strategies or potential cures; circumstantial evidence provided without randomized control trials (RCTs) was published rapidly and widely considered the gold standard in medical research and therapeutics. Nigeria and much of the rest of the world blindly adopted treatments like chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine and various prevention strategies, often without monitoring the efficacy of these treatment and social control strategies. COVID-19 provided Nigeria a critical opportunity to create or strengthen its national laboratory system by building up its Level 3 laboratories in all parts of the country with the capability to perform PCR tests and viral isolation. There was also an opportunity to establish hospitals in every region of a sufficient standard to reduce the numbers of Nigerians travelling abroad to seek medical treatment; to invest in building capacity to develop antiviral medications and vaccines in Nigeria, and to ensure better international health policies. Rather, Nigerian leaders, government and health managers decided (like most other nations of the world) to shut down the society using isolationist policies that were not necessarily tailored to local needs. Despite adopting these methods, COVID-19 cases continued to skyrocket in Nigeria. In the future, before adopting such broad sweeping policies, there should be local tailoring to assess their effectiveness in different communities. Given that the country has much experience in controlling Lassa and Marburg Fever outbreaks, Nigeria should lead by developing new strategies, new protocols and new local guidelines, based on validated and reproducible studies to ensure that the public health authorities are not caught unaware by any new outbreaks of emerging or remerging diseases.

DOI: 10.1093/qjmed/hcaa297
PubMed: 33118021
PubMed Central: PMC7665780


Affiliations:


Links toward previous steps (curation, corpus...)


Le document en format XML

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