The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), has intensified screening for Ebola and other communicable diseases following the recent outbreak of the disease.
FAAN also said screenings never stopped at any of the airports to detect any communicable diseases including Ebola since its first outbreak in 2014.
FAAN said it decided to increase the degree of the screening after the outbreak of the disease again in the Democratic Republic of Congo which has left 27 people dead.
The Nation monitored the screening process of international passengers from Kigali on board RwandAir and Ethiopian airline.
The temperature scanners installed at both the departure and arrival points at the International wing of the airports has two televisions to check the rise in temperature of passengers alongside handheld scanners.
The Nation observed that the temperature was set at 36.9 degree and an official explained that any temperature higher than the one set would trigger off an alarm which would cause the officials to do a secondary check.
At the arrival points, travel history of passengers were checked through their passport, the vaccination cards to check if the passengers received Cerebral Spinal Meningitis (CSM) vaccine , Polio and yellow fever vaccines.
FAAN also said members of the public have no reason to panic adding that adequate measures have been put in place.
Speaking on the screening, the Regional Manager of FAAN, Sani Mahmud said: โWe are at the alert phase of the outbreak. Since the first outbreak in 2014, we never stopped checking our passengers. They were always undergoing screening.โ
He also said the airport has not recorded any case of Ebola since the recent outbreak.
Also speaking on the measures put in place, the
Deputy General Manager and Head of Aviation Medical Clinics for FAAN, Doctor Adamu Adamu said the airport has also upgraded it hygiene.
On measures put in place at the airport to curb entry of Ebola and other communicable diseases, Adamu said: โRight now, we have public health emergency contingency plan at the airport which we have activated.
โWe are at the alert phase now and we are looking at rise in temperature, travel history basically and we have upgraded our sanitation generally at the airport in terms of toilets, we have sanitizers installed at different areas to ensure that passengers that come into Nigeria have facilities to clean up their hands and also washing facilities at the toilet. We also have public health messaging .
โWe are sending out information on our Port Health system to the airport on how to prevent communicable diseases because there is an ongoing Ebola outbreak outside the country and we are just trying to make sure that we donโt have an outbreak within the country.
โWe are doing this in conjunction with Port Health Services of ministry of healthโ, he said.
On if anyone with high temperature has been detected so far, he said: โIf the scanner detects anyone, the alarm would go off. The scanners have alarm that flags off any temperature that is above the threshold that we set but we have not had any major case of public concern.
He also the scanner have the capacity to capture children.
On the adequacy of the scanners, he said: โWe have one at the International arrival and another one at the International departure.
โAll the internationals airports in Nigeria have it presently. We have in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt and Kano. Right now, we are focusing on international airports so as to prevent importation.โ
He added that the bulk of the work is for airport officials to be vigilant to detect anyone with any symptoms and imported hygiene.