Five Nigerian pilgrims die in Saudi Arabia

Five Nigerian pilgrims die in Saudi Arabia

by Joseph Anthony
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The National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON), on Tuesday confirmed the death of five Nigerian pilgrims in Saudi Arabia.

Dr Ibrahim Kana, Chairman, National Medical Team, released the figure Tuesday in Madinah from the commissionโ€™s  National Medical Team Electronic Health Medical Records.

โ€œSo far, Nigeria has lost five pilgrims including three females and two males; out of which one died in Madina while the remaining four died in the city of Makkah.

โ€œThey all died of various illnesses including heart and lung diseases.

โ€œRecords shows that so far in both Makkah and Madina, we have made 10, 485 diagnosis with Makkah accounting for over 60 per cent.

โ€œAdditionally, 108 referrals were made to various Saudi Arabian hospitals after keeping 45 pilgrims on observation for variety of illnesses in the four facilities in Madina and another five in Makkah.

โ€œIn order to ameliorate suffering of pilgrims, all the clinics are located within a stone throw to pilgrimsโ€™ accommodation in both Makkah and Madina,โ€ he stated.

Over 150 million drugs had been consumed by Nigerian pilgrims at no cost to them, the record showed.

โ€œThe National Hajj Commission of Nigeria prepared a drug forecast for the entire operation, including drugs for HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis, donated by the Federal Ministry of Health.

โ€œThe remaining was procured by the commission, both onshore and offshore, following government due process.

โ€œIn terms of wellbeing of pilgrims so far on the medical side, we are yet to encounter any serious situation or potential outbreak of any disease, except for the extreme temperatures.

โ€œWe admonish our pilgrims to stay indoors as much as possible.

โ€œIf they must go out, they should cultivate the use of umbrellas and consume plenty of cold water,โ€ he said.

Regarding concerns of the deadly Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Corona Virus (MERS-CoV), Kana said that pilgrimโ€™s were strongly advised to stay away from camels which were the reservoir and vector for the transmission of the disease.

โ€œWe appeal to pilgrims to eat healthy and not patronise illegal food vendors to prevent cases of gastroenteritis as a result of food poisoning.

โ€œSimilarly, pilgrims are strongly advised not to consume stale foods which get easily contaminated as a result of the high temperatures.โ€

He also advised pilgrims to attend the health centres opened for them, reminding them that they were free to make use of the free services and called on the health personnel to be cautious and humane to โ€œthe guests of Allah.โ€

Kana said that all the NAHCON clinics were fully computerised, โ€œtherefore, pilgrims with the habit of patronising clinics just to receive drugs would not be able to do that this time.โ€

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