2,500 new cases discovered in Nigeria yearly, says Leprosy mission

The Leprosy Mission Nigeria has disclosed that nearly 2, 500 new cases of leprosy are discovered annually in Nigeria.

The National Director of the mission in Nigeria, Dr Sunday Udo, made the disclosure at the mission’s Open Minds Project close-out meeting on Tuesday in Abuja.

The Open Minds project is a four-year mental health project initiative focused on young people affected by leprosy and Neglected Tropical Diseases.

The project was implemented in the FCT, Kebbi, and Sokoto states respectively.

Mr Udo said that for over 10 years, the mission had found and equally treated thousands of leprosy cases in the country, adding that 90 per cent of the Nigerian population remained protected from the disease.

He said, “TLM works in about 30 countries across the world, including Nigeria, and every year, we find approximately 2,500 new people that have leprosy in this country. We work in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Health and in partnership with the National Leprosy Control Programme that we support. Over the last 10 years, we have found thousands of cases and treated equally that large number, but the interesting thing is that there is a large backlog of those who have already developed disabilities. They run into hundreds of thousands of people, and what we do is to support them with care after cure.’’

Mr Udo said that the mission had raised awareness on the impact of leprosy on the mental health of affected persons and the need to end stigma and discrimination.

He said that the mission had also provided those with disabilities from leprosy with disabilities services and complication management from the disease across different referral centres.

The TLMN country leader also said that the mission was supporting affected persons with livelihood, stating that due to stigma, many of those affected had lost their sources of livelihoods and needed such support.

He sensitised Nigerians that leprosy was not a death sentence, adding that it was a curable bacterial infection such as tuberculosis curable with the right treatment and medication.

According to him, tuberculosis and leprosy are curable, and there are antibiotics given and once the sufferers take the medications within six to 12 months they will be fine.

He advised the public to eat well and avoid crowded areas, boost their immunity, and maintain a healthy lifestyle to be healthy and remain immune to all kinds of diseases, including leprosy and other bacterial infections.

Mr Udo urged the Federal Government to continue to support the mission and the national leprosy programmes and technical working group to live up to its mandates.

Programme Officer, TLM Great Britain, Heather Saranne, lauded the leprosy mission in Nigeria for its valuable impact on the lives of those affected in the country.

Ms Saranne said that the Nigerian team was valuable globally, and the British TLM would continue to work with the mission to carry out programmes that would directly improve the lives of affected persons.

She said, “We have been in communication with the team at the leprosy mission in Nigeria because we can’t do this work without them, and because they do all the hard work. We have reviewed their performance against achievement and towards the target and the budget; we have done project visits with partners. We have met with projects clients to hear about the things that have gone well. We will work together to adopt any of those projects activities accordingly, we also act as the liaison between the project and the relief that will be reporting along with the team here in Nigeria. The relationship that we have with the leprosy mission in Nigeria is so valuable that we can’t put into

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