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Meningitis Outbreak Kills 33 Children in Sokoto as Cases Hit 256

Claudia Kane
· · 3 min read
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Outbreak spreads across eight LGAs

Thirty-three children are dead and 256 suspected cases have been recorded across eight local government areas in Sokoto State, following a cerebrospinal meningitis outbreak that officials say has been spreading for about a month.

Sokoto State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Faruk Abubakar, confirmed the figures on Wednesday during an advocacy meeting with district heads. The meeting was originally about maternal and child health — organised by the state’s Primary Healthcare Development Agency with Sightsavers and the Chigari Foundation — but the meningitis crisis took over the room.

The hardest-hit areas: Sabon Birni LGA with 63 cases, Wamakko with 60, Shagari with 51, Tambuwal with 33, and Dange Shuni with 26. Kebbe recorded 16 cases, while Bodinga, Gada, and Kware recorded smaller numbers.

Dying before they reach help

Abubakar said most deaths happened inside communities, before patients ever made it to a health facility. The pattern is grim but familiar in this part of the country: families wait too long, sometimes believing the illness has spiritual causes, and by the time they seek medical help it is already too late.

Residents of Kurawa village in Sabon Birni first raised the alarm weeks ago. Sources at the village health facility told journalists that at the peak of the outbreak, two to three people — mostly children and teenagers aged two to twenty — were dying every day.

Symptoms described by community members include severe neck pain, high fever, vomiting, diarrhoea, unconsciousness, and in some cases, foaming from the mouth. All textbook signs of cerebrospinal meningitis.

Isolation centres up and running

The state government, working with Médecins Sans Frontières, has set up isolation centres at general hospitals in Dogo Daji and Tambuwal, with separate wards for male and female patients.

But the ground reality is still difficult. A staff member at the Dogo Daji centre, who spoke anonymously, said 22 patients were on admission Wednesday. Two were discharged that day — and immediately replaced by two new cases.

“The cases are increasing. We are considering opening an additional ward to separate female and paediatric patients,” the health worker said.

The centre recorded two recent deaths despite treatment. One victim was a boy under five named Amir. Another patient, Nura Jabo from Jabo town, died while being transferred to Usmanu Danfodiyo University Teaching Hospital after his condition got worse.

Treatment at the centres is completely free. “Patients do not pay for anything. Everything is provided free, including sanitary pads,” the health worker confirmed. Confirmed patients receive medications, feeding, and even transport support.

The meningitis belt

Professor Bello Magaji Arkilla, Director of the One Health Institute at UDUTH, explained that northern Nigeria sits inside what is called the “meningitis belt” — a strip of territory stretching from Senegal to Ethiopia where climate conditions let the bacteria thrive.

“Overcrowding and delayed access to proper medical care significantly worsen the situation,” Arkilla said. He stressed that fast treatment is the most important response and urged parents to take vaccination campaigns seriously, noting that vaccine hesitancy in some communities has made containment harder.

While the Chief Medical Director of Specialists Hospital in Sokoto confirmed that earlier patients from Badon Barade community had been treated and discharged, no one is calling this over. Health authorities are still telling residents to avoid overcrowded, poorly ventilated spaces and report suspected cases immediately.

Sources: Daily Trust, Naija News, Linda Ikeji’s Blog, Nigerian Sketch

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Claudia Kane

General assignment reporter and News Editor at NaijaTrend. Covers breaking news, security, and national affairs across Nigeria.

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