Monday, June 15, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

Robust surveillance systems critical to containing disease outbreaks

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From Aniekan Aniekan, Calabar

Nigeria’s ability to stop the next epidemic before it spreads hinges on how fast it can detect it with robust surveillance systems and not the absence of drugs or vaccines.

National President of the Epidemiological Society of Nigeria, EPISON, Dr. Matthew Ashikeni, disclosed this in Calabar during the 12th Annual Conference and Annual General Meeting of the society.

The conference with the theme: “Strengthening Epidemiological Resilience in Nigeria: Addressing Emerging and Re-emerging Health Challenges” attracted epidemiologists across the country.

Dr. Ashikeni told participants that “Nigeria cannot fight outbreaks without robust surveillance systems.

“Early detection and rapid response help to curb outbreaks of such diseases. We need consistent monitoring, improved sanitation, continuous training for health workers, and evidence-based policies.”

 

Governor Bassey Otu, represented by Commissioner for Health Dr. Henry Egbe Ayuk, said his administration prioritizes disease surveillance alongside primary healthcare, immunization, and health insurance.

“Governor Bassey Otu has placed healthcare at the forefront of development through sustained investments in primary healthcare, disease surveillance, health insurance coverage, immunization programmes, and infrastructure,” Ayuk said.

He added that Cross River is among few states successfully delivering vaccines and essential medicines to hard-to-reach communities, a key test of any surveillance system.

Director General of Cross River State Primary Healthcare, Vivian Mesembe, said resilience means systems must detect threats fast and Cross River demonstrates resilience through routine surveillance and prompt investigation.