Adebola Olayinka
Ahmadu Bello University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Adebola Olayinka.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Daniel Tom-Aba; Adeniyi Olaleye; Adebola Olayinka; Patrick Nguku; Ndadilnasiya Waziri; Peter Adewuyi; Olawunmi Adeoye; Saliu Oladele; Aderonke Adeseye; Olukayode Oguntimehin; Faisal Shuaib
The recent outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in West Africa has ravaged many lives. Effective containment of this outbreak relies on prompt and effective coordination and communication across various interventions; early detection and response being critical to successful control. The use of information and communications technology (ICT) in active surveillance has proved to be effective but its use in Ebola outbreak response has been limited. Due to the need for timeliness in reporting and communication for early discovery of new EVD cases and promptness in response; it became imperative to empower the response team members with technologies and solutions which would enable smooth and rapid data flow. The Open Data Kit and Form Hub technology were used in combination with the Dashboard technology and ArcGIS mapping for follow up of contacts, identification of cases, case investigation and management and also for strategic planning during the response. A remarkable improvement was recorded in the reporting of daily follow-up of contacts after the deployment of the integrated real time technology. The turnaround time between identification of symptomatic contacts and evacuation to the isolation facility and also for receipt of laboratory results was reduced and informed decisions could be taken by all concerned. Accountability in contact tracing was ensured by the use of a GPS enabled device. The use of innovative technologies in the response of the EVD outbreak in Nigeria contributed significantly to the prompt control of the outbreak and containment of the disease by providing a valuable platform for early warning and guiding early actions.
PLOS Currents | 2015
Saheed Gidado; Abisola Oladimeji; Alero A. Roberts; Patrick Nguku; Iruoma Genevieve Nwangwu; Ndadilnasiya Waziri; Faisal Shuaib; Olukayode Oguntimehin; Emmanuel Musa; Charles Nzuki; Abdulsalami Nasidi; Peter Adewuyi; Tom-Aba Daniel; Adebola Olayinka; Oladoyin Odubanjo; Gabriele Poggensee
Background: The first ever outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD) in Nigeria was declared in July, 2014. Level of public knowledge, perception and adequacy of information on EVD were unknown. We assessed the public preparedness level to adopt disease preventive behavior which is premised on appropriate knowledge, perception and adequate information. Methods: We enrolled 5,322 respondents in a community-based cross-sectional study. We used interviewer-administered questionnaire to collect data on socio-demographic characteristics, EVD–related knowledge, perception and source of information. We performed univariate and bivariate data analysis using Epi-Info software setting p-value of 0.05 as cut-off for statistical significance. Results: Mean age of respondents was 34 years (± 11.4 years), 52.3% were males. Forty one percent possessed satisfactory general knowledge; 44% and 43.1% possessed satisfactory knowledge on mode of spread and preventive measures, respectively. Residing in EVD cases districts, male respondents and possessing at least secondary education were positively associated with satisfactory general knowledge (p-value: 0.01, 0.001 and 0.000004, respectively). Seventy one percent perceived EVD as a public health problem while 61% believed they cannot contract the disease. Sixty two percent and 64% of respondents will not shake hands and hug a successfully treated EVD patient respectively. Only 2.2% of respondents practice good hand-washing practice. Television (68.8%) and radio (55.0%) are the most common sources of information on EVD. Conclusions: Gaps in EVD-related knowledge and perception exist. Targeted public health messages to raise knowledge level, correct misconception and discourage stigmatization should be widely disseminated, with television and radio as media of choice.
International Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2016
Chima Ohuabunwo; Celestine Ameh; Oyin Oduyebo; Anthony Ahumibe; Bamidele Mutiu; Adebola Olayinka; Wasiu Gbadamosi; Erika Garcia; Carolina Nanclares; Wale Famiyesin; Abdulaziz Mohammed; Patrick Nguku; Richard Koko; Joshua Obasanya; Durojaye Adebayo; Yemi Gbadegesin; Oni Idigbe; Olukayode Oguntimehin; Sara Nyanti; Charles Nzuki; Ismail Adeshina Abdus-salam; Joseph D. Adeyemi; Nnanna Onyekwere; Emmanuel Musa; David M. Brett-Major; Faisal Shuaib; Abdulsalami Nasidi
INTRODUCTION The Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in Nigeria began when an infected diplomat from Liberia arrived in Lagos, the most populous city in Africa, with subsequent transmission to another large city. METHODS First-, second-, and third-generation contacts were traced, monitored, and classified. Symptomatic contacts were managed at Ebola treatment centers as suspected, probable, and confirmed EVD cases using standard operating procedures adapted from the World Health Organization EVD guidelines. Reverse transcription PCR tests confirmed EVD. Socio-demographic, clinical, hospitalization, and outcome data of the July-September 2014 Nigeria EVD cohort were analyzed. RESULTS The median age of the 20 EVD cases was 33 years (interquartile range 26-62 years). More females (55%), health workers (65%), and persons <40 years old (60%) were infected than males, non-health workers, and persons aged ≥40 years. No EVD case management worker contracted the disease. Presenting symptoms were fever (85%), fatigue (70%), and diarrhea (65%). Clinical syndromes were gastroenteritis (45%), hemorrhage (30%), and encephalopathy (15%). The case-fatality rate was 40% and there was one mental health complication. The average duration from symptom onset to presentation was 3±2 days among survivors and 5±2 days for non-survivors. The mean duration from symptom onset to discharge was 15±5 days for survivors and 11±2 days for non-survivors. Mortality was higher in the older age group, males, and those presenting late. CONCLUSION The EVD outbreak in Nigeria was characterized by the severe febrile gastroenteritis syndrome typical of the West African outbreak, better outcomes, rapid containment, and no infection among EVD care-providers. Early case detection, an effective incident management system, and prompt case management with on-site mobilization and training of local professionals were key to the outcome.
American Journal of Psychiatry | 2015
Abdulaziz Mohammed; Taiwo Lateef Sheikh; Saheed Gidado; Ismail Adeshina Abdus-salam; Joseph D. Adeyemi; Adebola Olayinka; Chima Ohuabunwo; Orina Oluwagbemiga Victor; Patrick Nguku; Erinfolami Adebayo Rasheed; Funmi Doherty; Ndadilnasiya Waziri; Faisal Shuaib; Babalola Obafemi Joseph; Idris Mohammed Bomai; Akin Oyemakinde
Abdulaziz Mohammed, M.B.B.S., M.P.H.-F.E, Taiwo Lateef Sheikh, M.B.B.S., M.S.C., Saheed Gidado, M.B.B.S., M.P.H.-F.E., Ismail Adeshina Abdus-salam, M.B.B.S., M.P.H., Joseph Adeyemi, M.B.B.S., M.Sc., Adebola Olayinka, M.B.B.S., Chima Ohuabunwo, M.B.B.S., Orina Oluwagbemiga Victor, M.S.W., Patrick Nguku, M.B.B.S., M.P.H., Erinfolami Adebayo Rasheed, M.B.B.S., Funmi Doherty, M.S.W., M.P.H., Ndadilnasiya Waziri, D.V.M., M.P.H.-FE, Faisal Shuaib, M.D., Dr.P.H., Babalola Obafemi Joseph, M.B.B.S., Idris Mohammed Bomai, D.V.M., Akin Oyemakinde, M.B.B.S., M.P.H.
The Pan African medical journal | 2014
Patrick Nguku; Akin Oyemakinde; Kabir Sabitu; Adebola Olayinka; IkeOluwapo O. Ajayi; Olufunmilayo I. Fawole; Rebecca Babirye; Sheba Gitta; David Mukanga; Ndadilnasiya Waziri; Saheed Gidado; Oladayo Biya; Chinyere Gana; Olufemi Ajumobi; Aisha Abubakar; Nasir Sani-Gwarzo; Samuel Ngobua; Obinna Ositadimma Oleribe; Gabriele Poggensee; Peter Nsubuga; Joseph Nyager; Abdulsalami Nasidi
The health workforce is one of the key building blocks for strengthening health systems. There is an alarming shortage of curative and preventive health care workers in developing countries many of which are in Africa. Africa resultantly records appalling health indices as a consequence of endemic and emerging health issues that are exacerbated by a lack of a public health workforce. In low-income countries, efforts to build public health surveillance and response systems have stalled, due in part, to the lack of epidemiologists and well-trained laboratorians. To strengthen public health systems in Africa, especially for disease surveillance and response, a number of countries have adopted a competency-based approach of training - Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program (FELTP). The Nigeria FELTP was established in October 2008 as an inservice training program in field epidemiology, veterinary epidemiology and public health laboratory epidemiology and management. The first cohort of NFELTP residents began their training on 20th October 2008 and completed their training in December 2010. The program was scaled up in 2011 and it admitted 39 residents in its third cohort. The program has admitted residents in six annual cohorts since its inception admitting a total of 207 residents as of 2014 covering all the States. In addition the program has trained 595 health care workers in short courses. Since its inception, the program has responded to 133 suspected outbreaks ranging from environmental related outbreaks, vaccine preventable diseases, water and food borne, zoonoses, (including suspected viral hemorrhagic fevers) as well as neglected tropical diseases. With its emphasis on one health approach of solving public health issues the program has recruited physicians, veterinarians and laboratorians to work jointly on human, animal and environmental health issues. Residents have worked to identify risk factors of disease at the human animal interface for influenza, brucellosis, tick-borne relapsing fever, rabies, leptospirosis and zoonotic helminthic infections. The program has been involved in polio eradication efforts through its National Stop Transmission of Polio (NSTOP). The commencement of NFELTP was a novel approach to building sustainable epidemiological capacity to strengthen public health systems especially surveillance and response systems in Nigeria. Training and capacity building efforts should be tied to specific system strengthening and not viewed as an end to them. The approach of linking training and service provision may be an innovative approach towards addressing the numerous health challenges.
The Pan African medical journal | 2015
Patrick Nguku; Fausta Mosha; Elizabeth Prentice; Tura Galgalo; Adebola Olayinka; Peter Nsubuga
The authors were invited to present in a session titled “The role of FELTPs in laboratory-based surveillance” at the African Society for Laboratory Medicine (ASLM) biennial conference in December 2014 in Cape Town, South Africa. This session focused on five questions: a) What is FELTP? b) What is the state of public health laboratory-based surveillance in Africa? c) Are FELTPs contributing to public health surveillance and response in Africa? d) What challenges are FELTPs facing in implementation? The following is a summary of the presentations and discussions.
The Pan African medical journal | 2015
Emmanuel Musa; Elizabeth Adedire; Olawunmi Adeoye; Peter Adewuyi; Ndadilnasiya Waziri; Patrick Mboya Nguku; Miriam Nanjuya; Bisola Adebayo; Akinola Ayoola Fatiregun; Bassey Enya; Chima Ohuabunwo; Kabiru Sabitu; Faisal Shuaib; Alex Okoh; Olukayode Oguntimehin; Nnanna Onyekwere; Abdulsalami Nasidi; Adebola Olayinka
Introduction In July 2014, Nigeria experienced an outbreak of Ebola virus disease following the introduction of the disease by an ill Liberian Traveler. The Government of Nigeria with the support of Technical and Development Partners responded quickly and effectively to contain the outbreak. The epidemiological profile of the outbreak that majorly affected two States in the country in terms of person, place and time characteristics of the cases identified is hereby described. Methods Using field investigation technique, all confirmed and probable cases were identified, line-listed and analysed using Microsoft Excel 2007 by persons, time and place. Results A total of 20 confirmed and probable cases; 16 in Lagos (including the index case from Liberia) and 4 in Port Harcourt were identified. The mean age was 39.5 ± 12.4 years with over 40% within the age group 30-39 years. The most frequent exposure type was direct physical contact in 70% of all cases and 73% among health care workers. The total case-fatality was 40%; higher among healthcare workers (46%) compared with non-healthcare workers (22%). The epidemic curve initially shows a typical common source outbreak, followed by a propagated pattern. Conclusion Investigation revealed the size and spread of the outbreak and provided information on the characteristics of persons, time and place. Enhanced surveillance measures, including contact tracing and follow- up proved very useful in early case detection and containment of the outbreak.
The Pan African medical journal | 2014
Lilian Okeke; Simeon Cadmus; Ikenna Osemeka Okeke; Maryam Muhammad; Oluchi Awoloh; David Dairo; Endie Waziri; Adebola Olayinka; Patrick Nguku; Olufunmilayo I. Fawole
Introduction Bovine tuberculosis (BTB) is widespread yet poorly controlled in Nigeria hence posing a public health threat. This study determined the prevalence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC) and factors associated with MTC among slaughtered cattle at Jos South Abattoir in Plateau State, Nigeria. Methods We conducted a cross sectional study in which we collected 168 lung samples systematically from 485 slaughtered cattle from May-June, 2012, and tested for acid fact bacilli (AFB) using Ziehl-Neelsen test and a duplex polymerase chain reaction technique (PCR) for MTC detection. Data on cattle socio-demographic characteristics and risk factors for zoonotic BTB infection was obtained and analyzed using Epi info version 3.5.3 to determine frequency, proportions, and prevalence odds ratios. Multiple logistic regression was done at 95% Confidence Interval (CI). Results The mean age of the cattle was 5.6 ± 1.3 years and (108) 64.3% were females. Majority were indigenous White Fulani breed of cattle (58.5%) and about half (54.8%) were slightly emaciated. Prevalence of MTB complex was 21.4% by AFB test and 16.7% by duplex PCR. Of 33 (19.6%) lungs with lesions, 27 (81.8%) were positive for AFB; while of 135 (80.4%) lungs without lesions, 9 (6.7%) were positive for AFB. Lungs with lesions were 52 times more likely to test positive to AFB test compared to tissues without lesions (AOR=52.3; 95% CI: 16.4-191.8) Conclusion The presence of MTC in cattle signifies its potential risk to public health. Presence of lesions on lungs is a reliable indicator of MTC infection that meat inspectors should look out for.
Malaria Research and Treatment | 2016
Abiodun Ogunniyi; Magbagbeola David Dairo; Hannah O. Dada-Adegbola; IkeOluwapo O. Ajayi; Adebola Olayinka; Wellington A. Oyibo; Olufunmilayo I. Fawole; Olufemi Ajumobi
Background. Unavailability of accurate, rapid, reliable, and cost-effective malaria diagnostic instruments constitutes major a challenge to malaria elimination. We validated alternative malaria diagnostic instruments and assessed their comparative cost-effectiveness. Method. Using a cross-sectional study design, 502 patients with malaria symptoms at selected health facilities in Ibadan between January and April 2014 were recruited consecutively. We examined malaria parasites using Cyscope®, QBC, and CareStart™ and results were compared to light microscopy (LM). Validity was determined by assessing sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV). Costs per hour of use for instruments and turnaround time were determined. Result. Sensitivity of the instruments was 76.0% (CareStart), 95.0% (Cyscope), and 98.1% (QBC). Specificity was 96.0% (CareStart), 87.3% (Cyscope), and 85.5% (QBC). PPV were 65.2%, 67.5%, and 84.7%, while NPV were 93.6%, 98.6%, and 99.4% for CareStart, Cyscope, and QBC with Kappa values of 0.75 (CI = 0.68–0.82) for CareStart, 0.72 (CI = 0.65–0.78) for Cyscope, and 0.71 (CI = 0.64–0.77) for QBC. Average cost per hour of use was the lowest (
The Pan African medical journal | 2014
Ndadilnasiya Waziri; Patrick Nguku; Adebola Olayinka; Ike Ajayi; Junaidu Kabir; Emmanuel Okolocha; Tesfai Tseggai; Tony Joannis; Phillip Okewole; Peterside Kumbish; Mohammed Ahmed; Lami H. Lombin; Peter Nsubuga
2.04) with the Cyscope. Turnaround time was the fastest with Cyscope (5 minutes). Conclusion. Cyscope fluorescent microscope had the shortest turnaround time and is the most cost-effective of all the malaria diagnostic instruments evaluated.