Plateau State is grappling with a rapidly expanding outbreak of Lassa Fever, a deadly viral haemorrhagic disease, with health officials confirming 11 new cases and four deaths across seven local government areas since December—including two healthcare workers killed in the line of duty.
Health Commissioner Dr. Nicholas Baamlong disclosed the alarming figures at a press briefing on Saturday, revealing the outbreak has now penetrated major population centers like Jos North and Jos South, indicating a significant geographical spread beyond initial rural hotspots.
From a Single Alert to a Statewide Health Emergency
The crisis began on December 20, 2025, with a single case in Quan Pan Local Government Area. Despite immediate activation of an incident management team and contact tracing of 69 individuals, the virus has proven difficult to contain. Of the 28 suspected cases, 11 have been laboratory-confirmed, prompting an urgent escalation in response.

“We have confirmed eleven positive cases in Plateau State,” Baamlong stated, underscoring the persistent transmission chain. Health authorities are now actively monitoring 109 contacts and have deployed rapid response teams to affected communities.
A Frontline Tragedy: Healthcare Workers Among the Dead
The human toll of the outbreak is starkly illustrated by the deaths of medical professionals. Of the four fatalities recorded at major hospitals, including Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH) and Plateau Specialist Hospital, two were healthcare workers who contracted the virus from patients.
“One of the deaths is a medical practitioner who attended to an infected patient. As of today, another medical doctor is also on admission and receiving treatment,” Baamlong revealed. These infections highlight critical gaps in infection prevention and control (IPC) within healthcare settings, risking the collapse of the very system meant to fight the outbreak.
A Race Against Time Amidst Public Awareness Gaps
The state ministry insists it is doing “everything possible” to stop the spread, citing the distribution of treatment drugs (Ribavirin) and personal protective equipment (PPE) to key facilities. However, the continued spread across seven LGAs—Quan Pan, Shendam, Wase, Langtang South, Jos North, Jos South, and Mangu—suggests containment efforts are being outpaced.
A central pillar of the new strategy is “active public health enlightenment,” a tacit admission that public awareness and preventive behaviors remain dangerously low. Lassa Fever, primarily spread through contact with rodents or the bodily fluids of infected persons, requires rigorous community hygiene and early reporting to curb.
A Litmus Test for Health System Resilience
This outbreak serves as a severe stress test for Plateau State’s public health infrastructure. The death of caregivers, the spread to urban centers, and the widening geographical footprint all point to systemic vulnerabilities.
The coming weeks will determine whether intensified surveillance, contact tracing, and belated public messaging can suppress the virus or if Plateau is facing a prolonged and devastating health emergency. For residents, the confirmed cases are a clear signal that a lethal and often forgotten fever is now active in their neighborhoods.
















