Connect with us

News

Another 14 Nigerians Die Of COVID-19, Infections Hit 114,691

Published

on

Nigeria’s COVID-19 death toll increased to 1,478 Wednesday, with new 14 deaths, the fifth successive day, since 16 January that the country recorded double digit fatalities from the virus.

Fifteen died on Sunday 17 January, 14 on the 18th and yet another 15 on 19th January.

According to the data supplied by the NCDC on its websites, the deaths on Wednesday came from eight states.

OSUN DIGITAL MEDIA WEEK: OOPA Opens Portal For Free Award Voting

Lagos, Edo and Oyo recorded 3 deaths each.

Rivers, Kano, Kwara, Imo and Taraba recorded one death each.

The NCDC also announced 1,386 cases for Wednesday, more than the 1,301 of the previous day.

The national caseload is now 114,691 from 1,198,758 samples tested.

The number of discharged increased to 92,336, with active cases now 20,877.

According to the NCDC, 1,136 people were discharged on Wednesday. Out of the lot, 626 community recoveries happened in Lagos State.

However, Lagos is carrying the heaviest burden of new infections, with 476 cases reported.

Rivers was next with 163 and the FCT Abuja reported 116 cases.

Kaduna logged 114 cases, Oyo 68, Plateau 62.

Osun’s 55 new cases sent jitters to the state government, making it to impose another round of curfew from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m.

Government directed civil servants below grade level 12 to work from home effective from Jan. 25.

But teachers, health workers and other workers on essential services, irrespective of grade, were exempted from the directive.

The state also banned vigils and crusades until further notice.

Here is the breakdown of cases for 20 January:

Lagos-476
Rivers-163
FCT-116
Kaduna-114
Oyo-68
Plateau-62
Ogun-56
Imo-55
Osun-55
Edo-51
Anambra-50
Kwara-44
Kano-17
Ebonyi-14
Cross River-10
Delta-10
Jigawa-8
Bayelsa-6
Ekiti-6
Borno-2
Taraba-2
Zamfara-1

Trending