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NCDC DG explains difference between COVID-19 and Malaria

The Director-General of the National Center for Disease Control, Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu has explained the difference between the viral disease, COVID-19 and Malaria.

Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu
Director-General National Center for Disease Control

He decided to make this statement after the Chairman of DAAR Communications, Raymond Dokpesi, who was discharged from an Isolation centre in Abuja last Thursday, May 14, publicly asked what the difference is between the two because according to him, all the drugs he was given at the Isolation centre were anti-malaria drugs.

Dokpesi while speaking to newsmen after his discharge, said: “I still have doubts in my mind. I still want to be properly educated. What is the difference between COVID-19, which is a virus and Malaria which is caused by mosquitos because every medication we were given was malaria medication? Some people, before they were told they were COVID-19 positive, they were tested in reputable laboratories and hospitals in Abuja and what they found was that they had a lot of malaria parasites in their bloodstream. So when did malaria become synonymous to COVID-19?”

 A reporter at the daily briefing of the Presidential Taskforce on COVID-19 threw this question to the NCDC boss and here is what he had to say:

 ”I think we all know COVID-19 is a respiratory illness caused by a virus; Malaria is caused by a parasite. They are completely different diseases.

 However, many diseases present exactly the same way in the beginning, Yellow fever presents the same way with fever at the beginning, Lassa the same way, malaria the same way.

 So, the initial presentation of febrile illness is similar across diseases. There is no specific treatment for COVID-19; so what clinicians do is to manage your symptoms so that your body recovers as quickly as possible.

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You can have Malaria and COVID-19. That you have COVID-19 doesn’t prevent you from having Malaria and if you are in a hospital for one month, you could definitely be co-infected by both of them.

 So there are many reasons why people receive similar treatments but they are two completely different diseases with different pathogenesis.” he said

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