IRIN
Lagos, 2nd October 2014
When an Internet message announcing a salt water solution for Ebola went viral in July, many Nigerians were quick to take heed. Twenty people were hospitalized and two died, reportedly from an excessive intake of salt.
Nigerians watched with growing unease as the Ebola outbreak spread through Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia. Few believed the creaking health infrastructure or the government’s managerial skills would be able to survive such a test. So when Ebola-positive Liberian Patrick Sawyer stepped off a plane in Lagos airport on 20 July, collapsed and died, social media exploded.
But it was not just the salt water claims and bogus pastors promising salvation that made the running: government agencies and proactive individuals also took to the Internet to quickly debunk the rumours and offer proper advice. The authorities also threatened to arrest anyone spreading falsehoods, starting with the salt water “cure”. There was, after all, a plan in place. [ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiJ6YPptdGA ]
A MASS AUDIENCE FOR MESSAGES
At 67 million users, Nigeria reportedly has the eighth largest Internet population in the world. It also had close to 166 million mobile subscribers as of June. (The country’s population is 175 million.) [ http://www.internetworldstats.com/africa.htm ] [ http://www.ncc.gov.ng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=125&Itemid=67 ]
The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has also taken a role in the communications work on Ebola, using the SMS portal UReport. UReport Nigeria is a free SMS platform designed as a community-based two-way information exchange mechanism. According to UNICEF Communications Specialist Geoffrey Njoku, over 57,000 people received more than 3.6 million SMS containing key messages about Ebola and how to stay protected over a six-week period.
COMFORT AND CONFIDENCE
For some who have used the service, like Dr Adoara Igonoh, an Ebola survivor, the advice given offered reassurance and quelled fears. “I began to think about my mother,” Igonoh recalled. “She was under surveillance along with my other family members. I was worried. She had touched my sweat. I couldn’t get the thought out of my mind. Hours later on Twitter I came across a tweet from the WHO [World Health Organization] saying that the sweat of an Ebola patient cannot transmit it at the late stage [after the incubation period]. That settled it for me. It calmed the storms that were raging within me concerning my parents.”
“A key issue in the fight against Ebola after the provision of the necessary human and technical infrastructure is information management,” said Tochuwu Akunyii, an online writer on public policy and international development. “In information management, the dissemination of accurate information is crucial; social media can be vital in this process.” Akunyii pays particular tribute to Nigerian youth and its use of forums and platforms like Twitter and Facebook.
SOCIAL MEDIA COMPLEMENTED TRADITIONAL MEDIA
Nigerians who do not have access to the Internet and mobile phones have not been left out of the Ebola campaign. Traditional mediums like radio, flyers, posters, village meetings and announcements by town criers are all being used. Priority is given to local languages.
Comparing the traditional methods of campaigning to social media and SMS campaigns, Nwokedi Moses, better known as Big MO, a vernacular language broadcaster with Wazobia FM, said the two approaches worked well together. “The social media Ebola campaign was massive, but it complemented the traditional media. This is due to social media’s limited reach within rural areas.”
As Nigeria gradually returns to normal, signalled by the slightly hesitant reopening of schools on 22 September, health campaigners are moving to tackle the new challenge of ending the stigmatization of those who have recovered from Ebola – backed by a government warning threatening action against those that discriminate.
Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola recently met survivors to confirm that an Ebola-free certificate means what it says. Health Minister Onyebuchi Chukwu has declared survivors the “safest people to be around”, given their new immunity to the virus.
IRIN
IRIN is the humanitarian news and analysis
service
of the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian affairs
The opinions expressed
do not necessarily
reflect those of the United Nations
or its Member States
Dal nostro Inviato Speciale Massimo A. Alberizzi Nairobi, 15 novembre L’ambasciatrice americana in Kenya, la…
Speciale per Africa ExPress Cornelia I. Toelgyes 14 novembre 2024 L'amministratore delegato e due dirigenti…
Africa ExPress Nairobi, 15 novembre 2024 Africa ExPress è una stella piccola nell’universo dei quotidiani…
Speciale per Africa ExPress Antonio Mazzeo 13, Novembre 2024 Fincantieri SpA, il gruppo leader della…
EDITORIALE Dalla Nostra Inviata Speciale Federica Iezzi di ritorno da Dayr al-Balah (Striscia di Gaza),…
Speciale per Africa ExPress Sandro Pintus 11 novembre 2024 Venancio Mondlane, candidato alla presidenza del…