"I ATE BUSH RAT AND NOTHING HAPPENED TO ME THEREFORE, THERE IS NO LASSA FEVER IN KIRIKIRI TOWN" – DANIEL
The headline is not a anyway a mimic of its meaning or a catchy one but a excerpts from a true life incident which occurred in Kirikiri town last month at the heat of public enlightenment about the Lassa fever caused by rodents.
When Daniel watches the TV, he would always see the announcement from various Federal Ministries and media houses across Nigeria telling people to avoid rats, its urine, excrete and report any fever case to the nearest hospital for proper investigation but, in spite of all these announcement Daniel confessed to have eaten a rat ‘bush rat’ during this period.
I picked up a stone just beside the fence and threw at it which pushed it down from the tree. I kind of like plucked the bush rat like a mango. It fell down but before it could run, I hit it with a stick too. It was weak and then it died.
This rat had a big head and a long tail and was three times bigger that an adult rat. The time was now 3pm according to my phones time. I put some sticks together to form a fire. From my room, I brought kerosene, pepper, onion and salt. I didn’t forget my knife and my roasting utensils. How I prepared the bush rat was indeed astonishing and as such, an ‘aboki-standard’ professional. I prepared it like it was a chicken.
It was my neighbor who heard the pleasant smell that came out. After he saw what was cooking, he asked if I have not heard about the Lassa fever virus presently being circulated by rats. He shocked me with those words that I was at the verge of throwing the entire pot of bush rat soup into the gutter.
Well, the cut the long story short, I ate all of it with a bottle of beer from my fridge and the cool early morning breeze whooshing on me as though the lord sent it upon me personally while my neighbor watched and expected my death few day later because he would always check on me daily.
I am alive and kicking but please my people do not eat rat oooo.. The one I ate will be different from the one you will eat oooo. The one I ate is from Kirikiri town oooo” Daniel stated his testimony as he cautions others too.
The natural host of Lassa fever is a rodent called the multimammate rat (2, 7, 8). This rodent is populous in the savannahs and forests of West Africa, but may also live in human homes and locations where food is stored - See more at:
This rat had a big head and a long tail and was three times bigger that an adult rat. The time was now 3pm according to my phones time. I put some sticks together to form a fire. From my room, I brought kerosene, pepper, onion and salt. I didn’t forget my knife and my roasting utensils. How I prepared the bush rat was indeed astonishing and as such, an ‘aboki-standard’ professional. I prepared it like it was a chicken.
It was my neighbor who heard the pleasant smell that came out. After he saw what was cooking, he asked if I have not heard about the Lassa fever virus presently being circulated by rats. He shocked me with those words that I was at the verge of throwing the entire pot of bush rat soup into the gutter.
Well, the cut the long story short, I ate all of it with a bottle of beer from my fridge and the cool early morning breeze whooshing on me as though the lord sent it upon me personally while my neighbor watched and expected my death few day later because he would always check on me daily.
I am alive and kicking but please my people do not eat rat oooo.. The one I ate will be different from the one you will eat oooo. The one I ate is from Kirikiri town oooo” Daniel stated his testimony as he cautions others too.
The natural host of Lassa fever is a rodent called the multimammate rat (2, 7, 8). This rodent is populous in the savannahs and forests of West Africa, but may also live in human homes and locations where food is stored - See more at:
http://www.healthmap.org/site/diseasedaily/article/lassa-fever-rages-nigeria-3716#sthash.QrxuWLlS.dpuf
The natural host of Lassa fever is a rodent called the multimammate rat (2, 7, 8). This rodent is populous in the savannahs and forests of West Africa, but may also live in human homes and locations where food is stored - See more at:
The natural host of Lassa fever is a rodent called the multimammate rat (2, 7, 8). This rodent is populous in the savannahs and forests of West Africa, but may also live in human homes and locations where food is stored - See more at:
http://www.healthmap.org/site/diseasedaily/article/lassa-fever-rages-nigeria-3716#sthash.QrxuWLlS.dpuf
Multimammate rat is the rat known to carry the Lassa virus.
Prevention methods;
1. Clean your environment regularly.
2. Don’t leave your food open. Use rodent-proof containers to store food.
3. Lock your doors and windows.
4. Avoid anything that invites rodents.
Multimammate rat is the rat known to carry the Lassa virus.
Prevention methods;
1. Clean your environment regularly.
2. Don’t leave your food open. Use rodent-proof containers to store food.
3. Lock your doors and windows.
4. Avoid anything that invites rodents.
BEWARE OF LASSA FEVER!
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