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COVID-19: Nigeria receives free COVAX Vaccines amidst safety concerns

Nigeria received its first shipment of COVAX AstraZeneca vaccines on Tuesday, amidst concerns about vaccine safety.

A shipment of nearly four million coronavirus vaccines arrived in Nigeria on Tuesday, making Africa’s most populous nation the world’s third country to receive vaccines under Covax, a global scheme to provide free inoculations.

COVAX is a joint initiative by UNICEF and World Health Organization (WHO) to provide COVID-19 vaccines for “poor countries”. An initiative led by Gavi the Vaccine Alliance, WHO and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) with UNICEF as implementing partner.

Read Also: COVID-19: WHO Disqualifies Nigeria From Global Bid For Pfizer-Biontech Vaccine

Some countries have surged ahead with vaccinations, but many countries deemed poor are still awaiting deliveries, prompting the World Health Organization (WHO) to warn that the crisis cannot end unless everyone can inoculate their populations.

 “The 4 million doses procured through COVAX is a historic step toward our goal to ensure equitable distribution of Covid_19 vaccines globally.” UNICEF Nigeria tweeted on Tuesday.

The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccines, manufactured by the Serum Institute of India, which arrived in Nigeria are the first of 16 million doses that Covax plans to deliver over the coming months to the country of 200 million people.

The shipment aboard an Emirates flight arrived shortly before noon at Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in the capital Abuja, an AFP journalist said. It contained 3.94 million Oxford/AstraZenica doses, the UN and Nigeria’s health agency added.

This comes a day after the country; through the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHCDA) launched an online registration portal for COVID-19 vaccination.

Read Also: Ghana President receives free coronavirus vaccine amidst rejection

 “Today is a good day for Nigeria,” Faisal Shuaib, director of the primary healthcare agency, said in a statement.

“Our team is ready to start administering doses to frontline health workers.”

Nigeria’s food and drug control agency approved the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine for use last month.

Vaccinations are scheduled to start Friday with frontline workers and support staff followed by the president and vice president on Saturday, a government spokesman Garba Shehu told AFP.

The Nigerian government said it hoped to vaccinate at least 70 percent of its adult population over the next two years.

“As the vaccines arrive in batches due to limited supply we will inform Nigerians about who and where to receive the vaccine,” Shuaib told reporters Monday.

The agency launched a self-registration portal online to try and help ease the roll-out but the country faces immense challenges due to security and logistics.

“States without a functional airport will have their vaccines transported by road using vans with fitted cold cabins, from the nearest airport,” Shuaib said.

The West African country has recorded 156,017 cases and 1,915 deaths since the start of the pandemic, though the figures are considered undercounted given the low number of tests administered.

A new virus variant has also been discovered in Nigeria, but researchers have not yet determined if it is more contagious or deadly than the original strain.

However, It is always possible that vaccines have health consequences that have not yet become clear.

Last week, Ghana and Ivory Coast were the first countries to receive vaccines from Covax, amidst wide rejection and concerns from Africans. Read Here

Nigeria has thus far registered 156,000 coronavirus cases and 1,915 deaths.

Breaking: Senate confirms Appointment of new Service Chiefs

The Senate on Tuesday confirmed the appointment of the new service chiefs following the consideration of the report of the Committee on Defence which recommended their confirmation.

The Senate President Ahmad Lawan, last week Wednesday referred the request of the President, Major General, Muhammadu Buhari, (retd.), for the confirmation of the new service chiefs, to the Committee on Defence.

Lawan, gave the committee, led by Senator Aliyu Wamakko, two weeks to carry out their assignments and report to the Senate in plenary.

The Senate confirmed their appointments both at the committee of the whole and at plenary on Tuesday following the Wamakko report’s consideration

Read Also: House of Reps screen new service chiefs

The new service chiefs are: Maj. Gen. Lucky Eluonye Onyenuchea lrabor as Chief of Defence Staff; Maj. Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru (Chief of Army Staff); Rear Admiral Awwal Zubairu Gambo, (Chief of Naval Staff); and Air Vice Marshal Isiaka O. Amao as Chief of Air staff.

They replaced the former Chief of Defence Staff, General Abayomi Olonisakin; Chief of Army Staff, Lt-Gen. Tukur Buratai; Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Ibok Ekwe Ibas; and Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar.

Lawan asked the new service chiefs to take the war to the bandits and insurgents and dislodge them in their strongholds

Viola Davies Stuns in ‘Lavie by CK’. Representing Africa in a Major Way At The Golden Globes.

When it comes to expressing ‘the colors of Africa’, Lavie Kameni’s designs would make you want to empty out your closet to make space for her.

The gorgeous Cameroonian fitted award-winning actress Viola Davies in a stunning, multicoloured African print dress that not only made the actress pop but stood her out at the 78th golden globes awards ceremony in California.

The Young designer has outfitted the likes of Tracee Ross and Janet Jackson amongst other A-list acts.

The 26-year-old fell in love with fashion after a design class in junior school and has run with the passion and dream of a more inclusive fashion industry ever since. The designer creates elegant, silhouette flattering designs for women of all shapes and sizes in a bid to serve all types of women. But most importantly for her, is for Lavie By CK to pave the way “for younger African designers to thrive.”

Through years as a self-taught designer, Claude has been able to create garments for both women and men, respectively. Having grown up in Cameroon before her relocation to the US, she merges her roots with today’s modern styles to produce brand new creations. Claude studied patterns extensively and developed a way to manipulate them to create extremely eye-catching garments.

Fani-Kayode urges Matawalle to expose those behind Jangebe school abduction

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Former Minister of Aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode, has urged Governor Bello Matawalle of Zamfara State to expose those behind the abduction of over 300 students from Government Girls’ Secondary School, Jangebe.

Recall that Matawalle had said there are many revelations in relation to the abduction of the students.

He had claimed that many people will be surprised to hear those people behind the abduction

According to him, some people are not comfortable with his peace initiative and are out to sabotage his efforts.

Reacting, Fani-Kayode on Twitter wrote, “I have known Matawalle for years and we are close. I trust him and I have respect and affection for him.

”When he says if people knew who those behind the kidnappings in his Zamfara state are it would rock the nation he has spoken the bitter truth. It’s time to name& shame those people!”

Meanwhile, all abducted students were released to the State Government on Tuesday.

They arrived at the State Government House, Gusau, at about 4 a.m. on Tuesday.

How to turn off annoying weight gain hormones and lose belly fat

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Being overweight often has nothing to do with calories or exercise. For a huge number of us, the problem is misfiring hormones. Research is still catching up with this paradigm shift, which has yet to be comprehensively studied. But seeing how this revelation has helped my patients and I slim down and feel better gives me confidence that it’s true for most women who are trying to lose weight and can’t. You already know about some weight-affecting hormone issues, like thyroid and insulin imbalances. But more subtle ones could also be keeping you from the body you want. Here are some other ways your hormones might be causing weight gain.

You’re consuming too much sugar.

I think of leptin as the hormone that says, “Darling, put down the fork.” Under normal circumstances, it’s released from your fat cells and travels in the blood to your brain, where it signals that you’re full. But leptin’s noble cause has been impeded by our consumption of a type of sugar called fructose, which is found in fruit and processed foods alike.

When you eat small amounts of fructose, you’re OK. But if you eat more than the recommended five daily servings of fruit (which in recent decades has been bred to contain more fructose than it used to)—plus processed foods with added sugar—your liver can’t deal with the fructose fast enough to use it as fuel. Instead, your body starts converting it into fats, sending them off into the bloodstream as triglycerides and depositing them in the liver and elsewhere in your belly.

As more fructose is converted to fat, your levels of leptin increase (because fat produces leptin). And when you have too much of any hormone circulating in your system, your body becomes resistant to its message. With leptin, that means your brain starts to miss the signal that you’re full. You continue to eat, and you keep gaining weight.

You’re super stressed.

The so-called stress hormone cortisol can create all kinds of trouble for women who want to shed weight. When cortisol rises, it encourages the conversion of blood sugar into fat for long-term storage. Hoarding body fat in this way was a useful survival adaptation for our ancestors when they faced stressful famines. But not so much today. Obviously, reducing stress in your life will help rein in this fat-storing hormone, but there’s another very common source of the problem: daily coffee, which elevates cortisol levels dramatically, causing your body to hoard fat when you least need to.

Your high estrogen levels are expanding your fat cells.

Although estrogen is responsible for making women uniquely women, it’s also the hormone that can be the most troublesome in the fat department. At normal levels, estrogen actually helps keep you lean by goosing the production of insulin, a hormone that manages blood sugar. When estrogen gets thrown off, though, it turns you into a weight-gain machine.

Here’s how: When you eat, your blood sugar rises. Like a bodyguard, insulin lowers it by escorting glucose into three different places in your body. When insulin is in good working form—not too high and not too low—it sends a small amount of glucose to your liver, a large amount to your muscles to use as fuel, and little to none for fat storage.

If you’re healthy and in good shape, your pancreas produces exactly the right amount of insulin to have your blood sugar softly rise and fall within a narrow range (fasting levels of 70 to 85 mg/dl). But when your estrogen levels climb, the cells that produce insulin become strained, and you can become insulin resistant. That’s when insulin starts to usher less glucose to the liver and muscles, raising the levels of sugar in your bloodstream and ultimately storing the glucose as fat. Your fat tissue can expand by as much as four times to accommodate the storage of glucose.

How do estrogen levels climb, exactly? Meat is one of the primary reasons. You take in a lot less fiber when you eat meat. Research suggests that vegetarians get more than twice as much fiber as omnivores. Because fiber helps us stay regular, and we process excess estrogen through our waste, eating less fiber drives up our estrogen.

Meat also contains a type of fat with its own estrogen problem. Conventionally raised farm animals are overloaded with steroids, antibiotics, and toxins from their feed and the way they’ve been raised. When you eat them, those substances are released into your system. They can behave like estrogen in the body, adding to your overload.

Your low testosterone levels are slowing down your metabolism.

You are confronted with an astounding number of toxins each day, including pesticides, herbicides, genetically modified foods, and about six different synthetic hormones in meat. Toxins are lurking in face creams, prescription drugs, processed foods, your lipstick, the linings of tuna fish cans, the fire-retardant materials in couches, and even the air you breathe. The list goes on.

Many types of these toxins, such as pesticides, plastics, and industrial chemicals, behave like estrogen when absorbed in the body. Experts believe that our increasing exposure to toxins helps explain why so many girls are entering puberty earlier and why many boys exhibit feminine characteristics such as developing breasts. Xeno-estrogens, as these particular toxins are called, have been associated with an elevated risk of estrogen-driven diseases like breast and ovarian cancers and endometriosis.

All this fake estrogen overwhelms your body’s testosterone—which is vital for hormone balance—and contributes to estrogen overload. Testosterone contributes to muscle growth, which in turn supports metabolism. And, as we already know, estrogen overload raises insulin insensitivity. The combination adds pounds to your frame: A study from Sweden published in the journal Chemosphere showed that exposure to a particular type of pesticide called organochloride was linked to a weight gain of 9½ pounds over 50 years.

And that’s just one type of toxin. Your risk of weight gain and disease from exposure to toxins may be greater than you realize. A survey by the CDC demonstrated that 93 percent of the population has measurable levels of bisphenol A (BPA), a chemical found in store receipts and canned foods that disrupts estrogen, thyroid, and androgen hormones. Endocrine disruptors have been shown to interfere with the production, transportation, and metabolism of most hormones.

The bottom line: You have to to address your hormone imbalances.

Now you know the “whys” of your broken metabolism, these are reasons regular diets don’t address the root cause of your weight gain. Hormones dictate what your body does with food. Talk to a doctor about fixing your hormones, and your body will slim down without any extra effort from you.

3 Important things people with High Blood Pressure should know

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If you have high blood pressure, you’re probably concerned about getting it under control. And you should be.

High blood pressure is a major risk factor for heart disease (the leading cause of death) and stroke (the fourth leading cause of death) and contributes to over 1,100 deaths per day.

The more striking aspect is most of these deaths are preventable. We have effective and inexpensive treatments for high blood pressure, yet less than 44% of high blood pressure cases are controlled.

It’s important to monitor your blood pressure at home

Like most doctors, I always thought the most accurate blood pressure is the one taken in my office, preferably by me. But research in recent years has shown that office blood pressures are often not accurate. Studies show up to 65% of office blood pressures are not correct. Other research has shown that home blood pressure measurements may be a better predictor of risk than office measurements and that monitoring at home lowers blood pressure and improves control.

Several expert blood pressure guidelines now endorse home blood pressure monitoring based on this information. I recommend home blood pressure monitoring for all my patients and emphasize that the best way to take your blood pressure is to sit quietly for 5 minutes first.

It may be better to take your blood pressure medications at night

In the past, I reasoned that blood pressure is higher during the day, so it would be better to take blood pressure medications in the morning. However, more recent research suggests that taking blood pressure medications at night does a better job of lowering blood pressure and, more importantly, may reduce the risk of death, heart attack, heart failure, and stroke. The one caution I have is if you take a blood pressure medication that is a diuretic or water pill, it may still be better to take it in the morning to avoid having to go to the bathroom at night.

If your blood pressure has been difficult to control, ask your doctor whether there may be a hormone problem

We have known for a long time that one of the causes of high blood pressure is an elevation in the hormone aldosterone. This was thought to be rare. Recent research, though, suggests that high aldosterone levels may be a more frequent cause of high blood pressure than we thought. One paper demonstrated up to 20% of people with hard-to-treat high blood pressure may have high aldosterone levels, although only about 1 in 1,000 people are actually tested.

You have the power to take charge of your blood pressure. Lifestyle changes such as exercising regularly, eating nutritious food, avoiding excess alcohol and salt, and getting down to a healthy weight may be as effective (or more!) than any medication. In addition to lifestyle change, talk to your doctor to see if you should monitor your blood pressure at home, take your medicines at night, and possibly be tested for high aldosterone levels.

They threatened to kill, fry and eat us – Released schoolgirl shares heart-wrenching experience

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One Hafsat Anka, a victim of Zamfara Government Girls Secondary School, Jangebe, abduction, has disclosed that their abductors threatened to kill, fry and eat them if they misbehaved.

Shortly after regaining freedom, Hafsat told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that they trekked over a long distance from the school, and had a stopover for some hours before they reached their destination.

The student who said she would continue her studies as a day student revealed that the bandits wore military uniforms and claimed they defeated the security officials by invading the school.

“There was no clean water or good food, and we felt we had already spent years even though it was our first day and the bandits kept firing into the air to scare us.

“They were very young boys with one elder they called Kasalle or Yaya who gave them instructions, and he was the one that stopped them from touching any of us,” Hafsat added.

Salihu Tanko Yakasai released from DSS’ custody

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The former media aide to the governor of Kano, Salihu Tanko Yakasai, has been released from the custody of the Department of State Services (DSS).

TheCable confirmed Yakasai’s release from DSS custody on Monday evening.

The former media aide was picked up by the agency over the weekend, after he made a post on social media, asking the President Muhammadu Buhari administration to resign over insecurity.

Yakasai, who was sacked on Saturday by Abdullahi Ganduje, governor of Kano, had called on the All Progressives Congress (APC) administration to resign from office, following the abduction of more than 300 students from Government Girls Secondary School, Jangebe, Zamfara state.

The 317 schoolgirls, who were abducted by bandits on February 26, have not yet been freed.

“Clearly, we as [the] APC government, at all levels, have failed Nigerians in the number 1 duty we were elected to do which is to secure lives & properties. Not a single day goes by without some sort of insecurity in this land. This is a shame! Deal with terrorists decisively or resign,” Yakasai had tweeted.

Hours after the post, his whereabouts raised concern on social media, after which Peter Afunanya, DSS spokesman, confirmed to TheCable that the former media aide was was in the agency’s custody.

“This is to confirm that Salihu Tanko-Yakasai is with the Department of State Services. He is being investigated over issues beyond the expression of opinions in the social media as wrongly alleged by sections of the public,” Afunanya had said.

The lovely Grace Adichie dies at 78.

The mother of renowned writer, Chimamanda Adichie, Mrs. Grace Ifeoma Adichie has passed away at the age of 78.

Mrs Grace Adichie was the first female registrar of the University of Nigeria Nsuka, a position she held from 1995.

She was appointed Assistant Secretary, Cabinet Office, Enugu between 1972 and 1973.She was also the Assistant Division Officer, Nsukka Urban, from June-December 1973;

Her other positions include, Admin Officer II, University of Nigeria Nsuka from 1973-75 & Admin Officer I, University of Nigeria Nsuka between 1975-77; Assistant Registrar from 1977-79; Senior Assistant Registrar from 1979-81; Principal Assistant Registrar between 1981- 85; and Deputy Registrar from 1985-95.

Her husband, Prof. James Nwoye, who was the first professor of statistics in Nigeria, had passed away in June of last year. The two had been married for 56 years and had done many interviews on their individual achievements and their achievements as a couple, prior to his death.

Presently, she is survived by 6 children and 9 grand-children. She is said to have passed away suddenly on the 1st of March, 2021.

IPOB: NBC jams Radio Biafra signals in Lagos

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Word out is that the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) has jammed the signals of a pirate radio claiming to be ‘Radio Biafra’ in most parts of Lagos, an official of NBC has said.

Mr Ekanem Antia, the Deputy Director, Public Affairs of NBC, made the disclosure in a statement by the management of the commission on Monday in Abuja.

Antia explained that the illegal radio which broadcast incendiary messages was notorious for spewing fake, inflammatory and inciting content.

“The NBC Act, CAP N11, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 spells out in chapter two, subsection two, that: No person shall operate or use any apparatus or premises for the transmission of sound or vision by cable, television, radio, satellite or any other medium of broadcast, from anywhere in Nigeria, except under and in accordance with the provisions of this Act.

“Also, Section 15.4.1 of the Nigeria Broadcasting Code provides that:

“The police shall prosecute any person engaged in any form of broadcasting or in possession of any broadcast equipment or apparatus in the country without a licence or permit for the purpose,” he said.

According to him, the commission, therefore, warns the general public that anybody who attempts to operate broadcasting in Nigeria without legal authorisation of the NBC will be prosecuted and the equipment, confiscated according to Law.

Antia stated that the Department of State Security and the Nigerian Police had been requested to bring the culprits behind the illegality to book.