Conference Abstract | Volume 8, Abstract ELIC2025108 (Oral 010) | Published:  11 Aug 2025

From strategy to solidarity: How Nigeria’s 2025–2029 plan advances leadership and regional collaboration for Lassa fever in West Africa

Sandra Chizoba Mba1,&, Yetunde Abioye1, Winifred Ukponu2, Vivian Nwechi1, Anietie Akpan1, Chioma Dan-Nwafor3, Charity Osafemi1, Elsie Ilori4, Oladipupo Ipadeola5, Fatima Saleh1, Olajide Idris1

1Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Abuja, Nigeria, 2Georgetown Global Health Abuja, Nigeria, 3Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Western Africa RCC, 4Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, Oslo, Norway, 5Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Abuja, Nigeria

&Corresponding author: Sandra Mba, Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, 801 Ebitu Ukiwe Street, Jabi, Abuja, Nigeria, Email: sandraigboayaka91@gmail.com

Received: 31 Mar 2025, Accepted: 09 Jul 2025, Published: 11 Aug 2025

Domain: Infectious Disease Epidemiology

This is part of the Proceedings of the ECOWAS 2nd Lassa fever International Conference in Abidjan, September 8 – 11, 2025

Keywords: Lassa Fever, Strategic Planning, One Health, Regional Cooperation, Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers, West Africa

©Sandra Chizoba Mba et al. Journal of Interventional Epidemiology and Public Health (ISSN: 2664-2824). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Cite this article: Sandra Chizoba Mba et al., From strategy to solidarity: How Nigeria’s 2025–2029 plan advances leadership and regional collaboration for Lassa fever in West Africa. Journal of Interventional Epidemiology and Public Health. 2025;8(ConfProc5):00010. https://doi.org/10.37432/jieph-confpro5-00010

Introduction

Lassa fever (LF) poses persistent public health threat in West Africa. In Nigeria, it accounts for over 70% of the regional disease burden with increased frequency and geographic spread during seasonal outbreaks, overwhelming the health system. Despite growing response efforts, the absence of a national strategic plan in endemic countries has undermined long term sustainability. This abstract outlines the development and regional relevance of Nigeria’s first comprehensive Lassa Fever Strategic Plan (2025–2029)

Methods

The NCDC through the National Lassa fever Technical Working Group (LFTWG) led a multi stakeholder One Health driven strategy development from 2018 to 2022. This included consultative meetings, workshops, and a final validation forum. Contributors involved focal persons drawn across 10 pillars of the LFTWG; high burden states; LGAs; treatment centres; LF diagnostic labs, state and federal ministries of health, agriculture and environment, academia and relevant departments and agencies.

Results

The strategy draws from 55+ years of surveillance data, reports from LF outbreaks in Nigeria and aligns with the WHO LF Research and Development (R&D) Roadmap (2019), the strategy aims to reduce Nigeria’s LF CFR to below 10% by 2029 through 23 objectives across 10 pillars. Total budget is estimated at $76 million USD, with 52% allocated to the first two years and driven largely by logistics and supply chain needs (50%). Sustained funding depends on collective multisectoral collaboration, domestic resource mobilization, and public private partnerships, driven by country governance. Regional mechanisms, including joint rapid response teams (RRTs), surveillance harmonization, and pooled financing, are integral for successful implementation. 

Conclusion

Nigeria’s 2025–2029 Lassa Fever Strategic Plan offers a model for embedding epidemic preparedness into national health policy while fostering regional collaboration. Platforms such as the Lassa Fever Governing Entity and ECOWAS are essential for coordinating governance, funding, and programmatic delivery—ensuring more resilient, coordinated epidemic responses across West Africa.

 
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