How to Prevent Infections in Nigeria: A Complete Guide

Infectious diseases in Nigeria cause enormous suffering and death each year, yet a significant proportion of these infections are preventable. Infection prevention requires both individual discipline and collective action. 

Understanding what works, why it works, and how to implement it in the Nigerian context is the foundation of a healthier, more resilient population.

Why Infection Prevention Matters in Nigeria

The Prevention-Resistance Connection

Every infection prevented is an antibiotic course that does not need to be prescribed. Fewer antibiotic prescriptions mean less pressure on bacteria to develop resistance. Therefore, infection prevention Nigeria-wide is not just a public health measure. It is a direct strategy for preserving the effectiveness of life-saving medicines.

Nigeria’s infectious disease burden strains an already under-resourced healthcare system. Prevention reduces patient volumes, frees hospital beds, and allows healthcare workers to focus on the most critical cases.

Hygiene Tips Nigeria Residents Can Follow Daily

Handwashing: The Most Powerful Single Intervention

Handwashing with soap and clean water for at least 20 seconds before eating, after using the toilet, and after caring for a sick person prevents the transmission of countless bacterial, viral, and parasitic infections.

Studies demonstrate that handwashing reduces respiratory infections by up to 21% and diarrhoeal diseases by up to 31%. These are among the most common causes of illness and antibiotic misuse in Nigeria, making hand hygiene a priority for every household.

Safe Food Preparation

Cooking food to appropriate temperatures kills most pathogens. Separating raw and cooked foods prevents cross-contamination. Refrigerating perishable foods slows bacterial growth. These practices, consistently applied, prevent a wide range of foodborne diseases.

In markets and food preparation settings, clean water access and proper waste disposal are essential for reducing the risk of cholera, typhoid, and foodborne E. coli infections.

Safe Water Practices

Boiling water before drinking, using water purification tablets, and storing water in clean, covered containers are effective household-level interventions in communities where piped water quality cannot be guaranteed.

Investment in community boreholes, water treatment facilities, and rainwater harvesting systems provides sustainable solutions that reduce dependence on contaminated surface water sources.

Disease Prevention Nigeria: Environmental and Community-Level Approaches

Mosquito Control for Malaria Prevention

Sleeping under insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs) remains the most cost-effective way to prevent malaria. Indoor residual spraying reduces mosquito populations within homes. Eliminating standing water around homes disrupts mosquito breeding cycles.

Community-level larviciding of breeding sites such as drains, ponds, and discarded containers is a scalable approach that complements individual protective measures.

Vaccination as a Disease Prevention Tool

Vaccines protect individuals and communities against many of Nigeria’s most common and deadly infectious diseases. Maintaining childhood immunisation schedules for diseases including measles, meningitis, hepatitis B, and rotavirus prevents outbreaks and reduces the burden on healthcare facilities.

Adult vaccination, particularly for healthcare workers and high-risk populations, is an underutilised tool in Nigeria’s infection prevention strategy.

Infection Prevention in Healthcare Settings

Healthcare-associated infections are a major source of morbidity in Nigeria. Standard precautions including glove use, safe disposal of sharps, and sterile technique in wound care prevent the transmission of resistant organisms within facilities.

NNAST (https://nnast.org/) supports the development and implementation of infection prevention and control protocols across Nigerian health facilities, recognising that hospital environments are particularly high-risk settings for resistant pathogen spread.

Personal Health Behaviours That Prevent Infection

Avoid Unnecessary Antibiotic Use

As emphasised throughout infection prevention guidance, antibiotics should only be taken when prescribed by a qualified healthcare professional for a confirmed or clinically suspected bacterial infection. Unnecessary antibiotic use impairs natural immunity and drives resistance.

Seek Early Medical Attention

Treating infections early, with the correct therapy, reduces severity, shortens duration, and lowers the risk of complications. Early treatment also reduces the window of time during which an infected person can transmit pathogens to others.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the single most effective infection prevention measure in Nigeria?

Handwashing with soap remains the most evidence-supported, cost-effective, and accessible infection prevention measure across all age groups and settings. Its impact extends across respiratory, diarrhoeal, and skin infections simultaneously.

How can Nigerian communities prevent cholera without government support?

At the community level, boiling drinking water, using latrines correctly, proper refuse disposal, and community-led hygiene education can significantly reduce cholera risk even in the absence of government-provided infrastructure improvements.

Does infection prevention in Nigeria reduce antibiotic resistance?

Yes, directly. Fewer infections mean fewer antibiotic prescriptions, which reduces the selective pressure that drives resistance. Disease prevention Nigeria strategies and antimicrobial stewardship are therefore complementary and mutually reinforcing public health approaches.

Scroll to Top
akinsete-omobosola-1004-240x240-29843

Dr. Omobosola Akinsete is a dedicated physician and a key member of the Nigerian Antimicrobial Stewardship Taskforce. She has been an internal medicine and adult Infectious Disease physician in the United States of America for 30  years . She graduated from Medical school at the University of Lagos, and has a masters in Public Health from Johns Hopkins school of Public Health. 

She did her Internal Medicine training at a Brown University hospital and her fellowship in Infectious Diseases  at the University of Minnesota where she is an associate professor. She has worked with the National Institutes of Health and Howard University a a coordinator for the Human Genome Project among other projects, she is a frequent public speaker and contributor to different types of media. She loves to advocate for healthcare in minority populations. She  has a lot of experience with  patients and health care providers on antimicrobial stewardship in her institution  HealthPartners in Minnesota U.S.A. Her expertise in the field of Infectious diseases and antimicrobial stewardship and her passion to improve health care in her home country will contribute significantly to the fight against antimicrobial resistance in Nigeria. Dr. Akinsete’s work with the taskforce focuses on leadership of the taskforce as chairperson and national coordinator, working closely with NCDC leadership, the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Health, stakeholders, and funding partners, and helping with capacity building of standardized antimicrobial stewardship and infectious disease educational programs. She will also use her expertise to guide providers and HealthCare institutions  on the ground . Her commitment to improving antimicrobial use and patient safety is invaluable to the nation’s public health efforts.