The Lagos State Commissioner of Health, Professor Akin Abayomi, has urged residents to avoid contact with floodwaters whenever possible.
The
commissioner noted that floodwaters are often contaminated with sewage,
chemicals, and other pollutants, creating ideal conditions for waterborne
diseases such as cholera and typhoid. He said they also increase the risk of
skin infections, injuries, snakebites, and electrocution from submerged
electrical installations.
With
flooding plaguing the state in this rainy season, Abayomi urged residents to
drink only safe or treated water and to maintain good hand hygiene.
Posting
on X, Abayomi advised Lagosians to switch off electricity before entering
flooded homes, and seek immediate medical attention for diarrhoea, vomiting,
fever, or other signs of illness.
“Health
is shaped not only by the care we provide in hospitals but also by the
environments in which people live. Protecting Lagos from the health impacts of
flooding requires government, communities, and residents to work together to
build a safer, more resilient city,” he said.
The
commissioner revealed that beyond damaged roads and submerged homes, floods
disrupt access to healthcare, schools, workplaces, and essential services. He
noted that families lose property and income, communities are displaced, and
the physical and emotional toll can last long after the waters recede.
He
said the impact of flooding falls hardest on those already most vulnerable:
older persons, young children, pregnant women, nursing mothers, and people
living with disabilities.
“Alongside Governor
Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Deputy Governor Dr Obafemi Hamzat, the Honourable
Commissioner for the Environment and Water Resources, and other senior
officials, I visited affected communities to assess the situation firsthand.
One striking sight was canoe operators ferrying residents, particularly older
persons and those with mobility challenges, across flooded streets. While this
demonstrates the resilience and ingenuity of Lagosians, it also highlights how
deeply flooding disrupts daily life.
“As
the Ministry of Health, our focus goes beyond treating illness. We are
strengthening disease surveillance in affected communities, promoting safe
water and sanitation practices, monitoring for outbreaks of waterborne
diseases, and coordinating with other ministries to reduce flood-related health
risks,” the commissioner said.
Abayomi
revealed that the state government has designed new healthcare facility
blueprints that integrate robust climate adaptation and resilience measures
tailored to Lagos’s annual flooding and worsening weather.
The
blueprint features low-carbon, naturally cooled designs elevated above
projected flood levels; improved local drainage and green roofs to manage
stormwater while harvesting rainwater; strict infection-prevention compliance
to ensure safe, hygienic operations during crises; and integrated solar power
systems to guarantee uninterrupted healthcare delivery during grid outages.







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