Covid-19
Fake sanitizers on sale in Nigeria – Health Minister warns
The Minister of Health, Osagie Ehanire, on Tuesday, raised red alert that some sanitizers being sold in Nigeria are sub-standard, indicating sale of fake sanitizers in the country. The minister at the briefing of the Presidential Task Force on COVCID-19, in Abuja disclosed that study by a research institution in the Federal Ministry of Health discovered that not all sanitisers on sale in Nigeria are up to standard.
Ehanire revealed how people can identify standard sanitisers in the market, pointing out the importance of ascertaining the NAFDAC number and ingredients used in producing the sanitiser.
The Minister highlighted: “I will start by using the opportunity to issue an advisory on sanitiser. You will see a lot of sanitisers out in the market. A study carried out by research institution in the Ministry of Health has shown not all of them are up to standard.
“In buying sanitisers, there is an advisory I will like to share. You must look first of all at the NAFDAC number. A sanitiser should have a NAFDAC number.
“Secondly, it should have a place where the ingredients are displayed. You must see that it contains a minimum of 60% alcohol. If it is anything different from that, the sanitiser is not going to do the job you think it is doing.”
-
News2 days agoFRSC opens 2026 nationwide recruitment, online applications begin July 3
-
Football7 days agoAfrica breaks World Cup record with seven teams in knockout stage
-
Entertainment4 days agoActress Cossy Ojiakor shares flooded home as heavy rainfall wreaks havoc in Lagos
-
Football1 week agoNetherlands to face Morocco, Brazil draw Japan in 2026 World Cup round of 32
-
Business1 week agoNAFDAC, FCCPC others partners OSOA Foods advocacy on food safety, MSME growth
-
Business6 days agoLogistics bottlenecks threaten Nigeria’s economic growth, industry leaders warn
-
Business6 days agoInflation, high interest rates loom as FG credit hits N40.38tn
-
Business1 week agoLagos leads as States receive N2.49tn FAAC allocation in Q1 2026

