When the next outbreak strikes, whether Lassa fever in the dry season, cholera after flooding, or a novel virus yet unknown; Nigeria may be better prepared than ever before. The reason is not dramatic. It is not a new vaccine discovery or a breakthrough laboratory. It is infrastructure — quiet, strategic, and transformative.
Nigeria now has functional Public Health Emergency Operations Centres (PHEOCs), in about 86 percent of states – 32 out of 37 states and the Federal Capital Territory. Under the leadership of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC), this expansion marks one of the most significant structural improvements in our country’s outbreak preparedness in recent history.
It may not dominate headlines. But it could save thousands of lives.
From Reactive to Ready
For decades, Nigeria’s public health response was often reactive. Outbreaks triggered hurried coordination meetings. Data flowed unevenly. State and federal actors sometimes operated in parallel rather than in sync. Hard lessons came from repeated cycles of Lassa fever, meningitis outbreaks, cholera surges — and of course, the global shock of COVID-19.
The 2014 Ebola outbreak offered a glimpse of what coordinated emergency management could achieve. The rapid containment of Ebola in Lagos demonstrated the power of structured response systems, incident command frameworks, and real-time coordination. Yet such structures were not uniformly institutionalised across states.
That is what is changing.
Today’s PHEOCs are not symbolic offices. They are operational hubs built around incident management systems — integrating surveillance data, laboratory confirmation, logistics coordination, risk communication, and field response under one roof. When activated, they function as command centres, aligning epidemiologists, clinicians, laboratory scientists, and communication teams toward a single objective: contain the threat quickly and effectively.

Why 86 Percent Matters
In a federal system like Nigeria’s, health emergencies begin locally. An unusual cluster of fever in a rural community. A spike in diarrhoeal illness after heavy rains. A suspicious laboratory report. The speed of detection and escalation at the state level often determines whether a problem becomes a crisis.
With functional PHEOCs now covering the vast majority of states, early warning and early action become far more feasible. States can:
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Detect abnormal trends faster through structured surveillance dashboards
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Convene multi-sectoral response teams within hours, not weeks
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Coordinate supplies and laboratory testing efficiently
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Deliver unified public messaging to reduce panic and misinformation
This decentralised capacity strengthens national security as much as public health. Disease does not respect state borders. A coordinated state-level response protects neighbouring regions and the country as a whole.
The Real Test: Sustainability
Celebration, however, must be tempered with realism. Infrastructure alone does not guarantee resilience.
The remaining states without fully functional centres must be prioritised. More critically, the existing 86 percent must remain operational — not merely on paper. Emergency operations centres require continuous funding, trained personnel, simulation exercises, data systems maintenance, and political commitment.
If donour funding wanes or political attention shifts, these centres risk becoming underused facilities rather than active nerve centres.
True institutionalisation means:
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Dedicated state budget lines for emergency preparedness
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Routine drills and simulation exercises
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Retention of skilled epidemiologists and data managers
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Integration with national and regional health security systems
Public health security is not built in crisis alone; it is sustained in calm periods.
A Strategic Investment in the Future
Nigeria’s demographic scale, urban density, climate variability, and regional mobility patterns make it especially vulnerable to infectious disease threats. But they also make preparedness investments exponentially valuable.
An outbreak stopped early in one state prevents nationwide disruption. Schools remain open. Markets continue functioning. Hospitals are not overwhelmed. Economic productivity is preserved.
In this sense, the expansion of PHEOCs is not just a health reform. It is an economic and national stability strategy.
Beyond Buildings — Toward Trust
Perhaps the most important ingredient in emergency response is public trust. During crises, communities must believe health authorities, follow guidance, and report symptoms promptly. PHEOCs can centralise technical coordination — but communication must be transparent, culturally sensitive, and timely.
If these centres succeed not only in data management but also in building trust with communities, Nigeria’s preparedness architecture will mature from reactive defence into proactive resilience.
A Moment to Consolidate
The expansion of functional public health emergency operations centres to 86 percent of states represents a quiet revolution. It reflects lessons learned from painful outbreaks and a deliberate effort to strengthen national capacity.
Now comes the harder phase: ensuring that these centres remain active, accountable, and effective long after the urgency of the last crisis fades.
If sustained, this reform may become one of the most consequential public health investments of the decade — positioning Nigeria not only to respond to the next outbreak, but to lead regional health security efforts across West Africa.
The work is not finished. But the foundation is stronger than it has ever been.
