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Intestinal Worms: Treatment in Nigeria

Updated July 2026 · Educational information — not a substitute for a doctor or pharmacist

Intestinal worms — roundworm, hookworm, whipworm, and others — are widespread in Nigeria, especially among children, spread through soil, contaminated food and water, and bare feet on infected ground. Light infections often cause no symptoms at all, which is exactly why routine deworming exists: worms silently steal nutrition and blood.

Hookworm in particular feeds on blood in the gut wall and is a classic hidden cause of stubborn iron-deficiency anaemia. Deworming is one of the cheapest, highest-value health habits a Nigerian household can keep.

The standard treatment is a single dose of albendazole (or an equivalent benzimidazole). WHO-backed practice is periodic deworming of children in endemic areas — once or twice a year — which Nigerian school and community programmes also follow.

Signs & symptoms

  • Often none — routine deworming assumes silent infection
  • Abdominal discomfort, bloating, or on-and-off diarrhoea
  • Itching around the anus, especially at night (pinworm)
  • Visible worms in stool occasionally
  • In heavier infections: poor appetite, weight loss, tiredness, anaemia; in children, poor growth and concentration

Medicines used for intestinal worms in Nigeria

Each medicine links to its full guide — uses, dosage forms, current naira prices, and NAFDAC-registered brands. Diagnosis and dosing belong with a clinician or pharmacist.

How it's treated

For routine deworming, a single albendazole dose is taken by everyone in the household at the same time — treating one child while siblings and parents carry worms invites quick reinfection.

Persistent symptoms after deworming, or suspected non-intestinal parasites, need a clinician: not every parasite responds to albendazole, and some (like schistosomiasis from rivers/streams) require different medicines entirely.

See a doctor if…

  • Worm-type symptoms that persist after a proper albendazole dose
  • Blood in stool or urine (blood in urine after river/stream contact suggests schistosomiasis — different treatment)
  • Severe abdominal pain or a child passing many worms
  • Deworming in pregnancy — timing matters; done within antenatal care
  • Children under 1 year — don't deworm without clinical advice

Prevention

  • Wash hands with soap after the toilet and before eating; keep children's nails short
  • Wash fruits and vegetables; cook meat properly
  • Wear footwear outdoors — hookworm enters through bare feet
  • Use safe water; keep toilets/latrines clean
  • Deworm school-age children every 6–12 months in line with local programmes

Frequently asked questions

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Related conditions

This page is educational information about how intestinal worms is generally managed in Nigeria. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or a prescription. Always consult a licensed clinician or pharmacist, and verify any medicine's NAFDAC registration with our free checker before buying.