The
Nigerian Medical Association, NMA, yesterday faulted the Federal Government’s
directive to schools to resume on September 22 as against October 12, arguing
that schools should not be reopened until all those under surveillance for the
Ebola Virus Disease in the country are certified free.
Speaking
through its National Secretary-General, Dr. Olawunmi Alayaki, the association
said, “we are not happy with this decision on the resumption of schools.
Schools should be shut till the last suspected case or patient is certified
free of the virus.”
According
to the NMA, the resumption of schools could be shifted till December or early
part of next year because if Ebola should spread to any school, it would
“assume another dimension.” Continue
While
urging parents not to be in a hurry to have their children back to school since
children cannot survive isolation like adults, the association noted that, “we
can shift the resumption date till next year or in the next three months if
that is the time it will take. Government should have enough time to follow the
standard procedure for containing the virus.
“Nigeria
is peculiar because of her large population and we should be pragmatic and
proactive. It will not augur well for the country if we have another outbreak
due to carelessness.”
Speaking
in the same vein, the Lagos State chapter of the NMA said that the Federal
Government should have postponed the resumption date till the completion of
surveillance and monitoring of contacts in the affected states.
Chairman
of the Lagos state chapter of the association, Dr. Tope Ojo, who observed that
many of the public and private schools in the country lacked basic hygiene and
sanitary facilities that could help prevent the spread of the EVD by pupils,
said: “It would not have cost the Federal Government anything to have waited
till those under surveillance have completed the 21 days in all the states
where they are being monitored.
“The
government knows that it takes a longer time for children to get used to the
idea of hygiene and sanitation. They are even more vulnerable because they
would play with each other whether they are sick or not.
“How
many children know that they should use hand sanitizers or avoid contact with
anybody that has fever?
“Waiting
till October when at least the situations in Rivers and Lagos states would have
been conclusively managed is another safety measure the government should have
taken. These kids are not studying to get a degree, so we are sure it would not
have affected schools’ curricula,” he pointed out.
Meanwhile,
the Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, while speaking with PUNCH in
Lagos, said there was nothing to fear over the federal government’s directive
to schools to resume on September 22, noting that, “We have contained the
situation. Ebola is no longer in the streets anywhere in Nigeria.
“We
are working with the Federal Ministry of Education and we made it clear that in
institutions having students returning from outside Nigeria, they should let us
know.
“We will work with them and we have questionnaires
which we are already using on airlines and ships coming into Nigeria as well as
other means of transport. They will fill questionnaires. We will ask questions
and conduct tests to see that they don’t have fever,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment