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in General News, Health

Children Must Emulate Protocols From You- Dr To Parents

M.Cby M.C
January 27, 2021
Reading Time: 3 mins read
New COVID-19 Measures Welcoming- Titus Beyuo

A parent putting on his child a face mask.

The Deputy Bono Regional Director for Public Health, Dr John Ekow Otoo, has urged parents and guardians to adhere to COVID-19 protocols in order for their children and wards to emulate, to protect themselves and others around them in schools.

This he explained that, children easily followed the behaviour of their parents and as such it was imperative for parents to always wear nose or face masks to motivate their children to do so.

Dr Otoo, speaking in an interview, implored parents to teach their children proper handwashing with soap and frequent use of alcohol-based hand sanitisers to prevent the spread of the viral disease.

Touching on COVID cases in relation to the reopening of schools, he emphasised that, the region has not recorded any suspected COVID-19 infection among school children since school re-opened. However, he cautioned that, the school environment could trigger the spread of the pandemic if children were not well protected. Hence, the need for parents and guardians to provide alcohol-based sanitisers and nose masks to their children before they left home for school.

Dr Otoo explained that, the COVID-19 Regional Response Team, in collaboration with School Health Coordinators of the Ghana Health Service, have put in place pragmatic measures and intensified monitoring to reduce the risk of infection in schools.

UNI330861
School children adhering to safety protocols in class

He, therefore, called on educational authorities to ensure that all suspected cases of coronavirus are immediately reported to the response team for attention and advised the public to avoid self-medication when they fell sick.
On the use of hand sanitisers, Dr Otoo advised the public to use enough sanitisers to rub their hands and between their fingers before the alcoholic content dried up.
He said the GHS and health workers were doing their best to prevent the spread of the disease in schools and the Region and appealed to everybody to adhere to the health safety protocols for their good.

Meanwhile, on COVID-19 transmission, Immunologist and Research Fellow at the West African Centre for Cell Biology of Infectious Pathogens, University of Ghana, Dr Yaw Bediako, has cautioned the general public against social gatherings.

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Dr Yaw Bediako observed that one sure way of transmitting the coronavirus is at such meetings and wants Ghanaians to note that Covid-19 is not a respecter of persons or care about the reasons for being at a gathering.

“I think we seriously need to consider restrictions on the social gathering.

“We’ve made a lot of noise about whether it is church, political campaigning or registration but the virus doesn’t care why you are in a social gathering.”

Speaking on if the ban on gatherings will negatively affect religious gatherings such as the Church and Mosque where people may want to meet to intercede in prayers, he disclosed that, so far as there is a gathering there will be a spread and cautioned against such gatherings.

 “The bottom line is if you have a lot of people in a congested place, no matter what you are doing, you are spreading the virus.

“So, I think we need to move the discourse away from is it political, is it registration, is it church, is it a party.”

Dr Bediako urged the general public to adhere strictly to the Covid-19 protocols to ensure that the rise in the number of active cases in the country is quickly contained.

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Tags: COVID-19COVID-19 protocolsGHSGMAsocial distancing
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The number of confirmed coronavirus cases worldwide has passed 100 million, according to data from Johns Hopkins University data, just over a year since the first officially diagnosed case of the deadly virus. During the past 12 months, the pandemic has forced governments to order lockdowns, curfews, travel bans and other public health restrictions in a bid to stem the spread of infections. Economies have been hard hit in almost every country in the world. Data from the Johns Hopkins University also reveals that more than 2.1 million people around the world have died from COVID-19, and more than 55 million people have recovered from the disease. The three worst-affected countries - the US, India and Brazil - account for more than two-fifths of all global cases. At more than 25 million, the US has the highest number and has suffered more than 400,000 deaths. India is the second worst-hit country, having recorded more than 10 million cases and more than 150,000 deaths. With nearly nine million, Brazil has fewer cases but more deaths than India - at least 217,000. Additionally, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told the country he is "deeply sorry for every life that has been lost" as the UK became the first in Europe and the fifth in the world to record more than 100,000 coronavirus-related deaths on Tuesday, January 27. The Prime Minister said it is "hard to compute the sorrow contained in that grim statistic" and described it as an "appalling and tragic loss of life". "I think on this day I should just really repeat that I am deeply sorry for every life that has been lost and, of course, as I was prime minister I take full responsibility for everything that the government has done." Despite the development of more effective treatments for the coronavirus and the roll out of vaccines across dozens of countries, mutant strains of the virus recently detected in the United Kingdom, South Africa and Brazil have created uncertainty about the potency of the vaccines against the virus. US infectious disease expert, Dr Anthony Fauci said earlier this month that vaccines are designed to recognise multiple parts of the spike protein, which makes it unlikely a single mutation could be enough to prevent them from being effective. However, he warned last week that current vaccines may not be as effective in protecting against the new and more contagious strains. The head of the World Health Organization has however called for more equitable vaccine distribution between nations, as wealthier countries have been accused of “hoarding” doses. Mr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said this month that prospects for equitable distribution are at “serious risk” as the COVAX vaccine-sharing scheme aims to start distributing inoculations to developing nations in February. He added that a “me-first approach” to distribution places the world’s poorest and most vulnerable communities at risk and “will only prolong the pandemic”. German Chancellor Angela Merkel also urged against a vaccine race between richer countries, saying that a multilateral effort was the best way to exit the coronavirus pandemic. Ms Merkel added that it was also essential to support programs subsidizing poor countries' access to vaccines. "It has become even clearer to me than it was before that we need to choose a multilateral approach, that a self-isolating approach won't solve our problems. "We see that first of all in the question of vaccination since it is the route out of the pandemic. Money is one thing, but the other thing in a time of scarcity is the availability of the vaccine. Here it's about a fair distribution, and not about a question of money. "Let's not kid ourselves, the question of who gets which vaccine in the world will of course leave new wounds and new memories because those who get such emergency help will remember that."

Global COVID-19 cases surpasses 100 million mark

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