COVID-19: Doctors kick as Lagos govt okays schools to reopen Jan 18

Lagos State government has approved Monday, January 18, 2021, as the resumption date for all public and private schools below tertiary level.

The resumption marks the commencement of second term of the 2020/21 academic session.

The Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Folasade Adefisayo, made the announcement in a statement on Monday.

Adefisayo said the reopening is in line with the Federal government’s directive.

She ordered schools to comply with all the COVID-19 protocols and guidelines.

She told them to have flexible plans where students and teachers who feel sick can teach or learn from home via available online platforms.

Adefisayo enjoined teachers, students and visitors to always wear face masks, observe physical distancing, regular hand washing with soap and maintain a high standard of personal hygiene.

Meanwhile, Secretary-General of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Dr. Ekpe Philips described as erroneous the belief that youths have immunity to withstand the virus.

Also last week at a webinar by the Alliance on Surviving COVID-19 and Beyond, NMA President, Prof. Innocent Ujah, cautioned against reopening schools now because of the second wave of the pandemic.

Philips said: “Granted that the younger population have a better immunity than the older population, but they should not take it for granted because there are still some children who have co-mobilities and their lives are important. There are children with hypertension, diabetes, who COVID-19 can take down.

“Also remember that the students do not just stay in schools on their own; they have teachers and workers who may also be exposed. So, it is important to exercise caution even in the reopening of schools.

“It is very wrong for schools to reopen now; and remember that most people have gone on Christmas and New Year holiday without keeping to the NCDC protocol. I am not saying that is what is going to happen, but there is that scare that there could be a sudden surge in transmission and infection associated with COVID-19.

“I also understand one fact that Nigerians have not kept to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) protocol. Also, you ask yourself – what difference has it really made if people are doing crossover sitting down without face masks and without social distancing? As far as I am concerned it is a sin that the government put a rule and people break it on religious grounds.”

President of the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), Dr. Uyilawa Okhuaihesuyi said: “I strongly feel that schools should not be reopening on Monday. The fact that states are now releasing children to resume school is my cry because we don’t know the directions that Nigerians are going. We are exposing our children, our families and everybody into where there is no direction.”

Decrying the level of response by relevant agencies, the NARD boss said: “We need to ask the government about their plans for people infected with COVID-19 and ask them where do we go from here?

“The Presidential Task Force on covid-19 (PTF) and the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) have a lot of questions to answer. They need to give answers on what their plans are for Nigerians on how to keep us and our families safe.

“We are in the middle of a second wave and isolation centres are not there again. For example in Lagos, where are the isolation centres? Where do you take your loved ones to, and who answers for us as Nigerians on where to get basic treatment from? As we speak now, my younger brother, my mother and I have been exposed, and we do not know where to go?

“Months earlier we knew that Lagos State Government had isolation centres in several locations. Now, most isolation centres have been closed down. For example, in Gbagada, there is an isolation centre there but we know it is not functional now.

“The ones in Lekki are not functional again. So, which isolation centres are functional in Lagos, Abuja, Enugu etc. They have all thrown caution into the air, and we are talking of vaccines of N400 billion which we don’t know where Nigeria is going to get it from. I cry for Nigerians, myself, and my family – I cry generally for everybody involved. NARD cries for Nigerians because we don’t know where we are going.

“The health sector is more in confusion state because we do not know where we are going.

“If, as Nigerians, we do not know where our parents, families, and those infected are going to go, how do we survive the state we are in?”

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