Nurses under the aegis of
University Graduates of Nursing Science Association (UGONSA) have saluted the World
Health Organisation (WHO) and countries of the world for their efforts so far
on COVID-19 and specially thanked the citizens of the world for their great
sacrifices in accepting to shutter their means of livelihood and giving-up some
of their fundamental human rights and usual activities of daily living (ADL) in
compliance with governments stay-at-home order made to contain the spread of
coronavirus, the virus that causes COVID-19.
In its nursing week message
signed by its National President, Chief (Hon) S.E.O Egwuenu and Ag. National
Secretary, Nurse P.O. Eteng, the association worried that despite lockdowns,
number of cases is still flaring-up and gave advice on additional measures it
believed will make a great difference if added to the ongoing measures adopted
for the fight against the disease.
It said, “when countries started
a massive shut down of their economies in February and March 2020, the hope was
that within two weeks, or at most one month, the spread of the virus would be
contained since the incubation period of the novel coronavirus is between 2 and
14 days.
“But a look at the more credible
data coming from the US and Europe show that the rate of infection and deaths
are still on the high side even as, perhaps out of lockdown fatigue and biting
hardships, economies have started to be reopened.
“The U.S. for example just had
its deadliest day from the virus so far on May 1, 2020 recording 2,909 deaths
according to CNBC news (of May 2nd, 2020) at a time when the country just
started reopening parts of its economy and easing stay-at-home order. The toll
of this deadliest day of COVID-19 so far witnessed in the U.S. rivals that of
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, which claimed the lives of 2,973 people
in one day, according to a government commission report cited by the CNBC news,
yet nobody can for certain predict what holds for future contagions and
fatalities from the virus.
“The questions that should
agitate our minds are, why is the virus still spreading ferociously despite
widespread lockdowns and social distancing practiced for months? If it was
still spreading vigorously with strict restrictions of lockdown and social
distancing what will the picture be when restrictions are lessened or removed?
“Being a professional association
of nurses, the frontline healthcare workers that have the most personal
round-the-clock close contact with patients, including the COVID-19 patients,
we have observed that despite that nurses could not afford to maintain social
distance with confirmed COVID-19 patients as they must come to a very close
range of the patients to care for them,
the rate of infections among nurses is still lower than that of the general population that practiced social distancing probably due to some things
which may be more potent than social distancing that is more common on the nurses'
side than they are with the general population which we believe if made
universally abundant to the general population might make them be more elusive
to the virus as the nurses.
“As the pandemic panned out, some
world-power countries which many other countries were looking-up to for
strategies and guidelines such as the US, France, and Britain focused more
attention on producing and stock-piling ventilators to the extent that the U.S.
for example, invoked its Defense Production Act to force automobile companies to
start producing ventilators. This action
subtly made some countries that were looking up to the U.S. for strategies to
adopt in the fight against COVID-19 to assume that having ventilators was the ultimate solution to the problem hence the frenzy with which many countries
were falling over each other to get hold of ventilators as if ventilator
was the COVID-19 messiah.
“As enormous energy was focused
on producing and acquiring ventilators, groceries and markets were allowed to
run severely dry of basic hygiene items such as disinfectant wipes, toiletries
and alcohol-based hand sanitizers and no Defense Production Act was invoked to
produce them in an abundant quantity to balance the need for their increased
usage orchestrated by COVID-19.
“As stimulus packages were
legislated upon, nobody deemed it fit to legislate on making it compulsory for
basic hygiene items to be available to all the people all the time while the
COVID-19 crisis lasts.
“While so much campaign was made in preaching
the practice of basic hygiene especially hand hygiene, the capacity for people
to effectively do so was not concomitantly enhanced thereby allowing severe
scarcity of basic hygiene items to create a weak link in the chain of
preventive measures that the virus maneuvered through to continue to spread.
“When contrasted with the situation for nurses
who, despite very close round-the-clock personal contacts with the victims of
COVID-19, still have a lower rate of infection and deaths compared to the
general population it becomes quite understandable that the meticulous hygiene
practices made by nurses while donning face masks and other PPEs such as
regularly wiping surfaces with disinfectant wipes, and regular hand hygiene
practice of combining hand washing with alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR), in a
nutshell, makes a great difference.
“The point we are trying to
highlight is that it is not enough to just preach to people to practice
meticulous hand hygiene without leveraging them the ability to effectively do
so vis-à-vis adequate provision of basic hygiene items such as disinfectant
wipes, toiletries, ABHR, and so on.
“The battle we are currently
waging against COVID-19 cannot be won by bullets or by ventilators but by
effective hygiene practices which should be done with basic hygiene items
complimenting regular hand washing with soap and water. Therefore the
bulletproof everybody should be universally provided with at this auspicious
moment is disinfectant wipes, toiletries, alcohol-based sanitizers and any
other thing needed for effective hand hygiene to efficiently complement hand
washing with soap and water.
“Now is, therefore, time for
countries to invoke their Defense Production Acts or whichever means possible
for mass production and free mandatory distribution of disinfectant wipes,
toiletries, alcohol-based hand sanitizers, and masks (regular masks or those
made from clothing materials) to the general public and as well make the use of
facemask in the public compulsory with punitive actions against defaulters.
“The
WHO, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC (US)] and the CDCs of
other countries should as a matter of urgent importance recommend these measures
as mandatory for speedy implementation across the globe – the statement
concluded.
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