Tag: UNICEF

  • 87m kids affected by global  conflicts, says UNICEF

    87m kids affected by global conflicts, says UNICEF

    The United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) has said about 87 million children around the world have reached the age of seven without peace.

    Such children, the global agency said, live in conflict zones, where the lives of the minors have taken a toll on their mental health and intellectual development.

    UNICEF’s Chief of Early Child Development, Pia Britto, said: “During the first seven years of life, a child’s brain has the potential to activate 1,000 brain cells every second. Each one of those cells, known as a neuron, has the power to connect to 10,000 other neurons thousands of times per second. Brain connections serve as the building blocks of a child’s future, defining their health, emotional well-being and ability to learn.”

    The global body noted that children living in conflicts are often exposed to extreme trauma, putting them at risk of living in a state of toxic stress, a condition that inhibits brain cell connections.

    It said such a situation would have significant life-long consequences on the children’s cognitive, social and physical development.

  • EU, UNICEF tackle open defecation in Ekiti

    EU, UNICEF tackle open defecation in Ekiti

    Ekiti State has the highest rate of open defecation in Nigeria. The European Union (EU) and United Nations International Children’s Fund (UNICEF) have taken up the challenge to reverse the trend. ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA reports.

    Open defecation has been identified as the major cause of diseases. In Ekiti State, many houses still lack toilets. Even many homes in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, do not have this facility.

    Despite its sobriquets of “Fountain of Knowledge” and Land of Honour”, the state has the highest rate of open defecation in Nigeria.

    The problem pervades urban and rural areas. The messy situation has become a challenge for the Ministry of Environment, Ekiti Waste Management Board (EKWMB), Rural and Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (RUWASSA) and other agencies charged with maintaining a clean environment.

    Surprisingly, Ekiti State observes environmental sanitation like other states on the last Saturday of every month. Apart from the general sanitation, civil servants, market men and women are also compelled to carry out environmental sanitation on other designated days.

    During one of his monthly media chats, Governor Ayo Fayose, apparently concerned about the problem, threatened to prosecute landlords who fail to provide toilets for their tenants.

    Many months after the threat, no landlord has been reported to have been prosecuted for non-provision of toilets in their houses. Some observers claim that political consideration could be one of the reasons for lack of action on the matter.

    Many parts of Ado-Ekiti are dotted with overflowing garbage bins and incinerators. In some places, such as Okutagbokutalori in Okeyinmi area of the town, residents dump their garbage on the ground. Those places provide people opportunity to defecate openly.

    Many houses in areas, such as Odo-Ado, Oke-Ila, Okeyinmi, Okesa, Ojumose, Oke-Ese, Irona, Ijigbo and Atikankan lack toilets making the residents to defecate openly.

    Apparently concerned by the development, the European Union (EU) and United Nations International Children’s Fund (UNICEF) have decided to reverse it in order to promote better hygiene and sanitation among the people.

    The bodies have committed huge financial, material and human resources to the Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Reform Programme (WSSSRP) III.

    At a two-day media networking and alliance building workshop held in Ijero-Ekiti, headquarters of Ijero Local Government Area, and sponsored by UNICEF, open defecation dominated deliberations.

    In Ekiti, about 1.8 million people representing over 60 per cent of the 2.7 million population still defecate openly. Experts say if the situation is not checked, the projected population that will be practising open defecation by 2025 will rise to 4.3 million.

    Open defecation has become an issue because it constitutes health hazard and outbreak of diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea, worm infestations; typhoid and contributes to child and adult mortality.

    While the city which is peopled by more educated and exposed people wallows in environmental deterioration and poor hygiene practices, the rural communities are showing the way on how not to foul the environment with human waste.

    The need for a collective action to stop open defecation was a step taken by EU and UNICEF to bring media practitioners together to brainstorm on how to use their platforms to promote water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) practices.

    The two local government areas for the EU/UNICEF sanitation agenda were Ekiti West and Gbonyin with 313 rural communities and 30 rural primary schools in the council areas billed to benefit from 460 hand pump boreholes and 60 sanitation blocks.

    The counterpart funding ratio for the construction of these facilities is 70 per cent to EU/UNICEF, 18 per cent to state and 12 per cent to the local government areas. The communities are also expected to contribute five per cent which will be left with the community as seed money for operation and maintenance.

    In the affected communities, water, sanitation and hygiene committees (WASHCOMs) were established as vanguards of proper hygiene practices and to carry out interface with the community-led total health facilitators (CLTS).

    As part of the workshop, a field trip was organised which took journalists to two farm settlements in Ekiti West Local Government Area.

    The leader of the UNICEF delegation, Ms. Mohsena Islam, described the media as an important and strategic partner in creating awareness and sensitising the people.

    Ms. Islam, who is also sanitation specialist, UNICEF Lagos Field Office said the two communities namely Temidire Elejofi Farm Settlement and Aba Asasa Farm Settlement both in Ekiti West Local Government Area have keyed into the war against open defecation by constructing toilets latrine facilities for each family.

    She said: “We go to communities where it is demonstrated; we have to work with the communities to sensitise them to the need to embrace hygienic lifestyle so that it would not seem as if it was imposed on them.

    “The community leaders are involved. We have been able to get 26 communities and we are looking at how monitoring can be done. We also do hygiene promotion, going from one household to another to communicate the messages.”

    First to be visited by the journalists, UNICEF and RUWASSA officials was Temidire Olojofi which is located off Aramoko-Ado Ekiti Highway and linked by a wooden bridge over the community river.

    The settlement is surrounded by cocoa, kola nut and banana plantations and it is populated by the Oyos, the Urhobos and the Togolese who are bound together by massive agricultural activities.

    The people were full of enthusiasm in receiving the delegation and were proud to show off their household latrines to announce to the world that open defecation has become history among them.

    A community leader, Kareem Isola, revealed that they had settled on the land for over 50 years, even as he praised EU/UNICEF for enlightening them on the need to construct latrines to prevent outbreak of communicable diseases.

    Isola said: “We are all farmers and we have been here for more than 50 years. These people always come here to give us enlightenment on the evils associated with open defecation.

    “They advised us that each family should have its own latrine, each family contributed money and materials needed to make our toilets. At the back of the houses, there are latrines for the families.

     

     

  • Riders for health

    Riders for health


    There is no denial that the World Health Organisation (WHO), the United Nations (UN) and many other non‐governmental organisations (NGOs) as well as various parastatals have engaged in endless struggles to provide health care for mothers and children across less privileged communities in Africa.

    Interestingly, the more these health organisations make efforts, the less it seems they are doing greatly in reducing maternal and child mortality, thus, the need for ‘Riders for Health’.

    According to United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) reports in 2014, Nigeria loses about 2, 300 of her under‐five year old children per day, which is approximately 839,500 children in a year.

    The same report has it that 145 pregnant women reportedly die either at child birth or after child birth per day. And this amounts to 52, 925 women per year.

    Given this statistics, Nigeria ‐ like many other African countries – ranks high as one of the countries with large contribution to the under‐five and maternal mortality rates in the world.

    Worthy of mention here is the fact that many of these deaths could be prevented if aid gets to those who need them, regardless of their locations – rural or urban settlement.

    It is largely true that the coverage and quality of health care service delivered to communities that are at the outskirts or in far rural areas has continued to fail both women and children in Nigeria. Thus, the need to introduce a project called: ‘Riders for Health’.

    ‘Riders for Health’ is an international social enterprise that strives to manage and maintain vehicles for health‐focused partners in sub‐Saharan Africa with the view of delivering health care services to communities far from cities.

    The expertise to be put in place by this project in transport management will enable health workers deliver vital health care to rural communities on a reliable and cost‐effective basis.

    The need for Riders for health became pertinent considering the challenges faced by health care givers in reaching communities that are far removed from urban settlements.

    What this means is that, not only that those members of communities that are far from cities often struggle in vain to get health care, even health care workers likewise struggle in a bid to save affected Riders for Health employs the use of every form of motor‐vehicles to deliver health care facilities as well as move health care givers to concerned communities.

    Among the motor‐vehicles that would be employed by this project include motorcycles, ambulances and other four‐wheel vehicles used in the delivery of health care in seven countries across Africa.

    These countries include Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Zambia, Nigeria, Zimbabwe and The Gambia.

    The project is in collaboration with ministries of health, international and African NGOs, private‐sector organisations, local community‐based organisations and religious groups, to improve access to health care,

    Furthermore, it is important to note here that the project has the capacity to take care of an estimated 14 million people across the seven African countries mentioned above.

    For example, one single motor‐vehicle plus one rider has the capacity to cover 56.7 kilometers and beyond within a month covering a total of 5.1 million people.

    At the core of this community‐focused project is both training and preventive vehicle maintenance. The essence for running reliable vehicle fleets cannot be separated from the need to ensure that the chain in health care delivery is never broken by failing vehicles thereby increasing health workers’

    The same way, prevention is better than cure in human health, so is maintenance better than repair for automobiles, hence the need for constant maintenance, which is also cheaper to keep a vehicle running efficiently over time than to repair it when it breaks down completely.

    The programmes have been designed to provide training and employment opportunities to build local  a project focusing on human health, the service of highly skilled technicians becomes vital to regularly travel to service vehicles in the communities in which health workers serve.

    In addition to training health workers to drive safely in the difficult terrain, there would also be training for them on how to carry out daily checks on their vehicles.

    It worthy of note to mention that majority of the population of sub‐Saharan Africans live in rural areas where the best roads are little more than dirt tracks.

    Public transport is infrequent and delivering health care on foot or by bicycle between sparse villages is an exhausting and ineffective task.

    Simply put, without reliable transportation system, the millions of pounds invested in vaccines, drugs, bed‐nets, condoms and to train health professionals every year will be wasted because they will fail to get to where they are needed on time.

    There is therefore every reason for this project to achieve the set goal in order to have a safe and healthy world.

  • UNICEF seeks $2.8b to assist children worldwide

    UNICEF seeks $2.8b to assist children worldwide

    The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) on Tuesday in New York appealed for 2.8 billion dollars in aid to assist 43 million children living in humanitarian crises worldwide.

    Afshan Khan, UNICEF’s Director of Emergency Programmes, said that a large portion of the appeal would go toward funding education.

    He said one-fourth of the appeal would be used to educate children in emergencies and to get 5 million Syrian children living in and outside the country into schools.

    Khan said the number of children living in humanitarian crises with access to schools from 4.9 million at the beginning of last year to 8.2 million this year.

    “Education is a life-saving measure for children, providing them with the opportunity to learn and play, amidst the carnage of gunfire and grenades. UNICEF noted that its current appeal had doubled what it was just three years ago.

    “Today, one in nine children worldwide lives in a conflict zone.”

     

  • UNICEF, College urge Osun to adopt UBE policy

    The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)  in collaboration with the Osun State College of Education, Ilesa has implored the Osun State government to adopt the 2004 Universal Basic Education (UBE) policy to accommodate pre-schoolers.

    The policy mandates every public primary school to have a pre-primary school linkage to cater for children aged three to five.

    In a communiqué signed by the Drafting Committee’s chairman and secretary, Wahab Ibrahim, and Mrs. Adebola Olayinka, the participants agreed that stakeholders should pay an advocacy visit to the Osun State House of Assembly to sensitise its members on the importance of early childhood education.

    The training for stakeholders of pre-primary education drawn from schools, communities across the 30 local government areas of the state and the media had about 50 participants, who urged the Rauf Aregbesola administration to take advantage of all UNICEF’s assisted early childhood education in Nigeria.

    The participants also said enlightenment campaigns should be conducted by stakeholders in the focal council areas to make the people key into the programme.

    They said the trainers and the caregivers linked with the programme should be adequately equipped.

  • Boko Haram forced one million out of school – UN

    Boko Haram forced one million out of school – UN

    Violence in northeast Nigeria and neighbouring countries targeted by Boko Haram has forced more than one million children out of school, leaving them prey to abuse, abduction and recruitment by armed groups, the United Nations said on Tuesday.

    More than 2,000 schools in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger remain closed due to the conflict and hundreds have been looted, damaged or destroyed, said the UN children’s agency UNICEF.

    While hundreds of schools in northeast Nigeria have reopened in recent months, insecurity and fear of violence are preventing many teachers from resuming classes and discouraging parents from sending their children back to school, Reuters quoted UNICEF as saying on the crisis.

    Boko Haram is mostly based in northeast Nigeria but the militant group has this year intensified its campaign, setting up camps and launching attacks in neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger in its drive to carve out an Islamist caliphate.

    “Schools have been targets of attack, so children are scared to go back to the classroom,” UNICEF’s West and Central Africa regional director Manuel Fontaine said in a statement.

    “Yet the longer they stay out of school, the greater the risks of being abused, abducted and recruited by armed groups.”

    More than 400 schools have reopened since October in Nigeria’s Borno State, birthplace of the six-year insurgency waged by Boko Haram, more than 18 months after education was halted in the wake of an attack on a school in neighbouring Yobe state which killed 59 students.

    Yet in Cameroon’s Far North region, which has been struck by a string of suicide bombings in recent months, blamed on Boko Haram and often carried out by young women, only one school out of the 135 closed in 2014 has reopened this year, UNICEF said.

  • Govt, EU, UNICEF join forces against  gender-based violence

    Govt, EU, UNICEF join forces against gender-based violence

    In the yesteryear, a young girl’s uncle took her to the city. He promised to give her quality education and good home, among other things. The girl and her parents fell for it.

    Contrary to the promises, things turned awry as early as she arrived at her uncle’s home. She immediately became a servant and was subjected to various forms of cruel treatment. She attended school in tears.

    One day, she demanded school fees from her uncle. For this, she received severe beating and was forced to kneel down under the sun.

    She was serving that punishment when a passerby (her uncle’s friend) saw her. Moved with pity, the passerby enquired from her what the matter was. The girl narrated her ordeal to the man who urged her to come to his office for the money.

    Excitedly and relieved, she rushed to see him at the appointed day, only for the man to rape her in his office. He threatened to kill her if she told anyone about it.

    The girl mustered courage and told her uncle. But the he girl, her uncle doubted her, stripped her and kicked her into the streets—naked.

    That was where she met a Good Samaritan and the contact that fulfilled her dreams. Today, she is proudly married and has children.

    But how many of her type are that lucky? What about a man who, after some years of marriage that was blessed with children, decided to take a second wife? One day, an argument ensued between both wives and the second wife poured hot water on her senior colleague.

    Neighbours rushed the woman to the nearest hospital and her assailant to the police. But on their husband’s return, he asked the police to release her and arrest him instead. After securing her bail, he  divorced his first wife while still in hospital.

    In another instance, a father sexually abused his two daughters who were 12 and 14 years old respectively. The older one was courageous enough to open up.

    She opened up to their 20-year-old brother who eventually blew it by taking them to the palace of their traditional ruler for safety.

    These are few examples of the many cases of gender-based violence (GBV) and Violence against Children (VAC) that occur daily.

    Despite the outcry about the increasing incidents of victimisation, a lot more are not publicised.

    It was on this ground that the European Union (EU), United Nations Women, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the Federal Government entered into a partnership towards curbing the trend.

    As part of the activities, the coalition held a one-day workshop with select religious and community leaders and other stakeholders in Gombe State. The workshop aimed at finding solution to the problems of VAC and GBV in various communities. The workshop also aimed at strengthening the commitment of stakeholders in combating the trend by tapping into applicable religious injunctions and practices that discourage VAC and GBV.

    At the forum, resource persons categorised VAC into emotional, physical and sexual. Emotional violence, they said, is ridiculed, talked-down on or put down by parents. Adult caregivers or adult relatives who continually show or tell victims, mostly children, that they were unloved or did not deserve to be loved, or wished they were dead or had never been born.

    Physical violence was defined as physical acts of violence such as physical assault–punching (hitting with a fist), spanking, kicking, whipping, beating with an object, choking, smothering, burning intentionally, using or threatening to use a gun, knife or other weapons, regardless of whether or not it resulted in obvious physical or mental injury.

    Sexual violence describes all forms of sexual abuse and exploitation. This encompasses rape, attempted non-consensual sex acts, abusive sexual contact (i.e. unwanted touching) and pressured sex (such as through threats or tricks) regardless of the setting and perpetrators’ relationship to the child/victim. It was also established that victims experience these forms of violence on multiple occasions and they often experience more than one type (either at same time or at different points).

    Witnessing violence was said to have effects on children’s behavioural and social development as adults are significantly more likely to perpetrate physical violence against their intimate partner if they witnessed it in childhood.

    The representative of UN Women in Nigeria and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Dr. Grace Ongile said the choice of community and religious leaders was based on their roles as value bearers, spiritual mentors and critical stakeholders in the quest for sustainable peace.

    Ongile, who was represented by the Deputy Programme Manager, UN Women, Peter Mancha, said violence against women slows down poverty eradication, just as it is a consequence of discrimination against women. She added that prevention is possible.

    She said GBV/VAC prevention strategy needed to be backed by political will and holistic participation by all sectors of the community so that it could have a long-lasting and permanent impact.

    “Evidence has shown that community mobilisation to change social norms and educational programmes, including gender equality training for both women and men are some of the interventions that have helped.

    “It is, however, important to note that any prevention strategy that is not backed by political will and holistic participation from all sectors of the community will not have a long-lasting and permanent impact.

    “You and I can work together. Governments, civil society organisations, businesses, schools could help to achieve a more equal world where women/girls and children will be free from violence. A little touch goes a long way,” she said.

    Ongile said: “Religious and community leaders could bring the desired change when they continue to emphasise values and cultural practices that support equality and respect for women, girls and children in their teachings; support local programmes that provide services to victims and survivors; speak out about sexual assault and domestic violence as well as encourage and support training to increase the awareness about sexual assault and domestic violence.”

    Contributing, the Permanent Secretary, Gombe State Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development, Muhammadu Adamu Bappah said a draft copy of the domesticated Child Rights Law was already before the Ministry of Justice for consideration and onward presentation as bill to the State Assembly. He said it was against this background that the state government praised the stakeholders’ discussion on how best to handle and manage GBV/VAC in the state.

    He recalled that a 2014 National Survey Report indicates that “approximately six out of every 10 children experience some form of violence. Half of all children experience physical violence. One out of every four girls and one out of every 10 boys experience sexual violence while one out of six girls and one out of five boys experience emotional violence.”

    He said: “Thinking that violence against children is not a problem and that ‘it is their fault’ by perpetrators” were barriers to children seeking help against violence. The fear of getting into trouble and children’s inability to afford or get the services they need, fear of stigmatisation and lack of sufficient response to enable service providers analyse the reasons also build-up VAC.

    “These are traits that shape our perception, thinking and behaviours on GBC/VAC. We are aligned to our thinking in this modern age and present realities. GBC/VAC is moral imperatives. “I wish to call on us all to reconsider our belief systems, norms, values and practices which provide acceptable ways,” said the Permanent Secretary as he called on participants to step down the benefits of the forum in their respective areas.

    Quoting Marie Fortunes in his paper on “Christian Perspective on Violence against Women and Children in Nigeria,” Pastor Musa David described sexual assault as bodily sin that violates bodily boundaries and distorts one’s sense of body image. It is also a sin against relationship because it violates the command to love one’s neighbour as oneself.

    He further said it betrays trust and destroys relationships.

    and those who should have cared for them, the consequence of which could lead to distrust in victims in their future relationships. He said it is also a sin against the community surrounding the victim.

    He said referred to sexual assault as not only emotional trauma, but also a humiliating and debilitating loss of sense of self and something that “is deeply traumatising and resulting in devastating emotional and psychological consequences for the victim.”

    Pastor David emphasised the need for publicity on the issue through church magazines, postal/fliers with various pungent inscriptions; organising seminars/public lectures and rallies on war against GBV/VAC; enforcing church discipline without discrimination; launching a social media campaign and embarking on intercessory prayers, among others.

  • EU,UNICEF battle open defecation in Bayelsa

    EU,UNICEF battle open defecation in Bayelsa

    The European Union (EU)  and the United Nations  Education Funds (UNICEF) are worried about entrenched habit of openly depositing faeces in water bodies and general environment by residents of Bayelsa State especially persons living in the rural and coastal areas.

    The international agencies in collaboration with the Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agencies (RUWASSA) observed with dismay that unhygienic lifestyles associated with poor management of faeces account for constant outbreaks of water borne diseases like cholera in some parts of the state.

    In fact,  the rural communities in the riverine Ijaw communities are polluted.  They lack access to clean drinking water.  They only rely on water from the rivers around them,  which are mostly contaminated, for drinking and other domestic purposes.

    According to research,people from rural area in Bayelsa state  greatly practice open defeacation  in their rivers, bush, and water banks. This is the same river they  swim in,fetch water for drinking,  and do other household activities. Most of them engage in the practice for misguided reasons.

    One of the villagers from Kaiama in  Kolokuma/Opokuma Local Government Area of the  state, said he  he enjoys his open defecation system because according to him, the fish in the river feeds and grows large from his faces.

    He said:  ”I defaecate in this river. I drink from this river. My fish feeds largely on my faeces, and I kill my fish  and then eat the end product of my feaces”.

    In fact,  there is a great need to improve on the people’s hygienic behavior by providing them with a good sanitation.

    UNICEF defined sanitation as the provision of facilities and services for the safe disposal of feaces and human urine adding that inadequate sanitation is known to be a major cause of water- borne diseases  such as cholera, typhoid, diarrhea and ringworm.

    Following their discovery,  UNICEF in partnership with EU and RUWASSA  floated a programme in Bayelsa to discourage unhygienic behaviour and encourage adoption of  Ecological Sanitation (ECOSAN) known as an improved approach in sanitation in Nigeria.

    Ecological Sanitation (ECOSAN) is seen as any sanitation systems whose ultimate objective is to achieve practical sustainability and still maintain human dignity. So, the sponsors assembled artisans, wash committees and other stakeholders from different communities in the state in Kaiama to learn about ECOSAN and take their lessons to their various settlements.

    The trainees comprising officials of RUWASSA,  local government area wash units, community artisans, state local government area wash consultants and  sanitation officers were  empowered with knowledge and practice of ECOSAN.  It was a one week event.

    They were not only taught the theories of ECOSAN, they also helped the sponsors in constructing a durable ECOSAN pit latrines one each in Kalama, Ekwuari,  and Brass.  They learnt the skills of building environmentally friendly latrines.

    Speaking at the event, a UNICEF consultant, Mr. Patrick Ikor, said that ecological sanitation stores feaces and enriches the soil for farming.

    “Ecological Sanitation does not pollute rather it encourages  storage and usage of urine and feces materials  that can further be poured into agricultural development. The  Ecosan system involves buidling a water tight vault for storage of faeces  and building water tight chambers for urine storage.

    “This urine when it is filled up,  the jerry cans introduced to the chambers are removed  and kept for over one month  for most of the disease causing organisms to die off  and it is then safe for use  in our agricultural products.

    He advised the communities to forego their open defecation and embrace Ecosan latrines which he described as modern and hygienic.

    Explaining how the Ecosan latrines should be used,  he said: “The ecosan toilet should be used In such a way that the urine does not  get  mixed with the feaces,    I will advise that whenever they are using the vaults, they  should make sure to use toilet paper so that they  would avoid water going into the feaces chamber.

    “They should follow the guidelines of the  trainers on how to use those latrines because if  water and urine are being mixed together the results or the expected desired results will not be achieved. And at the moment when feaces are separated from urine, it dehydrates.   “Anal cleansing method should be tissue paper and not water because there are some people that use water. But in this approach we are asking the community users to learn how to use tissue paper even though they might have been using water for their anal cleansing”.

    He said the evacuation of the compost should be done after one year just as he advised users of the facility to ensure that the surrounding of the toilets are kept clean.

    In fact,  the construction of the modern latrines brought joy to the benefitting communities. The Amanonowei of the Ekwuari community His Highness, Bernard Izimbadi, thanked  EU and UNICEF for bringing such facility to their community.

    ”We did not have public toilet and we were so worried about it. We normally go to defecate inside river, and other places like inside bush and on our surrounding but now that the toilet has come through the help of EU/UNICEF,  we are happy.

    He went further to state that  the use of the toilets would bring some behavioural change like the  use of tissue papers. He advised the residents to adopt the new latrine.

    Another Resident said:  ”The toilet is very important to our community, and we need it especially now. Many of us we use to go to the waterside to defecate but since they  have come to do this thing for us we appreciate it”.

    One of the participants, Mr..Ezekiel Okobo,  who hails from  Brass commended the  EU and UNICEF coming to their rescue by erecting a toilet facility for them. The facility according to him will go a long way in making life easier for the community.

    “This  is a new concept but what we intended doing is to call the wash committees, the chiefs, the community leaders and then arrange a town hall meeting where we will  educate them and tell them what  this new approach is all about  so that they can easily adopt the concept for their community”, he said.

     

     

  • ‘80% of maternal deaths caused by unhygienic deliveries’

    ‘80% of maternal deaths caused by unhygienic deliveries’

    The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) says 80 per cent of maternal deaths are caused by unhygienic delivery practices at Primary Health Care Centres (PHCs) nationwide.

    Mr Bioye Ogunjobi, the UNICEF Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Specialist, made the disclosure at the National Stakeholders’ Workshop on Draft Hygiene Promotion Strategy and Guidelines in Abuja.

    According to him, effective provision of WASH facilities will go a long way to promote safe health care.

    He explained that in Nigeria, many PHCs do not adhere to minimum WASH standards to provide adequate and safe levels of health care.

    He added that “reports say 80 per cent of maternal deaths are caused by unhygienic delivery practices in PHCs across the country.

    “However, for PHCs to work well, they must have good source to water, safe excreta disposal, drainage, hospital waste and hygiene promotion facilities.’’

    The WASH specialist said it was worthy to note that inadequate access to water, sanitation and hygiene facilities were known to cause 10 out of 100 hospitalisations in Nigeria.

    He stressed the need for stakeholders to see access to WASH as a human right, saying “this pays a vital role in attaining universal health coverage.’’

    Ogunjobi said it was saddening to see that there were no specific policies on hygiene promotion in PHCs as it were.

    He said if healthcare facilities were overcrowded, lacked toilets, access to water, patients and health workers may be exposed to danger.

    Mr Job Ominyi, a WASH Officer with UNICEF, also said Nigeria needed to have a hygiene promotion strategy, saying access to water and sanitation was central to development.

    He said that with effective hygiene promotion safety, 50 per cent transmission of water and excreta related diseases would be reduced to the barest minimum.

    Ominyi said the Fund was carrying out a research on Menstrual Hygiene Management to ascertain the level of awareness on myths and practices.

    This, Ominyi said, would enable the organisation know how to intervene to reduce negative beliefs and taboos associated with menstruation in some communities.

    He said Nigeria was one of the 14 countries carrying out such research, saying Katsina, Anambra and Ogun were the targeted states.

    He urged Nigerians to create accessible sanitation facilities, privacy, access to water supply and effective waste disposal for menstruating girls.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the workshop was jointly organised by the Federal Ministry of Water Resources and UNICEF to seek ways to enable Nigeria to have a hygiene promotion strategy.

     

  • Maternal mortality drop by 44 percent – UN

    Maternal mortality drop by 44 percent – UN

    Maternal mortality has fallen by 44 percent since 1990, United Nations agencies and the World Bank Group has declared.

    In a Joint news release by the World health organisation (WHO), UNICEF, UNFPA, World Bank Group and the United nations Population Division Maternal deaths around the world dropped from about 532 000 in 1990 to an estimated 303 000 this year.

    According to the report, this is the last in a series that has looked at progress under the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). This equates to an estimated global maternal mortality ratio (MMR) of 216 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births, down from 385 in 1990.

    Maternal mortality is defined as the death of a woman during pregnancy, childbirth or within six weeks after birth.

    According to WHO Assistant Director-General, Family, Women’s and Children’s Health Dr Flavia Bustreo, “The MDGs triggered unprecedented efforts to reduce maternal mortality. Over the past 25 years, a woman’s risk of dying from pregnancy-related causes has nearly halved. That’s real progress, although it is not enough. We know that we can virtually end these deaths by 2030 and this is what we are committing to work towards.”

    Achieving that goal will require much more effort, according to Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, the Executive Director of UNFPA, the United Nations’ Population Fund. “Many countries with high maternal death rates will make little progress, or will even fall behind, over the next 15 years if we don’t improve the current number of available midwives and other health workers with midwifery skills,” he said. “If we don’t make a big push now, in 2030 we’ll be faced, once again, with a missed target for reducing maternal deaths.”

    The analyses contained in Trends in Maternal Mortality: 1990 to 2015 – Estimates by WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, World Bank Group and the United Nations Population Division are being published simultaneously in the medical journal The Lancet.

    Ensuring access to high-quality health services during pregnancy and child birth is helping to save lives. Essential health interventions include: practising good hygiene to reduce the risk of infection; injecting oxytocin immediately after childbirth to reduce the risk of severe bleeding; identifying and addressing potentially fatal conditions like pregnancy-induced hypertension; and ensuring access to sexual and reproductive health services and family planning for women.