Environment
Group Seeks Policies To Promote Cleanliness In Schools
The President, Global
Advocacy for Toilet and Sanitary Standards Initiative, Ms Miriam Onuoha, has called for deliberate policies to promote cleanliness in schools to reduce preventable diseases.
Onuoha told newsmen in Abuja that the school environment was becoming a breeding ground for pathogens (organism promotion diseases) to thrive.
According to her, hygiene promotion matters in schools, because young pupils are most vulnerable to the threats caused by unclean water, poor sanitation and hygiene.
“Schools realistically help as a meeting point of pathogens spread, a large numbers of pupils from different socioeconomic background assemble into one place.
“Diarrhoea diseases, intestinal worms and other debilitating parasites affect lots of school children.
“Such disease burden have a negative effect on growth, nutritional status, physical activities, cognition, concentration and school performance of children between ages five and 14.
“In spite of this, globally, more than 50 per cent of schools lack access to a safe water supply and about two thirds of schools have no access to sanitation facilities,” she said.
Onuoha said schools need to be empowered to have adequate toilets and constant running water, saying that lack of sufficient sanitary infrastructure has been attributed to poor performance of students.
She urged the national policy makers to invest in physical Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) infrastructure in addition to enhancing resources for hygiene promotion.
This, she said, would impact positively on life skill-based practices on daily basis.
She said that hygiene promotion in schools and through schools programme was also important to children.
“Because they play in the school environment, and around their homes, they are prone to diarrhoea,’’ Onuoha said.
She said human excreta were the major carriers of these pathogens, adding that with a healthy, safe and protective leaving environment, lives of school children would be guaranteed.
“The healthy environment also helps children for their cognitive, emotional and social development through nurturing values, hygienic habits, skills and experiences.
“In turn, school children can act as change agents for their family members and the community.
“One of the prerequisite conditions for quality education is the provision of an environment conducive for pupils, so that they can enjoy school and achieve the best of their capability,’’ Onuoha said.
She decried the way the government was handling sanitation, saying that poor handling of sanitation issues was not just restricted to hygiene.
“Without a private toilet, women and girls are vulnerable to violence, intimidation and indignity.
“Women and girls living in Nigeria without toilet facilities spend about 3.1 billion hours each year finding a place to go to toilets in the open.
“Sanitation was the most neglected and off-track of the just concluded Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) with little funding, resources or political will to address the crisis,” Onuoha said.
The president said that little progress had been recorded toward the agreed target of allocating 0.5 per cent of Gross Domestic Product to sanitation.
She said stakeholders should begin to see access to sanitation and water as fundamental human right, adding that it was possible for everyone to own a toilet and access good hygiene.
She urged community members to take ownership of their hygiene, saying “sanitation starts with the individual before reflecting in the society”.
According to the WHO/UNICEF led Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP 2015), only 29 per cent of Nigeria’s population has access to improved sanitation facilities.