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Water Aid urges leaders to invest $1.2bn to ensure access to clean water

Chris Ndibe

Evelyn Mere, Country Director, Water Aid has urged leaders around the globe to invest an amount up to $1.2bn on water, sanitation and hygiene during the pandemic.

Mere made this call in a press statement made available to newsmen through her communications and media manager, Mr Oluseyi Abdul Malik, in Abuja.

She stated that the said sum equated to just thirty minutes worth of what most countries had already spent on Covid-19 response packages in the last one year.

“Spending at least £1.2 billion on water, sanitation and hygiene for healthcare centres is a no-brainer investment, both saving lives now and also protecting against future pandemics and the devastation they cause.

‘’Yet it could change everything for the millions who have no option but to seek care from the 50 per cent of health care facilities in the poorest countries which don’t have clean water.

“We must find the money needed as a matter of urgency, to make sure all healthcare facilities in the poorest countries have clean water and soap before another pandemic hit’s’she added.

Mere emphasized that if frontline health workers can’t wash their hands, keep patients clean or have somewhere decent to go to the toilet, a hospital is not a hospital at all ,it would be a breeding ground for disease.

As G20 finance ministers meet this week in Rome to discuss how they will build back from the pandemic, world leaders are being advised to heed this call to save countries from the disturbing effects of the pandemic.

The News Agency of  Nigeria,(NAN)reports that since the onset of Covid-19, rich countries have spent significant sums, an average of nearly 10% of their GDP, and a total of $20.6 trillion, on stimulus packages to help bolster their economies and to recover from the pandemic.

The sum needed, $1.2 billion, equates to just thirty minutes-worth of the past year’s spending. This investment would bring these vital frontline defences against future pandemics to all healthcare facilities in the poorest nations.

In Nigeria, millions of people are at free risk of COVID-19 and other infectious diseases as 96% of all healthcare centres in Nigeria lack access to basic water, sanitation and hygiene services – putting the lives of doctors, nurses, midwives and patients at risk.

Providing doctors, nurses and patients with somewhere to clean their hands is one of the most effective ways to halt the spread of disease.

An essential injection of finance by the G20 would prevent millions of avoidable deaths through infections and diseases.

Not only has research shown that washing hands with soap helps reduce the spread of coronaviruses by one third but it would also help curb the growth of antimicrobial resistance.

Antibiotics are tooo used in unclean health facilities as a ‘quick fix’ in place of proper hygiene – Which is contributing to an increasingly alarming situation as antibiotics lose their power to fight infections.

According to the World Health Organization, investment of this nature would take just one year to pay for itself and produce savings for every dollar invested thereafter.but an ever-growing debt crisis is preventing poorer countries from being able to invest into basic water.

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