COVID-19: Community hails NGO over ‘life-changing’ campaign

Sat, Jan 30, 2021
By editor
4 MIN READ

Health

SOME members of the Kufana community in Kajuru Local Government Area (LGA) of Kaduna State have commended the efforts of the Water Aid and Aid Foundation’s ‘Clean Family campaign’, describing it as a ‘life changer’.

The community members made their commendations in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Saturday  in Kufana.

The Clean Family Campaign inaugurated in 2020, under the Water Aid and Aid Foundation’s Scaling-Up Hygiene Project in the state, is to promote good hygiene practices in households, against the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

The Water Aid Team Lead in the state, Idowu Adebayo, had explained that the main objective of the campaign was to influence the adoption of good hygiene behaviours at critical times by family units.

The community members told NAN that the campaign was already yielding the desired result, stressing that regular hand washing, wearing of face masks and other hygiene practices were becoming a norm in households.

Mr Tijjani Dauda, village Head of Sabon Gari Kufana, said that hand washing and wearing of face masks had become part of daily life in his households, following the sensitisation campaign.

Dauda, a father of four, said that the Clean Family Campaign had changed his household’s attitude toward hand washing and good hygiene practices.

He added that the campaign had enlightened him more about the dreaded pandemic and how regular hand washing and wearing of face masks could protect his household from the disease.

”Before the outbreak of COVID-19, we only wash our hands in the morning and during meals, but now we all wash our hands regularly, wear face masks all the time and so far, life has been good.

”In fact, I have never used a face mask in my 67 years in this world, until I received a hygiene pack from the Water Aid and Aid Foundation and now, I am getting so used to it.

”The gesture made me realise how serious COVID-19 is and strengthened my resolve to do all that I can to remain safe from the deadly virus and other diseases being spread through unhygienic behaviours,” he said.

Similarly, Mr Markus Madaki of Unguwan Mangoro, Kufana, said that he became aware of the COVID-19 through radio programmes and other sensitisation campaigns.

Madaki, 64 and  father of 10, said that the campaign had helped inculcate the attitude of regular hand washing and wearing of face masks in his household.

”The campaign was timely because we never took the COVI-19 issue seriously. We viewed it as mere stories until the consistent sensitisation campaigns by Non-Governmental Organisations, (NGO) and government agencies.

”I saw a hand washing facility being installed in my community and I benefited from the hygiene packs being distributed to households. This was a great encouragement to keep our households clean at all times,” he said.

Also speaking, Mrs Maria Stephen, a housewife and a mother of seven, said: “I began wearing a face mask and washing my hands regularly when I kept hearing that it would protect me and my household from the Coronavirus.

”I leant that a person will be infected with the virus if he refuses to wear a face mask, not washing hands regularly or living in an unhygienic environment.

”I also heard that besides protecting against COVID-19, regular washing of hands, wearing of a face mask and good hygiene practices will prevent one from all kinds of communicable diseases.

”As we kept hearing this, we decided to comply and do the needful and we are seeing the benefits, as the last time my five-year-old boy was sick was in July 2020”.

Mrs Stephen’s 16-year-old daughter, Catherine, who wants to be a doctor, said that wearing face masks and regular washing of hands were difficult at first, adding that they were now getting used to it.

Mr Emmanuel Bonet, Executive Director, Aid Foundation, told NAN that the campaign was implemented in 14 out of the 23 LGAs of the state.

Bonet said that jingles on good hygiene practices were being aired in five radios and two television stations in the state and had distributed hygiene packs to 5,000 vulnerable households.

He added that hand washing facilities were installed in churches, mosques, markets, schools, hospitals, and other high-density areas in the 14 benefiting LGAs.

NAN

– Jan. 30, 2021 @ 16:05 GMT |

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