Skip to main content

COVID-19: NEIGHBORHOOD TRANSFORMATIONAL SHIFT


COVID-19 is an infectious disease caused by a newly discovered “coronavirus”. According to World Health Organisation (WHO), the virus spreads primarily through droplets of saliva or discharge from coughing and sneezing from an infected person and attacks the respiratory systems. Presently there are no specific treatments or vaccines for COVID-19.

Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has reported over 1,000 cases in 21 states in Nigeria, a month after the index case was reported. Consequently, federal and state governments have enforced lockdowns at different levels and forced people to stay indoors and all economic activities are put on hold except for critical and essential services.

However, there are growing concerns about safety, health, and economic implications during this period.
The truth is that if COVID-19 breaks out in Nigeria at an overwhelming rate, the entire health system would collapse.

According to the WHO (2004), there are approximately 5 hospital beds per 10,000 people in Nigeria. The University College Hospital, Ibadan with the highest bed spaces only boasts of about 900; most other Teaching and General Hospitals have less than half of this capacity.

Also, the lack of access to clean water and poor hygiene poses a serious challenge for stakeholders and social workers.

According to UNICEF, it is estimated that 69 million Nigerians have no access to clean water. Our local communities are filled with cramped shelters and slum clusters and this makes social distancing and social isolation difficult to achieve. Social distancing and self-isolation presuppose that people have enough space. These facts alone make it difficult to contain the pandemic.
Regular hand-washing under a running tap presupposes that people have clean and running pipe-borne water.

Furthermore, there have been reported cases of increase in theft, loss of jobs and businesses are beginning to feel the impact of the pandemic as healthcare workers work tirelessly to tackle this pandemic; and there is a significant likelihood that the economic impacts of the coronavirus pandemic on the Nigerian economy could be even more far-reaching and extensive than anticipated.

Our society is fragile.
How can people who can’t defend themselves during crises living in the nation with fragile and low medical capacity survive this?

That is why I am urging the government and humanitarian groups to do their best and come to the aid of these people.

These are the groups of people social distancing will be impossible for, lack of medical care, lack of basic amenities, and lack of relief materials will make COVID-19 entry into conflict zones terrifying.

Amidst this crisis, care and support for the vulnerable in our society are critical to building a resilient society. Many daily income earners and petty traders who are a vast majority of the informal economy have been protesting against the lockdown in the absence of financial aid and relief. There is an urgent need to find a sustainable way to respond to these challenges and keep people safe.

Humanitarian groups, philanthropists, and the government should help in deploying scarce medical resources and develop holistic transformational plans for a healthy nation, for a safe and prosperous country.

Helping those that cannot fend for themselves during crises is a moral and leadership obligation as well as a shared responsibility for all and sundry.

Igbayilola Joseph Mayowa
SHADE-IN


Let us know how COVID-19 is impacting on you, your family, your community or someone you know. If you don't wish to make it public, you can send a mail to shadein2009@gmail.com

Follow and Partner with SHADE-IN.

Kindly contact us: https://shade-in.blogspot.com/p/contact.html?m=1

#YouthEducation #LeadershipDevelopment
#ValueReorientation #NeighbourhoodTransformation

Your feedback will be appreciated using the hashtags below. Share widely with the hasgtags as well.

Thank you.

#COVID19
#PostCOVID19
#SHADE-IN
#SHADE_IN

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

SHADE-IN at 15: Transforming Lives, Impacting Communities—One Step at a Time

A BIG ANNOUNCEMENT!  Hurray! We’re 15 Today!🕺💃 Happy Anniversary to Us at Saving Hand Development Initiative (SHADE-IN)! Today, we joyfully celebrate 15 years of transforming lives and impacting communities—one step at a time. To all our donors, partners, stakeholders, volunteers and staff (past and present), board members, management team, beneficiaries, and community supporters—THANK YOU! This milestone wouldn’t be possible without your love, support, and shared belief in the mission. Join us as we reflect, share stories, and spotlight our journey starting from today within the next couple of months this year using the hashtags below.  Let’s celebrate this legacy together! Saving Hand Development Initiative (SHADE-IN) gratefully celebrates F.I.F.T.E.E.N (15) years of: F – Faith and Faithfulness I – Initiative, Innovation, Inspiration and Impact F – Fortitude and Forging Resilience T – Tenacity and Transformation E – Excellent Executions E – Empowerment and Empathy N ...

International Day of Conscience: When Moral Outrage Misfires – A Case Study in Ethical Activism

Abstract On this International Day of Conscience, we reflect on the delicate balance between righteous indignation and ethical responsibility. This article examines a 2025 incident in Nigeria where an activist’s public confrontation of a struggling mother and her 11‐year‐old daughter escalated into a humiliating episode.  The case, which involved the exposure of the child’s face in violation of child protection guidelines, ultimately led to a public apology from the activist and compassionate intervention from well-meaning Nigerians including the famous chess player and philanthropist Tunde Onakoya, and the founder of Buchymix, who stepped in and offered to support the child’s education and the family's welfare, including accomodation.  Through this analysis, we explore the complexities of activism that neglects empathy and the need for a conscientious approach in public discourse. Introduction Conscience guides us in differentiating right from wrong, yet its application in pu...

TO A FRUIT OF OUR LABOUR: RASHEED O. SANNI

Let us celebrate one of the fruits of our ministry in SHADE-IN, Rasheed Obaro Sanni. February 5, 2019 was his birthday. Rasheed (Right) being taught by one of our volunteers, Gloria Iboroama (L), 2010 He was in JSS 2 when we started work in Aba-Ebira, Ekiti State, being one of the pioneer beneficiaries of our extra mural classes. Today, he is a Civil Engineering 200 level student of University of Benin (UNIBEN), Edo State. Rasheed in school (UNIBEN) I enjoin all of us to pray specially for him on this his birthday, as well as reach out to him. Our most sincere prayer for him is that Christ be formed in him. This is the secret of greatness in life, because Christ in us is the hope of glory. My little children, of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you, Galatians 4:19 KJV To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory: Colossians 1:27 KJV Kee...