COVID-19: Govs urged to enforce vaccination of workers

The National Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHDA) has urged state governors to enact and enforce COVID-19 vaccination for local and state government workers.

The NPHDA gave this urge to Chiefs Executive of states, in its latest advisory.

This came to the fore as the percentage for fully vaccinated Nigerians stalled at 4.2 per cent while those that had taken their first dose remained grounded at 9.8 per cent as of Sunday, January 9, 2021.

The NCDC had, in its daily updates, continued to report increase in the number of fatalities reporting no fewer than 38 deaths between January 1 and January 8.

READ ALSO: http://Armed Forces Remembrance Day: Lagos’ll continue to remember fallen heroes, heroines, says Sanwo-Olu

Despite the increasing number of cases and deaths, some states have not vaccinated up to 200,000 individuals while Abia, Kogi and Niger states have not commenced administration of booster shots.

While some states had commenced the booster administration, analysis by our correspondent revealed that Akwa-Ibom, Anambra, Benue, Ebonyi, Imo, Kwara, Sokoto and Yobe had yet to administer boosters up to 100 residents.

While Imo State had only administered 10 booster shots, Ebonyi State3 administered 52, Akwa Ibom State administered 67.

But the NPHCDA in its bid to speed up vaccination, in its advisory, told governors that it was part of their responsibility to enact and to enforce vaccine mandate on state and local government workers.

Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Boss Mustapha had, in October, announced that Federal Government workers who failed to show proofs of vaccination would be barred from government offices.

Executive Director of the NPHCDA, Dr. Faisal Shauib, had another press briefing in 2021 had said that individuals who refused to get vaccinated would not be allowed to infect other people.

The Presidential Steering Committee went ahead to issue a vaccination mandate to Federal civil servants. The Boss Mustapha-led Committee had stated that Federal Civil servants without proof of vaccination and negative PCR tests would not be allowed into their respective offices as of December 1, 2021.

The federal civil servants who refused to adhere to the mandate were turned back home while others had to visit makeshift vaccination sites to get vaccinated.

READ ALSO: http://Katsina man puts house roof for sale to raise ransom for son’s release from terrorists’ captivity

State governments of Kaduna and Ondo states had also enforced vaccine mandate on state workers. But in a fresh advisory sighted by our correspondent, the NPHCDA advised governors to enact and enforce the same vaccination mandate on state and local government workers.

The advisory partly reads, “Enact and enforce vaccine mandate for all state and local government workers, direct mandatory set up of mass vaccination sites in public places including markets, parks, event centres, stadia and academic institutions.

“Approve and direct the release of state counterpart funds for advocacy, communication and social mobilization, logistics and additional teams in quarterly tranches.

“Pay weekly unscheduled visits to at least one mass vaccination site to supervise and motivate the vaccination teams, chair weekly review meetings with traditional and religious leaders to address vaccination gaps.

But the Senior Special Assistant to the FCT minister, Dr. Ejike Orji told one of our correspondents that the final decision to enforce the vaccine mandate lay on the minister.

He said, “Well the vaccine mandate is a Federal Government policy and it is expected that each state will start the process. A lot of people think we are trying to force it but what the government is saying is that if you have a right to not get vaccinated, other people also have rights to not getting the virus from you.”

“Sooner or later, the FCT will give the instruction. it is the mandate of the minister to do so and he will decide when to fully enforce it.”

COVID-19 vaccinationNational Primary Healthcare Development Agency
Comments (0)
Add Comment