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Coronavirus: Rwandan Hospital Ban Visits As WHO Urges Africa To Reopen Schools

Coronavirus: Rwandan Hospital Ban Visits As WHO Urges Africa To Reopen Schools

Rwanda’s top referral hospital has banned visits amid coronavirus cases among doctors and nurses, officials say.

Dr Edgar Kalimba, an official at King Faisal hospital, told state television that five doctors and “some” nurses have recently contracted the virus.

The hospital receives between 600 and 1,000 patients per day and has around 500 workers.

In the last seven days, Covid-19 cases in Rwanda have quintupled comparing to the previous week. Fatalities of the virus also jumped from five to 11 in the last two weeks.

More than 2,700 cases of Covid-19 have been recorded in Rwanda, health ministry data shows.

meanwhile the World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations children’s agency have urged African governments to promote the safe reopening of schools during the coronavirus pandemic.

They say prolonged closure of schools is harmful to students and want governments to invest in sanitation facilities to prevent the spread of coronavirus in learning institutions.

The two organisations said students are being exposed to poor nutrition, teenage pregnancies and violence during this extended stay-at-home period.

Schools in Africa are a “safe haven” for children, according to the WHO Regional Director Matshidiso Moeti.

“We must not be blind-sided by our efforts to contain Covid-19 and end up with a lost generation. Just as countries are opening businesses safely, we can reopen schools,” she said during a virtual press briefing on Thursday.

See Also

The long closure of schools poses a risk to the future of children and their communities, according to Unicef Regional Director Mohamed Fall.

Only six African countries have fully opened schools, according to a survey of 39 countries by the WHO and Unicef.

Some countries reopened schools and closed them soon after because of a surge in coronavirus cases.

Others have reopened for final year students to sit for crucial examinations.

Countries like Kenya have completely scrapped the 2020 academic year.

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