The Federal Government, in partnership with the World Health Organisation (WHO) and United Nations Children’s Education Fund (UNICEF), has inaugurated a National Roadmap on Hand Hygiene for All.

 

The roadmap gives direction for collaborative efforts to implement the Sanitation and Hygiene programmes under the UN Sustainable Development Goal six.

 

At the public presentation on Tuesday in Abuja, the Minister of Water Resources, Mr Suleiman Adamu, said the Nigeria Roadmap identified strategic goals and opportunities for investments to improve hand hygiene.

 

Adamu said that it provided actions across the three pillars of political leadership, enabling environment and inclusive programming at scale to increase supply and demand.

 

“The Roadmap has laid out a path for maximising upcoming opportunities in the implementation of hand hygiene in homes, schools, and healthcare facilities, among others.

 

“This Roadmap will further increase the awareness of Nigerians on the developing initiative for inclusive hand hygiene in all human contexts of existence in Nigeria.

 

“Activities to realise these factors have been detailed to include short-term COVID-19 response needs to control the outbreak and medium-term activities to rebuild hand hygiene culture,’’ he said.

 

Adamu said the long-term approach called for the sustenance of hand hygiene culture, adding that the impact of adequate handwashing cut across the whole SDGs Agenda.

 

He said this has the potential to improve healthcare outcomes and subsequently increase the progress regarding equity, education, and WASH.

 

Also, Mr Emmanuel Awe, the Director, Water Quality Control and Sanitation, Ministry of Water Resources, said there was a need for political leadership to build momentum in all tiers of government.

 

Awe said that a strong enabling environment was crucial, as it would strengthen systems for financing and developing policies in a sustainable manner.

 

The UNICEF Deputy Representative, Ms Rushnan Murtaza, said the roadmap was a deliberate effort to guide the country in interventions that build on the efforts of the government in curtailing the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Murtaza said the benefits of hand hygiene in preventing the transmission of infectious diseases were crucial, as it had been proven to reduce deaths from respiratory and diarrhoea diseases in under-fives.

 

She said to facilitate the implementation of this Roadmap, UNICEF supported the Market Assessment of Hygiene Products and Services in Nigeria.

 

“The report of this assessment is ready and will be widely circulated to facilitate efficient decision-making on sourcing hygiene products and services at all levels.

 

“I understand that the Clean Nigeria Campaign at the National level has already incorporated the core strategies of the hand hygiene for All Roadmap into their campaign strategies,’’ she said.

 

Murtaza urged all states and local government areas to key into the roadmap and integrate it with their state-specific open defecation-free roadmaps.

 

Commenting, Dr Edwin Isotu-Edeh, WHO Representative, commended the efforts of the Federal Government in prioritising sanitation and hygiene through the campaign for hand hygiene.

 

“There is a huge gap in access to handwashing services among households in the country as reflected in the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Normal Routine Mapping report, as it stood at only 17 per cent.

 

“There is a need for behaviour change to inculcate handwashing as the first line of defence in breaking disease transmission,” Isotu-Edeh said.

 

He called for mainstreaming the roadmap into all development policies and programmes.

 

According to him, this will help to improve access to basic and improved sanitation and hygiene services sustainably.

 
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