GNA Accra successfully ends 2023 World Book Capital, prepares to handover title to Strasbourg GNA Teachers seeking study leave with pay should secure bank guarantees – PAC GNA Ghana takes ‘a bitter pill’ to attract investment for energy sector sustainability GNA Ghana is set to procure one million revenue efficient metres GNA SY electronics wins GHC 20,000 cash prize under Startup Takoradi 2024 GNA Fidelity Bank joins United Nations Global Compact Initiative GNA World Bank, AfDB commit to connect 300m Africans to electricity by 2030 MAP Water Management: Morocco Has Rich Experience to Share with Other Countries (FAO DG) MAP Morocco’s Army Rescues 12 Sub-Saharan Would-Be Migrants off Laâyoune MAP Moroccan Sahara: Liberia’s Constant, Positive Positions Consolidate Bilateral Ties (FM)

Prioritise environmental health issues in Ghana


  24 Juin      28        Environment (3678),

   

Tema, June, 24, GNA – Some environmental health students on an internship programme at the Tema Metropolitan Assembly on Tuesday advised the communities in Tema to make environmental health a priority to curb an outbreak of diseases such as cholera and typhoid fever.
Ms Beatrice Prisca, an internship student of the Tema Metropolitan Assembly (TMA), speaking the Ghana News Agency in an interview said as a patriotic citizen of Ghana, we should be more responsible for waste management in our communities since it can help prevent diseases.

According to Ms Prisca, “we must all get involved in educating the general public on how to keep our environment clean, wash our hands regularly before eating, especially, keeping our latrines clean to help prevent houseflies from stepping on it and stepping on our foods, also we should eat warm food to prevent being infected with typhoid fever”.

Ms Comfort Avaya, another student on an internship at TMA, said that previously Environmental Health Officers were known as ‘Town Council’, though the name has been changed, the duties remain the same.

She said that « when we go to the community or the field to educate them, they don’t even want to listen to us, the community is not welcoming us like those days when the name used to be “town council ».

She, therefore, called for the prosecution of environmental offenders.

Ms Hilda Atinga, also an internship student, called for stringent enforcement of laws as well as prosecution of offenders to deter others from engaging in unhealthy environmental practices.

Ms Beatrice Akpabi also encouraged everyone to keep a good and hygienic environment.

Dans la même catégorie