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Health

Public education needed ahead of arrival of COVID-19 vaccines – Okoe Boye

By : cd on 06 Feb 2021, 11:29     |     Source: citinewsroom

Covid vaccine

Former Deputy Minister, Dr. Bernard Okoe Boye has underscored the need for state agencies to begin a targeted public sensitization for the roll-out of the COVID-19 vaccines in the country.

For him, government’s efforts to acquire the vaccines to slow the spread of the virus will come to naught if the right public sensitization is not provided for the population especially when the Health and Finance Ministry has put in place adequate measures to ensure Ghana receives its fair share of the consignment.

He is however worried over the unwillingness of many Ghanaians to reject any form of vaccination insisting that only proper education will ensure the needed change of mind.

“Government has not been idle for the vaccine but I think the education must start aggressively so that we conscientize the population on the arrival of the vaccine. On my own level, I sent my assistants to the filed to try and talk to people.

“I just developed a simple questionnaire asking about what they know about COVID-19 and whether they are willing to take the vaccines. I am still processing the data but you will be amazed almost everyone including the educated say they won’t take the vaccine. The education must not be wholesale but surgical so we know who to target and the reasons to address,” he said on the Big Issue on Saturday.

Dr. Okoe Boye also mentioned that it is imperative for a more scientific idea of public perception about the vaccines in order to have a tailor-made form of education.

Providing more details on the acquisition of the vaccines, he said the government is exploring several options to boost its chances of more stock adding that health officials will take advantage of the country’s already existing Expanded Program against Immunization (EPI) to improve the cold chain system for the storage of the doses.Ghana is first expecting a batch of the COVAX vaccines to meet its target vaccinating 20 million out of the 30 million population with the government outlining four categories of persons for the receipt of the vaccine to be administered.

The segments are frontline workers, people with some form of health risk and co-morbidities, workers who offer essential services and the arms of government and the remaining population.

President Akufo-Addo has already indicated that the government is working to procure 17 million vaccines.

“Our aim is to vaccinate the entire population with an initial target of 20 million people. Through bilateral and multilateral means, we are hopeful of by the end of June, a total of 17,600,000 vaccine doses will have been procured for the Ghanaian people,” he said in an address to the nation on Sunday evening.

The earliest batch of vaccines will be in the country by March 2021.