Environmental group, CLAP GH has reiterated
the need for attention to be given to protecting the environment as a means to
fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.
In commemoration of World Environment
Day,
the group is encouraging individual and group tree planting drives for a clean
healthy environment to fight pollution and diseases.
About
one quarter of global disease is linked to the environment or caused by
environmental factors that could be changed, according to the World Health
Organisation (WHO).
The environment influences our health through the air we breathe, the water we drink, radiation and noise, the work environment, and also the climate and ecosystem.
Polluted
air causes respiratory diseases; unclean water and lacking sanitation causes
diarrhea; poorly-managed water bodies cause vector diseases such as malaria.
The
WHO says more than 3.5 million deaths each year are from respiratory
infections, diarrhea disease and malaria alone.
Often
the practice has been to wait for diseases to happen before resources are
deployed for treatment afterwards.
Living Clean, Green and Healthy
Scientists
have observed that taking care of the environment and keeping it clean directly
affects the health of the environment we live in.
Interventions
that will help develop a better and cleaner air, clean and safe water, is
critical to promote good health.
The Climate, Livelihoods &
Agriculture Platform (CLAP GH) is therefore constituted to build synergy along
the Science, Environment and Agriculture nexus to drive a common goal of
addressing climate change for sustainable development.
“We believe that in as much as the global
economies are being disrupted, health systems and people being affected, there
is the need for us as individuals to think about how we need to be clean and
cater for the environment as part of the actions to bring this coronavirus to a
halt,” said Environmentalist Kofi Adu Domfeh, who is convener of CLAP Gh.
“While we are fighting Coronavirus in the
short term, climate change is for the long term, and the actions we are taking
to mitigate and adapt should be more focused even at this time than ever before”.
The call is to ensure a clean and healthy
environment which is very crucial to curtail most of the things that help the
virus to grow.
Climate Scientist at Kwame Nkrumah
University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Professor Isaac K. Tetteh,
admonishes the society to be mindful of actions that might pollute the
environment.
He emphasizes the importance for every
individual helping to manage the micro environment because poor environmental
quality makes the society susceptible to many diseases.
“Poor
environmental quality can make us highly susceptible to many diseases in the
environment. We need to look at our environment and keep it clean so that we
don’t become vulnerable to the COVID-19 and other diseases, so we can enjoy
infection-free environment,” said Professor Tetteh.
In
the face of the COVID-19, the little we can do at the individual level in protecting
the environment is attitudinal change towards the environment.
“We must adhere to strict etiquette [no
spitting around] and coughing freely into the air, and indiscriminate nasal
discharges around. This ‘normal’ practice in Ghana contributes much to
polluting the environment,” he noted.
Planting CoronaVirus Trees
Healthy
environments are the key for better health. Policy makers are expected to take
decisions and actions to protect the environment.
CLAP GH is however calling on individuals
and groups to endeavor to plant trees in commemoration of World Environment Day
as contribution to promote an infection-free environment.
The "CoronaVirus Tree Planting”
campaign is to encourage collective actions to protect the environment even as
the planet survives this pandemic.
CLAP Gh believes the world must not lose
sight of the need to take collective action on climate adaptation and
mitigation.
The environmental group mobilizes young
professionals to become part of the momentum created by the Paris Agreement on
Climate Change to partner all interest groups to share knowledge and take
action.
No comments:
Post a Comment