The Health Sector Environmental Health Practitioners Association ndash;Ghana (HeSEHPAG), a professional Association for Environmental Health Officers practicing under the Ministry of Health (MOH) and its Agencies, and are regulated by the Allied Health Professions Council (AHPC) in accordance with the Health Professions Regulatory Bodies Act, 2013 (Act 857), wish to state categorically the following: Ministry of Health (MOH), Ghana Health Service (GHS), Teaching Hospitals (THs), Ch
Belfast and Lisburn residents fight for answers as smell impacts communities We can t even open our windows most days. It is a terrible smell and we just want the issue resolved
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Health by Hayden Johnson
Premium Content Highly-paid workers at the coalface of Queensland s COVID-19 response are becoming harder to recruit, prompting fears a worsening skills shortage will hamper the state s ability to fight public health emergencies. Environmental Health Officers, grassroots workers on the frontline of the pandemic, are increasingly hard to source as school leavers instead study the more high-profile nursing, teaching or corporate careers. During COVID-19 officers have assisted Queensland Health s contact tracers, screened airport passengers and assessed the spread of the deadly virus. Just eight students will graduate from Griffith University s Environmental Health course this year, prompting fears from course Professor Anne Roiko that the lack of interest would result in chronic skills shortages over the next decade.
COVID-19 vaccine: NAFDAC rules out clinical trial
• Reps set to revisit bill mandating vaccines for Nigerians
• FG places six-month ban on 100 travellers for shunning PCR test
• Bayelsa, Ebonyi postpone school resumption, Rivers resumes Monday
Our Reporters
The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control has ruled out the possibility of conducting a local clinical trial on the proposed N400bn vaccines before administering them on Nigerians.
The agency said since the World Health Organisation had approved the vaccines there might not be need to conduct another clinical trial on the vaccines.
It, however, said it would subject vaccines, which the Federal Government may likely spend N400bn to procure, to proper revalidation before administering them on Nigerians.