According to
a statement from the bank on Friday, the amount includes $100 million credit
from the International Development Association (IDA) and $14.28 million grant
from the Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility.
The World
Bank has approved $114.28 million financing to help Nigeria prevent, detect and
respond to the threat posed by COVID-19 with a specific focus on state-level
responses.
It stated
that the Federal Government would provide grants to thirty-six states and the
Federal Capital Territory (FCT) through the COVID-19 Preparedness and Response
Project (CoPREP).
It added that
the project would serve as immediate support to break the chain of COVID-19
local transmission and limit the spread of coronavirus through containment and
mitigation strategies.
Mr Shubham
Chaudhuri, World Bank Country Director for Nigeria said: “Nigeria has ramped up
its efforts to contain the COVID -19 outbreak, but more needs to be done at the
state level, which is at the frontline of the response.
“The project
will provide the states with much needed direct technical and fiscal support to
strengthen their position in combating the pandemic.”
Chaudhuri
added that the project would finance federal procurements of medical equipment,
laboratory tests and medicines to be distributed to the states based on their
needs.
He also said
that the project complemented the Second Regional Disease Surveillance Systems
Enhancement Project (REDISSE II) which was already providing short-term
emergency support to implement national and state Incident Action Plans.
Furthermore,
he said that all 36 states had incident action plans cleared by the Nigeria
Center for Disease Control (NCDC) and funds had been disbursed to 23 states.
According to
the World Bank, CoPREP would finance further support to all states and the FCT
through the NCDC to implement their COVID-19 Incident Action Plans.
“Specifically,
this includes: the operationalisation of 37 Emergency Operations Centres;
training of 30,000 healthcare workers in infection prevention and control;
support for emergency prioritised water sanitation and hygiene activities; and
strengthening of risk assessment and community and event-based surveillance.”
Others are:
“provision of on-time data to inform the response and mitigation activities;
additional support to laboratories for early detection and confirmation; equipping
and renovating isolation and treatment centres including community support centres;
and improving in patient transfer systems through financing of ambulances and
training as needed.”
It further
stated that grants to states would be conditional on states adopting COVID-19
response strategies in line with the Federal Government guidelines and
strategies.
“CoPREP will
enhance the institutional and operational capacity for disease detection
through provision of technical expertise, coordination support, detection,
diagnosis and case management efforts in all states and the FCT as per the WHO
guidelines in the Strategic Response Plan.
“It will also
help the government mobilise surge response capacity through trained and
well-equipped frontline healthcare workers and strengthen the public health
care network for future health emergencies.”

No comments:
Post a Comment