COVID-19 Scare: Rural folks in Wa West refuses to visit health centers
Posted on July 13, 2020
Some sick rural folks from the Poyentanga in the Wa West District of the Upper West Region are refusing to visit their health centre to seek health care for fear of contracting the coronavirus disease.
Their reason for choosing to stay at home
with their sickness rather than visit the health centre for health care, is
that they heard the coronavirus disease was in the big villages, towns and
cities, which discourages them from attending to the health facilitity.
Mr Yuorido Kakariba, a native of Tendoma community in the District told the
Ghana News Agency (GNA) in an interview that they prefer to stay at home with a
sickness they are familiar with than to go out and contract what he referred to
as a strange disease.
“We have lived with a lot of sicknesses such as malaria and others but no one
told us not to go out, but with this disease, they said we should not go out
because if we go out, we are likely to contract it”, he said.
“If you get malaria there is medicine but for coronavirus, we heard there is no
cure for it. So if you make mistake and contract it, you are in trouble that is
why we don’t want to take chances”, he emphasized.
Madam Grace Bonye, also a native of Tendoma whose child was sick told the GNA
that she did not send her child to the health centre because she was afraid of
the risk of travelling in a public transport and also to public facilities such
as the health centre.
‘We believe the disease is not in our village, we will only get it if we go to
town so we choose to stay at home”, she said.
Mr Kareem Rashid Dalo, Physician Assistant In-charge of the Poyentanga Health
Centre when contacted confirmed that the people were refusing to patronize the
health centre because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
He said this was a worry to them because a lot of people were getting sick but
were staying at home, which according to him was dangerous to their health.
He said, however, that they had initiated mobile outreach services to the
communities to respond to the situation.
“We now send our health staff to the communities to attend to sick people in their
homes since they are refusing to come to the facility by themselves”, he said.
Mr Dalo added that the outreach team was recording high number of attendance in
the various communities than those who visit the facility itself daily.
By Prosper K. Kuorsor