Social Distancing Not Effective Enough To Curb COVID-19, Says Ayade
Social Distancing Not Effective Enough To Curb COVID-19, Says Ayade
The
Cross-River State Governor, Professor Ben Ayade, has said the social distancing
directive is not enough to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in the country.
Speaking during an interview on Channels
Television’s Sunday Politics, Governor Ayade said the
use of nose mask provides one the needed protection against the virus.
The governor explained that his research as a
Professor of Microbiology has shown that science has backed the use of nose
mask as an option, stressing however, that social distancing is not as
effective as some would have people believe.
“Social
distancing presupposes that things are so equal, that you stay in an isolated
room, it is completely wrong because in natural circumstances, in our own
cultural habit people are used to interacting, we are not electric poles, we
are not trees, we are interacting by nature.
“Social
distancing gives a false impression of security, because I know that if you and
I stand together and I sneeze, that two meters distance, the factors that
govern the transitivity are things that are beyond your own control.
Variables like humidity, wind speed, wind direction, how do you control those
factors?” Ayade questioned.
He further
opined that “When you wear a mask, it gives structural protection.
It is a very strong option. And so, as a Professor of Microbiology, I know that
as common sense.
“And that
is why it (wearing of the mask) is not an economic option. It is a scientific
option. That is the most popular option.”
When asked if his administration’s policy on
‘no mask no movement’ is against the World Health Organisation (WHO), the
governor neither affirmed or overruled the question.
Rather, he faulted the global health body for
reversing itself on the use of nose mask following the outbreak of Corona virus
globally.
“The same
WHO said mask doesn’t work but they reversed themselves after proper research
that showed that the use of nose mask reduces droplets that are up to 95 per
cent.
“The WHO
came out to reverse herself. In several other research findings, WHO has been
seen severally reversing herself. Come to the real substance, the use of the
nose mask confirms structural protection,” he
said.
Ayade’s remarks come two weeks after the
state government began the mass production and distribution of nose masks free
of charge to residents of the state.
Don't forget to subscribe!
Stay safe!
Comments
Post a Comment