Thousands
of Nigerians admitted into United Kingdom universities appear sure to
face tough health screening as their campuses have been placed on the
alert for the danger posed by the Ebola Virus Disease.
According to The Independent on Sunday,
the alert by Universities UK, the umbrella body that represents
vice-chancellors, was issued because the universities are expecting
new students to arrive from West Africa.
While
the three countries which have seen the largest number of Ebola cases –
Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone – have hardly any students enrolling
at UK universities, Nigeria – which has also had confirmed cases – is
the fourth largest supplier of international students to UK
universities.
In 2012-13, the latest year for which figures are available, a total of 9,630 were enrolled.
A
spokesman for the body said, “The issue is very much on universities’
radars. We circulated to universities the publicly available guidance on
the topic.”
The
guidance makes it clear that any student suspected of having Ebola
should immediately be isolated in a side room away from any member of
staff or student contact.
“The
side room should have dedicated en-suite facilities or at least a
dedicated commode,” it says. “The level of staff protection is dependent
on the patient’s condition,” the London-based newspaper newspaper said.
It
added that “those having any dealings with the patient must take
careful hand hygiene precautions, wearing double gloves and a disposable
visor.
The
guidance told university workers that, “evidence from outbreaks
strongly indicates that the main routes of transmission of infection are
direct contact (through broken skin or mucous membrane) and indirect
contact with environments contaminated with splashes or droplets of
blood or body fluids.”
It
said that experts “agree that there is no circumstantial or
epidemiological evidence of an aerosol transmission risk from patients.”
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