WHO, UNICEF: Schools Must Open Across Europe
LONDON (Guardian) -- Schools across Europe must stay open and be made safer for staff and children, the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF have demanded, as a new term gets under way with the highly transmissible Delta variant still dominant in the region.
“The pandemic has caused the most catastrophic disruption to education in history,” said Hans Kluge, the head of the WHO’s Europe region. “It is vital that classroom-based learning continues uninterrupted.”
Kluge said that while the pandemic continued, “educating children safely in a physical school setting” was of “paramount importance for their education, mental health and social skills”, and must become “a primary objective” for governments.
Forty-four out of 53 countries in the WHO’s Europe region closed their schools nationwide at the height of the pandemic’s first wave in April 2020, and while most reopened that September, surging infection rates sparked new restrictions and more closures in dozens of countries during the autumn and winter.
Mass absences and frequent school closures have continued in several countries through the spring and early summer, with more than 1 million children, or 14.3% of the age group, out of school for COVID-related reasons – either self-isolating or because their school was closed – in England in late July.
“We encourage all countries to keep schools open, and urge all schools to put in place measures to minimize the risk of COVID-19 and the spread of variants” throughout the new school year, Kluge said in a joint statement with the deputy regional director of the UN children’s fund for Europe and central Asia, Philippe Cori.
The two organizations said teachers and other school staff must be primary target groups for national vaccination programs, adding that all children aged 12 and over with underlying health conditions should also be inoculated.
School environments should also be made safer by improving classroom ventilation, reducing class sizes where possible, maintaining physical distancing rules and regularly testing both pupils and staff, they recommended.
“The pandemic is not over,” Cori said. “Children and youth cannot risk having another year of disrupted learning. [They] have been the silent victims of the pandemic, and the most marginalized have been amongst the hardest hit. ”
Schools were “places of learning, safety and play at the heart of our communities”, he said. “When they close, children miss out on learning and being with their friends, and may be exposed to violence in the home. We must ensure they reopen, and that they stay open safely. ”