
It was a late sunday afternoon,I had observed the clouds were getting darker,and the heavy rain was impending.Even as I was enjoying the long walk,a hobby that served as an ideal reboot for me mentally,I quickly reversed my course.
However,the loud and fervent prayers from five middle aged women and a man I assume is in his late 20's caught my attention.They had encircled a teenager rolling on the floor with frothy oral secretions. My training in first aid came in handy,and I quickly assessed the boy was experiencing a tonic-clonic seizure.
Interestingly, the 6 people had the impression this was a demonic attack on the teenager. With alacrity,I introduced myself and asked them for help to clear away stones and sharp objects that could cut him as he rolled aggressively on the muddy ground.
I requested for clothes from 3 of the women folded it to formally a cushion for his head as he jerked rhythmically.After,I quickly turned him to the recovery position, loosened his belt and clothes,emptied his pockets and took off his shoes.Clearly he was returning from church as I spotted a sizeable Bible on the ground around him.
After 4 minutes the seizure stopped but he remained in the recovery position.The pastor said his last prayer thanking God and after 20 minutes the young man had recovered from the episode.
The stigma attached to such seizures and the spiritual lense through which it is seen by some does not sit well with me.This is is caused by abnormal electrical activity in the brain and not by sorcery.
In my tensed reflections at home, it dawned on me how crucial first aid training is.I also reconciled on the gaps created by it's absence in our school curricular from basic school to tertiary.
To be candid,it was my first aid skills that saved the boy who I later discovered is called Kofi. What would have been his fate if I never had that walk? He could have chocked and developed other serious complications.
What if it had happened while he was in school,playing with his peers? Or at the aunday school where little is known about first aid?
Appreciating John Locke's philosophy of "Tabula Rasa", I believe the time is opportune for us as a people to revaluate the content of our school curricular.We must make first aid training and education a compulsory part of it on all levels of education.Having a high illiteracy rate is flattering as a country and such is our status as a very religious country. However,our educational system has to shift significantly in imparting useful knowledge.
Policy and decision makers must consider making First Aid Education/Training an integral part of primary,secondary and tertiary education.
This will be empowering to the youth saving lives,reducing the severity of illnesses and injuries, increasing workplace and school safety,reducing healthcare cost and strengthening the emergency system nationwide.
The Bible states in Proverbs 22:6 that "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it".Indeed this will be a step in the right direction for the ministry of education to make first aid training a compulsory part of school curricular.
A partnership between the Ministry of Education and the National Ambulance Service now would be crucial to this agenda.Austria,Norway,Australia,UK among several others have adopted this policy and already seeing significant changes.
In the quest of achieving the reset agenda,this will be revolutionary.Among the several new policies introduced to bring major shifts in the education sector,this will certainly go a long way to make the ministry and it's policy makers paladins of great nation building.
I hope this receives the urgency it requires.
Long Live Mother Ghana.
Dumenu Charles Selorm


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Comments
I think it is the best thing to do. Introducing first aid as a club or lessons in our schools will go a long way to shaping our upcoming generations. I suggest the constitution should be thought someway somehow too.