Elimu Bora Working Group calls for reinstatement of EduAfya amid rising student deaths
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The Elimu Bora Working Group is demanding the immediate reinstatement of the EduAfya medical insurance scheme for all learners, citing what it describes as a troubling rise in preventable student deaths.
The group says recent tragedies in several schools have
exposed serious weaknesses in emergency response, supervision and enforcement
of safety standards.
The education stakeholders are also
calling for independent and transparent investigations into the recent deaths,
with firm accountability where negligence is established.
This is, even as the recent rise in sudden deaths of learners in schools raised serious questions about institutions’ readiness to handle medical
emergencies and the education stakeholders now warn that gaps in supervision, delayed
responses and limited access to healthcare are putting learners at risk.
“Even
after the tragic fire at Endarasha in 2024, which exposed serious failures in
compliance and oversight, it is evident that lessons were not learnt," said
The group enumerated seven recent cases that they say could have been prevented.
“It is very
mandatory that every boarding institution has a nurse and regularly a clinical
officer and a medic where circumstances call for, but unfortunately, it only
happens in C1 schools,"
The stakeholders argue that relying on parents’ Social Health Authority cover for learners is inadequate, especially during emergencies when delays in access to treatment can have fatal consequences.
“The
government was taking up the cost of medical attention for these learners to a
point where if they required transfer or airlifting or an ambulance. So we are
saying SHA has failed to take up this responsibility because there are parents
who are not even in SHA," another member
Boaz added, “Those learners
used to benefit greatly and the facilities did not fear handling them because
they knew they would be paid, but when EduAfya was removed, this is where the
situation is becoming more difficult.”
Another Mercy Gichengi said, “Institute
mandatory, continuous training for teachers and school heads in first aid,
basic life support, emergency medical response, risk assessment for
co-curricular activities, and crisis management and communication.”
They are also calling for the establishment of an Education
Standards and Quality Assurance Council to strictly enforce safety regulations
and compliance in schools.


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