File Photo (March 2020) - Public Health staff in training dons PPEs
#Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands – August 23, 2020 – It remains a mystery, the reason for the sudden departure of the two-year director of the National Public Health Laboratory, NPHL but today the Ministry of Health confirmed the contract of Samuel Johnson was indeed terminated on Friday August 14.
Already, the search is on for a new director explained
the Ministry of Health in a statement to Magnetic Media on Saturday.
“The substantive Director post which
recently became vacant, has been advertised in the latest recruitment batch as
a part of TCIG’s recruitment programme.”
In the past nine days, the Turks and Caicos has recorded 125 new cases of COVID-19; the spike and regular reports of offices and businesses having to close as a result of positive diagnoses of staff had also spiked concern about the timing of the termination.
“…the National
Public Health Laboratory continues to carry out testing as necessary under the
leadership and direction of the Acting Director of the NPHL, Mr. Samajeo
Williams, who is a TC Islander that is a highly trained and qualified Chief
Medical Technologist.”
Samajeo Williams, a Turks and Caicos Islands native,
was added to the NPHL team in November, with glowing commendation from the
Office of the Deputy Governor. Williams
is now the acting director.
“Mr. Williams, a former recipient of the
‘Best Performing Student’ award in 2007 (External Exams), completed his
A-levels at the British West Indies Collegiate shortly after. He later enrolled in Newcastle University in
pursuit of a Bachelor’s of Science in Biology and Psychology which he completed
in 2012. In 2016, he graduated with
Honours from the University of the West of England with a Bachelor’s of Science
in Healthcare Science – Infection Sciences. While working as a registered
Biomedical Scientist in the United Kingdom, Mr. Williams also attained the
accreditation of a Specialist Biomedical Scientist in Microbiology.”
Manpower has been
strained at the lab; a fact which has waylaid plans for progressive community
testing. The National Public Health Laboratory is overwhelmed by the second
wave of the coronavirus pandemic which has been 30 times worse than the first
wave for the TCI.
A molehill has
certainly turned to a mountain for the Turks and Caicos Islands as data exposes
the country is currently averaging more cases per day, than the total number of
positives charted in the entire first wave of the pandemic.
Between August 14 and
August 22 – nine days – there have been 125 cases of COVID-19; that’s an
average of 13 new cases per day.
In the first wave,
the Turks and Caicos recorded 12 positives for the coronavirus.
Over the same period,
testing has been erratic, ranging from no tests done to as many as 168 tests performed
in a single day. The daily average for August
14-22 is 50 tests, which exceeds a previously divulged daily COVID-19 testing capacity
of 47.
Within the same
period, the lab was able to inform that 48 people were recovered from the virus;
from 54 recoveries charted on August 14 to now 102 patients who are COVID-19
free.
The rate of work at
the NPHL appears to have not been stymied by the loss of the director given the
data provided by the TCI Ministry of Health.
Still, the
expeditious action to advertise the director vacancy underscores the need to shore
up human resources at the lab, which is the key agency guiding and influencing national
decisions in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.