Coronavirus in Xanthi: 80 teachers in quarantine and 5 schools are closed

By 4 years ago

Four schools in the city of Xanthi will remain closed for the next 10 days, after a teacher who works in all four tested positive for coronavirus, Ethnos reported.

The man, who is from the village of Echinos, is currently asymptomatic and has been instructed to remain at home. The eighty teaching staff at the four schools will also be tested.

This comes as last Friday, another teacher from the municipality of Topiros also tested positive for the novel virus. Her school in the village of Iliopetra will be closed until June 19.

According to reports, both teachers are among the 29 infections found during mass checks conducted by teams of the National Organization for Public Health (EODY) in the regional unit of Xanthi in the past few days.


Meanwhile, at the Delphi Economic Forum, Civil Protection Deputy Minister for Crisis Management Nikos Hardalias said that dealing with the novel coronavirus pandemic with horizontal measures as a model will likely not be used in the future again on the likelihood of a resurgence.

That first stage of across-the-board lockdown measures and the gradual shutting down of the market Greece took in March will be replaced by actions primarily targeted at local level, or a particular theme, Hardalias said.

"We are trying hard to prevent problems, and preparing to avoid having issues, but if something crops up our criteria will clearly and primarily be local or thematic," he explained.

The government's focus was to follow the recommendations of specialists, he said, a choice that played a key role in managing the health crisis.

"Greece was called upon to crate - in uncharted territory - structures that had to become permanent, particularly in terms of civil protection since we had challenges in the past, but none like that of COVID-19," the minister said. "We had to deal with influenza at one end and Ebola at the other, but COVID-19 has unique features and its spatial involvement was global - it was something, in other words, that nobody expected would operate like it did."

Globally, the crisis raised the issue of leadership, he pointed out, and "though it may not have necessarily brought to light a new type of leader, it brought us closer to the ideal," which includes a leader with decisiveness, fast reflexes, "and how  much you can inspire the public to follow" you. Public trust is something that must be built "step by step", he added.

When asked how prepared the country was for the possibility of a second wave of the pandemic, Hardalias said that public health and human lives remain a priority. "We continue step by step to open the market under the proper rules, and at the same time to create such structures that if a second wave comes tomorrow, Greece (...) and Greek citizens will feel and actually be safe."

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