174 Amabuko Secondary School Students Rushed to Hospital in Kisii

An ambulance at the school and a bus belonging to Amabuko Secondary School.
An ambulance at the school and a bus belonging to Amabuko Secondary School.
Photo
Kenyans.co.ke

Around 174 students from Amabuko Secondary School in Kisii were on Monday rushed to the hospital over an unknown illness which some sources suspected to be food poisoning. 

A source familiar with the matter told Kenyans.co.ke that the first case was reported in the wee hours of Monday, raising alarm over the quality of food served at the institutions.

The students were rushed to Keroka Sub-County Hospital, Ichuni Mission Hospital and Gucha Hospital after reporting severe abdominal pains and diarrhoea.

In a statement, the area Rigoma Ward MCA Nyambega Gisesa noted that the response time was quick, even as the case comes just weeks after a similar one in Vihiga.

A bus belonging to Amabuko Secondary School.
A bus belonging to Amabuko Secondary School.
Photo
MCA Nyambega Gisesa

"Following a suspected case of usage of contaminated water and food poisoning at Amabuko Secondary School, our medics at Keroka Hospital are offering services to the affected students. There are adequate medical supplies and our well-trained personnel are handling the emergency," he stated.

Area residents who rushed to the institution to help with the evacuation believed that the poisoning was caused by a meal of beans and vegetables the students indulged in on Sunday night.

Experts have raised concerns over the quality of living in boarding schools as populations grow while investments in expanding infrastructure such as classes and dormitories remain low. 

Most schools are currently facing sanitation challenges with some struggling to meet water needs among other challenges. 

The quality of food has also been questioned as the rising cost of living puts more pressure on school administrations amid a cash crunch.

At the beginning of October, St. Theresa's Eregi Girls High School sent home its students after an outbreak of an unknown disease broke out at the institution.

Blood samples from the 95 affected students were sent to the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) in Nairobi and Kisumu counties for further analysis. 

The school's administration first noted that there was a disease outbreak after 95 students started experiencing difficulty in walking.

Earlier in the year, Mukumu Girls was shut down after a severe case of diarrhoea broke out at the institution and claimed four lives, three students and a teacher. 124 students were hospitalised at Kakamega Referral Hospital while the school was temporarily shut down.

In response, Education CS Ezekiel Machogu mandated all institutions to have  a safety sub-committee aimed at ensuring that students observe sanitation at all times.

Entrance to Eregi Girls High School in Kakamega County
Entrance to Eregi Girls High School in Kakamega County.
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Eregi Girls
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