Category: Health

  • No fraud in Nigeria’s HIV fund management, says Global Fund

    No fraud in Nigeria’s HIV fund management, says Global Fund

    The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria has denied misappropriating or being involved in any fraud in the funds for managing HIV treatment and prevention activities in Nigeria.

    The clarification was made by the Global Fund Portfolio Manager for Nigeria, Dr. Jean-Thomas Nouboussi, who reacted to media enquiries on the allegations.

    Nouboussi, through Christy Feig, Head of Communications Department, External Relations and Communications, Global Fund headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, said what was insinuated as fraud was mere audit review; and not an investigative report that can establish fraud or misappropriation or any other problems.

    According to Global Fund, there is a lot of difference between an audit review, which is periodically carried out to examine the design and adequacy of internal control mechanisms and risk management processes, and an investigation, which is usually a more comprehensive study of all the records to examine whether fraud or misappropriation has taken place.

    Stressing that Global Fund’s Office of Inspector-General (OIG) has several tools to ensure Global Fund investments have the most impact possible, it clarified that “there was no fraud or misappropriation of Global Fund funds identified in the review”.

    Feig also admitted that audit reports could be quite technical and complex to read through. Global Fund was also effusive in its praise for Nigeria, saying the country has a success story to be proud of in HIV and malaria management.

    Read Also: ‘How COVID-19 breakthroughs opened possibilities for HIV vaccines’

    “Thank you for your question about the audit report of our Inspector-General’s Office (OIG) conducted in Nigeria. An audit mainly examines the design and adequacy of internal controls, governance and risk management processes of the auditee. This includes adherence to national and implementers’ policies. An investigation is a comprehensive and careful study of the records to examine whether fraud or misappropriation of funds as well as other problems took place. As this was an audit, there was no fraud or misappropriation of Global Fund funds identified in the review.

    “Nigeria is an important country for our work to end HIV, TB and malaria. As you will see in the report, our grants there are mostly performing well across the three diseases.  The Global Fund commends Nigeria for the progress the country is making in the fight against the three diseases. HIV performance has improved greatly, with 90 per cent of people living with HIV knowing their status, 98 per cent of those who know their HIV-positive status on treatment and 95 per cent of those on treatment having suppressed viral loads. Because of this progress, HIV infections have decreased by 28 per cent over the last 10 years.

    “During the COVID-19 pandemic, Nigeria’s ability to innovate and adapt made it one of the few countries in the world that had positive progress in HIV. When COVID-19 struck in Nigeria in 2020, many clinical facilities were swiftly turned into COVID-19 isolation centers. The country acted quickly to bring HIV services closer to the people. Integrating health services meant that when community health workers were out looking for cases of COVID-19, they were also looking for cases of HIV and TB.

    “That led to an unexpected success: While HIV testing dropped drastically worldwide in 2020 due to COVID-19, Nigeria was one of the few countries to achieve an increase in the number of people diagnosed with HIV in 2020 compared to 2019. Nigeria has a good story to tell with its work to combat HIV, TB and malaria.  I know the audits can be quite technical and complex to read through, so I hope some of these statistics help with your work,” Feig said.

    Recently, there were reports of purported misappropriation of $19.6 million worth of COVID-19 procurement grants awarded to Nigeria by the Global Fund – an allegation the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) has refuted.

    The Director-General of NACA, Dr Gambo Aliyu, described reports as “lacking in facts, misleading to the public and capable of inflicting reputational damage on the country”.

    He added: “It is on verifiable record that under NACA Procurement processes, especially through the Global Fund, there is zero tolerance for fraud because of the layers of filtering of the process and compliance culture already established. All processes are guided by the PPA 2007, the Global Fund Manual and extant circulars. In addition to internal controls and supervision in NACA, all procurement undertaken are subjected to verification and clearance by the Fiscal agent embedded in NACA by the Global Fund as well as final approval and continuous supervision by the Global Fund Country Team in Geneva. Needless to add that all processes are finally reviewed and signed off by OIG’s Office as required by law.”

  • 200 indigent patients benefit from free cataract surgery in LASUTH

    200 indigent patients benefit from free cataract surgery in LASUTH

    To restore sight to people living with eye diseases, the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), in partnership with a South Korea-based NGO, Vision Care, has offered free eye cataract surgery to 200 indigent patients.

    The programme, tagged, ‘Restore Sight, Share Vision,’ was sponsored by Daewoo E&C as part of the company’s corporate social responsibility.

    According to research, a cataract is a clouding of the lens of the eye, which can cause visual impairment and blindness. Cataract surgery involves the removal of the eye’s natural lens, followed by the implantation of an artificial intraocular lens. Cataracts cannot recur in an eye with an artificial lens. Hence, patients who wait for more than six-month for surgery may experience negative outcomes during the waiting period, including vision loss, reduced quality of life and an increased rate of falls.

    The Chief Medical Director of LASUTH, Prof. Adetokunbo Fabamwo, said the Vision Care team has continued to transfer their skills and technology to the hospital personnel since 2015.

    Read Also: ‘LASUTH’s new machine can remove kidney stones without painful operation’

    “In previous years, the Vision Care team had performed the surgery while our personnel observed. From year to year, you’ve been coming to transfer skills and technology. To ensure we have selected eligible patients for this exercise, the team have taken their time to screen all the patients available and you may like to know that they came in their hundreds. This is to prove that there is a crying need to expand this kind of service to other healthcare centres across the state.”

    The Executive Director, Deawoo E&C, Yeon Seop Jung, noted that healthcare is a fundamental sector that needs effective funding and no contribution will be too much to offer.

    He commended the management of LASUTH for accommodating the Vision Care team and the Daewoo team over the years.

    Also Consular-General of the Korean embassy, Haeng Gu Kang, said the mission by the Vision Care team would give people who otherwise may have turned blind, a new lease of life. He noted that the sponsorships from Daewoo, backed by the Korean government, will go a long way in imparting better healthcare which is a worldwide concern.

    Medical Support Team Manager of Vision Care, Yuna Kim, said her team has treated 1,766 patients and offered 740 free cataract surgeries since they came to Lagos, in 2015 except for 2020 due to COVID-19.

    One of the beneficiaries, Ibrahm Yaya, who had a problem with his left eye, said he was fortunate to benefit from the medical service and urged the state government to create more awareness about free eye surgery.

  • Eat healthy diet, exercise regularly to avoid osteoarthritis — Physiotherapists

    Eat healthy diet, exercise regularly to avoid osteoarthritis — Physiotherapists

    Physiotherapists have advised individuals to eat healthy diet and engage in regular exercise to avoid osteoarthritis.

    This medical advice was given at the awareness walk organised by Igbobi physiotherapists (physiotherapy department) in commemoration of this year’s world physiotherapy day.

    This year’s theme — Osteoarthritis: role of physiotherapists in their management and prevention, presented the medical professionals opportunity to sensitise people about the disease.

    Staffs of the department, secondary school students from Bright Future School, Angus Memorial School joined the awareness rally round the National Orthopedic Hospital, Igbobi.

    Osteoarthritis is the most common form of arthritis, affecting millions of people worldwide. This type of arthritis occurs when flexible tissue at the ends of bones wears down.

    Head, physiotherapy department, Mrs. Atinuke Adepetun said osteoarthritis used to be a disease of the elderly, but now young persons are now affected by it.

    Read Also: Six healthy vegetables good for consumption

    She said: “We noticed that a large number of the country’s population have osteoarthritis, people of all ages are now affected. So that’s why we decided to intensify awareness this year.

    Advising individuals on how to prevent the disease, she said: “First of all, exercise, then healthy diet, weight loss, lifestyle change are serious factors to be considered.

    “Taking healthy diet helps to educes the chances of getting the disease. Osteoarthritis can be managed but cannot be cured completely.

    Adepetun further advised those who may have been affected by the disease to seek professional advise from a physiotherapist.

    “For example, in the area of exercise, a physiotherapist is in the vantage position to advise on kind of exercise to do.” She added.

    Similarly, The planning committee head, Mrs. Temilola Abolarin explained that: “Osteoarthritis is majorly age-related. Age is a risk-factor. It is very rare to find a child (under-20) to have the disease.

    “In years past, it used to be 50 and above but now it has done down due to life expectancy. Aboderin warned against treating the disease with kid gloves or doing home treatment. She advised people to always seek medical, professional advise.”

  • Medic admonishes Nigerians on healthy living

    Medic admonishes Nigerians on healthy living

    Nigerians from all age groups and backgrounds have been advised to take good care of their health and embrace healthy lifestyles in order not to be susceptible to a killer disease called diabetes. A Medical Officer with Gero Care, Dr. Violet Iheanacho, gave the admonition during a health talk by the Kingdom of Light Ministries (KLM) as part of the church’s yearly Family Health Week.

    According to her, diabetes is a chronic disease characterised by high levels of sugar in the blood. She listed the different diabetes as Types I and 2, pre-diiabete stage, and gestational, adding that symptoms of the disease include frequent urination, loss of vision, and an unhealed ulcer. The medical practitioner said further that the disease affects the heart, kidney, eyes, nervous system, skin, among others, making it a deadly disease if not detected early and managed properly.

    While noting that diabetes has no cure, Dr Iheanacho urged Nigerians to watch their lifestyles, adding that they should eat a healthy diet, exercise regularly, reduce their intake of non-alcoholic drinks, stop smoking and check their sugar levels regularly.

    In his address, the KLM Founder/Presiding Pastor, Samson Makinwa, also harped on good health. Explaining what informed the church to embark on the programme, he stressed that besides ministering to the spiritual needs of members, it is also proper and useful to educate people to let know why they should also see to their medical needs. The programme is to assist families to see to their health issues of any kind, he said.

    “This programme has brought health solutions to many families in the past; it was a big touch on society. Before those who attended were people around us, but in recent years, people came from far and near in Lagos State. This year’s was great; the turnout was high. And various medical experts attended to them all. Various doctors e.g. ophthalmologists, cardiologists, blood- related issues, general medical experts, nurses and para-medicals, etc.

    “This event was powered by an organisation in our church called the Kingdom Care. It spends huge money on this event yearly. They also gave out drugs as prescribed by medical doctors and gave medicated eye glasses for eye-related issues.”

    The President, KLM’s Kingdom Care Group, Uchechukwu Nwogu, said no fewer than 300 Nigerians have benefited from the programme. He said both members and non-members of the church from not only the community, but also other parts of the state benefit from the programme.

  • More well-equipped diagnostic laboratories can improve cancer care, says expert

    More well-equipped diagnostic laboratories can improve cancer care, says expert

    Distressed by the increasing prevalence of cancer in the country, the Center Manager and Clinical Pathologist at Bola Tinubu Health and Diagnostic Center (BTHDC), Dr. Wale Olusanya, has said that having more laboratories that are well-equipped with modern and effective cancer diagnostic equipment in Nigeria can improve cancer care. Because better diagnosis will lead to better treatment outcomes, having world-class laboratories will reduce cancer morbidities and mortalities in the country.

    Olusanya said that accurate data from cancer screening can help doctors detect the malignant cells before they spread to other parts of the body and become terminal. In Nigeria and other parts of the world, cancer is a major health problem, causing an estimated 78,899 deaths in 2020 and about 124,815 new cases diagnosed by medical doctors every year in Nigeria, according to data from the Global Cancer Observatory.

    But Olusanya insisted that screening tests can reveal a significant abnormality in different body organs and help in monitoring the progression of cancerous cells for proper patient management. The pathologist explained that a combination of imaging tests such as CT Scans, Ultrasounds and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) can help in the early detection of tumors, inflammation, and other signs of cancer, especially in patients that are at a high risk.

    According to him, laboratory screening tests with the appropriate devices offer reliable results for prompt diagnoses, saving lives and reducing patient length of stay in hospitals. “Cancer treatment is more effective in the early stages of the diseases. This is the reason why we need to bridge the gap in cancer screening by establishing more laboratories that have modern equipment. We have the expertise and relevant diagnostic tools that use modern technology in disease screening. This aligns with our mission of enhancing patient care and safety.

    “Our partnership with the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) has helped doctors detect latent cancers at an early stage. This helps them in properly managing the disease condition and preventing it from spreading to other parts of the patients’ body. Also for cancer survivors, these screening procedures help in identifying untreated cancer cells and reoccurrences. We are planning to have more of these partnerships to support hospitals in the treatment of this deadly disease,” he said.

    To provide continued support in the treatment of cancer, Olusanya stated that BTHDC was working closely with stakeholders to understand their challenges in cancer diagnosis and meet their needs by providing accurate data that aids doctors in disease diagnosis and treatment for better health outcomes.  BT Health and Diagnostic Center, an ultra-modern Diagnostic facility, is a Public-Private Partnership Project between LASUTH and the PPC Healthcare, a leading innovative healthcare solutions provider.

  • Advantage Health Africa marks 5th anniversary, births new culture

    Advantage Health Africa marks 5th anniversary, births new culture

    Advantage Health Africa, an innovative health company and driver of several health innovations – myMedicines, myPharmacy, myLabs, myAdvantage, and Advantage Pharma – has announced its rebranding to become a one-stop health shop for all Nigerians. The rebranding launches an overarching company with several products and services, meeting the everyday health and lifestyle needs of Africans.

    For the past five years, the company has built effective health solutions to some of the prevalent challenges in developing societies, specifically addressing access, affordability and quality of health. “In line with this rebranding, the brand is now formally called “aha! (ah-ha)” and the current business units of the brand are aha! myMedicines, aha! trybe, aha! myPharmacy and aha! myLabs. Our burst of orange symbolises creativity, success, change, health, happiness, sexuality, freedom, expression, and fun.”

    The company’s Founder and CEO, Abimbola Adebakin, said: “Our major purpose for this rebranding is to get closer to every African. Good health is the basis of every other thing and this is the message we are trying to get out there. People should begin to see healthcare not as something to be dreaded or overlooked but as an active lifestyle choice. Aha is offering Nigerians a one-stop-shop for everything healthcare. We welcome you as a part of our community as we build a healthy society together.  Health is hip!”

  • ‘LASUTH’s new machine can remove kidney stones without painful operation’

    ‘LASUTH’s new machine can remove kidney stones without painful operation’

    For the treatment of kidney stones and related diseases, patients won’t be going through painful surgical operation again.” These were the words of the Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Prof. Akin Abayomi, during the launch of a lithotripsy machine donated by Idowu Obasa to the Urology Unit of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Ikeja, Lagos.

    According to Abayomi, biometric equipment will make a huge impact on the condition of stone formation in vital organs of patients. “Instead of cutting up the body, which might lead to all kinds of surgical complications or admission in the hospital for days, this modern technology allows us to put patients in front of a machine that delivers shocking sound waves and it will shatter these stones from the body in few minutes. We need to be grateful for the evolution and the advancement of medical biotechnology that makes the practice of medicine easy, faster and saver for our patients,” he said.

    The Minister noted that kidney stones are precipitated mainly by dehydration, urging Nigerians to develop the habit of hydration. While appreciating the donor for his generosity towards supporting the healthcare sector in the state, Abayomi called on other Nigerians to emulate the kind gesture to standardise the medical infrastructure.

    “Stones are quite common in all populations, particularly in tropical populations where there is a lot of heat, and one of the predispositions of kidney stones is dehydration. In this environment, many people don’t drink enough water and then kidney stones form. So drinking about two and a half litres of water per day will help to flush out the waste products without creating the opportunity for these stones to crystallise and settle. Kidney diseases are caused by a variety of things: blood pressure, diabetes, dehydration, toxins in your food, infections, malaria etc.

    “Generally, following the tenets of public health, which is taking your vaccinations on time, making sure you are reducing your risk to infections, managing your metabolic disorders, which are blood pressure, hypertension and overweight and paying attention to good nutrition, good rest and hydration. The metabolic syndrome is a very serious one because as people live sedentary lives, they start to put on weight; the sugar profile goes out of control, and they develop hypertension. All of these damage the kidneys; so everyone must pay attention to their diet, exercise, weight, type of foods we eat, good rest and good hydration.”

    The Chief Medical Director, LASUTH, Prof Adetokunbo Fabamwo, said with the newly donated lithotripsy machine, kidney stones patients will experience bill reduction. “We couldn’t afford the machine because it’s very costly. What we usually do is to arrange with a private company that would bring it to us and we will pay money, but now that our donor has come to our aid, the pricing fee for using the equipment for patients will become much cheaper because we don’t have to pay any rental fees to any private company again.

    “This is equipment that can – without any surgical operation – break down stones anywhere in the body. Kidney stones are common, but stones can be in the kidney and gallbladder and can even be in the urinary bladder. Normally, if you have to treat this condition, you have to carry out a major surgical operation to remove the stones one by one, and then you close up again. The patient would need to spend at least one week in the hospital. The patient would need heavy antibiotics used to make sure that it doesn’t develop an infection; he/she would also need to be nursed by several doctors and nurses over a while but with this lithotripsy, the patient won’t need to stay overnight. The stones will be broken down by the machine, dissolve into a powder form and extracted from the body.”

    In his response, Obasa narrated his ordeals when he travelled to treat related disease in India as there was no lithotripsy machine in Nigeria. “In 2009, I used this machine in India for a procedure in just a normal hospital, not private, not expensive and honestly it’s shameful that we have to go to India to get things that we ought to get here. My experience in India inspired me and I said, why should India have these machines scattered all over the place and we don’t have any here?”

  • 2022 DOG DAY: Hello doggie! shout out to my four dogs (2)

    2022 DOG DAY: Hello doggie! shout out to my four dogs (2)

    VICTORY, SENIOR BINGO AND MERCURY, all pure Nigerian bred, were great dogs in their diverse ways. I hope I remember them well in my shout out to them in the first part of this series last week on the occasion of the August 22, 2022 World Dog Day. That column was meant to encourage everyone to respect dogs more, and to stop killing them for meat. My fourth and last dog, KING, was no less a wonderful dog than the other three. From it, I, also, learned many wonderful lessons.

    King

    This was the replacement for Mercury which, as I reported in the first part of this series, was given a respectable funeral with prayers when it died. I couldn’t have thought of any other way to part ways with this dog. We had grown so used to each other that I couldn’t consider it not a part of my family. In any case, my spiritual convictions were that we would meet again somewhere in this great Universe on our ways home, Mercury to the animistic realms, from where the souls of animals come, and I, too, prayerfully and through hard work on my being, to the  the spiritual realms, paradise, the orign and final abode of perfected human spirits who, a long, long time ago, left its home as an unconscious spirit seed germ for the earth where, alone, it could attain consciousness before returning home. This sober reflection reminds me of a whole world of things which am   still doing but which I ought to have  stopped doing along time ago, and, also,   of those things which by now ought to have become my first  nature but have still  not.

    King was, also, a “no nonsense” local dog like the others. At Emina, I was disturbed a lot by lizards which sometimes found their  ways into the house. So, I brought in a cat. The lizards disappeared or went up to the roof. I felt obliged to unite the dog and the cat. As a lord in this wonderful creation, uniting all creatures in love is a task which a substantial part of humanity has abandoned or distanced itself from. Whenever food was served, the cat came along to eat and King would begin angrily to bark. Both would stand at opposite ends of the bowl,  adrenalin, the flight or fight hormone, running high, hairs on their bodies  standing on end. Often, King pulled away, the cat ate and left and King had its turn. Later, they ate together. I learned a lesson from them. Neither was glutonous. Each took only whatever it needed for the time being, whereas humans, everyday, ferociously tried to accummulate what they wouldn’t need in all eternity, never filling up, and quitting and leaving something for the next person.

    I am elated whenever I hear stories of this human weakness being overcome in Europe or North America. I sell nutritional food medicines out of passion and for a living. These days, Europe and America are going through a sort of rationing because the COVID 19 pandemic has dealt a severe blow to manufacturing capacities in these regions. My friends over there tell me that if there are only 12 bottles of an item on the shelf, you cannot pick more than one bottle.  The sales people would remind you that some have to be left for other customers who would come after you. This is a great way of life which King and the cat, though animals, consciously or subconsciously respected and constantly reminded me of: to not be ravenous or gluttonous. While I salute Europeans and North Americans for their consideration for fellow human beings, I cannot reconcile this behaviour with the ravenousness with which they destroyed Africa and other regions of the earth, including, right now, Ukraine and Russia, setting up one nation after another.

    It was after I moved house again on my retirement from THE COMET Newspaper that King’s years with me were more eventful. I was building a house. I noticed an anthill on the ground. I shook my head in partial worry because I should have seen it before I took possesion of the land. Many house owners and property developers do not pay serious attention to natural forms they find on the lands before they begin to develop it. I count myself lucky that the radiations which were coming from underground water crossings may not be injurious to human life on the top soil blanket over them. If the radiations are injurious, there are plants from the psychic garden one may cultivate on the land to divert, block or absorb the radiations.

    An anthill has a story line behind it, for ants build their  ant hills, the colonies in which they live, over the tracks of underground water crossings and courses, which send different types of radiations, some harmful, some beneficial, to the top soil. How many people building houses checked the land for such features as this before they began to build? Even now that this area is fully built, I doubt if there is any of the house owners who know why an army of giant Hawks land on their rooftops everyday as though for a meeting or whatever. On the road behind my land, there once stood a tree which was the meeting point of these Hawks night and day. Road construction workers brought down the tree to make way for the road. The Hawks were not disappointed. They merely made the roof tops of houses nearby their new meeting point. What has continually brought them here for about the last 15 years since the tree was gone? Do they come for earth radiations? Notice chickens in the late afternoons when the sun is setting. With their legs, they make a crater in the soil and lie in it. Cats and dogs like to lie where the earth radiation is strongest. So, it does not surprise me that all manner of snail species thrive in my compound and in neighbouring locations.  The frogs, toad and the crickets are long gone. Snakes are no longer daily sight. Except for the snails and the Hawks, a concrete jungle  has taken over a beautiful ecosystem dotted here and there by insignia which invite our attention to streams and possibly rivers underground, crossing each other or one another spewing all kinds of radiations to the top soil.

    One of the ways the existence of underground water movements may also be confirmed is the movement of these ants in large numbers in a single file. These ants were to torment King and probably shorten its life. When they came upon it one night, and it was furiously barking, I assumed it was asking for more food or just wanted to go out of the premises on its nocturnal prowls.  When I came out to silence it, I found the African Black Ant and the Red Ants every where and on Kings’ body. My family was out of town, and  I lived alone in a neighbourhood where houses were just going up. Everyone wondered why I lived alone in that seemingly “defenceless” area. I knew the beings were around. The house itself stood over underground water crossings as evidenced by long columns of the African Black Ant and fire ants which like to move from an anthill on the undeveloped opposite property towards the site of an anthill on my own property which had to give way to the foundation. I sprayed petrol on the ants to no avail. I also burnt heaps of papers and rags without success. They fled in disarray only to regroup later in exactly the same route. They dispersed only to return. Then, someone told me to pour wood ash on them. There is nothing on earth which does not have an antidote. Snakes flee from the smell of tobacco leaves, kerosene and bitter kola. The ant columns disappeared and never came back. I did not have the patience to watch out for where they were always heading. I was concerned that they did not kill King. King was a rebellious dog with a large appetite. When my purse could not satisfy its appetite, I introduced bones to its diet. It would fish out all the bones and eat them first. Sometimes, it abandoned the rest of the meal and would be happy to have more bones. One day, I dared King and it showed that it was up to the task, but the task taught it a bitter lesson. It ate all the bones in a meal and abandoned the rest of the meal. Its bowel movements blocked in the process. It cried and cried when the poop got stuck in from constipation.  Only when I gave it a whole bottle of olive oil did its anal muscles relax. My entrance gate had a clearance from the ground through which it always sneaked out. I would arrange three levels of block work from pillar to pillar. But it would make a way out for itself. It got infected with so many ticks  which sucked its blood and later killed it. There was no vet doctor around, and I had no car to run it to where I could find one. Everyday, I helped it to pick the ticks. But the more I did, the more it became infected. I chained it down in the cage with a double chain. But it would break the chains and escape. Once I heared the chains making noise in the street at night, I would know it had escaped. If I shouted its name, it would halt in its tracks and return home.

    One day, someone misadvised me that he could remove the ticks by bathing King with a mild solution of expired  diesel and kerosine. That was a disaster. King lost almost all the hairs on its body. It felt pains in different parts of the skin which appeared damaged. We were both lucky it was gagged. The gags were removed when the pains subsided. It really did not mind me for as long as I emptied a bottle of olive oil in its meal bowl. I mixed the olive oil with powder or liquid vitamin B5 supplement and vitamin A I learnt from the book THE WONDERFUL WORLD WITHIN, by Dr. William Rogers, the biochemist who discovered that pantothenic acid or vitamin B5 and that this vitamin makes animals grow beautiful coats and that vitamin A, like vitamin c and zinc, is good for skin health and wound healing. In a twinkle,  King licked it up as though the oil were water. Then I knew it was ready for a meal. Its last three days were agonising for both of us. King grew leaner and leaner, and rejected food. I knew it was going. Isn’t that the way gluttonous persons also go? The thick population grew more and more. Ticks do nothing but suck blood and nutrients from their host. Then, one day, King went to hide itself where I could not easily find it. My vision was ebbing. So I could not easily tell where it was. When I finally discovered it, King was gone. This time around, I had to perform a funeral ceremony alone. I looked for a place on the grounds which would not be affected by future development, and dug a deep pit into which I put the body, said farewell prayers and gave assurances that I would not forget the time we spent together. If our relationship had been mutually-inwardly strengthening, our paths should again meet some day. I knew this message will not be lost on King for, contrary to some human opinions, animals pick our thoughts and understand our language. This time around, I alone buried its remains amid prayers.

    A different level of respect for the dog by Keysley Okundaye, a retired Central Bank of Nigeria employee who lives in Abuja

    Sir, this is most intriguing and yet highly educating. You may say ah, a crossbearer should not be intrigued by the account of love between man and animals. That is correct. But the burial rite is markedly a different level of respect for the dog. Yes, I am aware of the possibility of love of man for the whole of mankind. This, I had once experienced. It repeated a few times later. But love of dog or animals, is something rather far removed from me. That, perhaps, is a brand or variant of love. The subject of love is something that should interest all adults. The problem in our country Nigeria today can be traced to one word: hatred. The solution obviously is love. Descriptions of human problems in economic, social or political angles are due to the fact that man is too complicated to comprehend simplicity. If a person has love for an animal to the extent that she or he would bury the animal with prayer, then such a one cannot kill a human being. I had kept two dogs. This was many years ago. I don’t know now if I can find time to respond as you requested. You have drawn society’s attention to a most URGENT AND CRITICAL ISSUE at a time when hatred and falsehood are destroying lives and property in all parts of the country. Thanks so much, sir.

    Typical Obudu people respect dogs, don’t eat  “404”

    By Mrs. Evelyn Obiku who lives in Obudu

    Such an interesting write up. I will like to shade light on two things:

    • You saw dogs in Watt Market Calabar waiting to be bought for both home and restaurants use; there is no section in Watt Market where live dogs are kept to be bought for either home or restaurants use like there are designated places that one can find goat meat, beef, chicken, fish etc. There is none like that in Watt Market. Rather dog meat dealers bring dogs from the northern part of Nigeria and keep them around their joints in cages for people to go there and buy. There is a dog depot on Atimbo Road as you are going to Akpabuyo.

    Dog meat is not sold in restaurants and it’s not served in homes as in using dog to prepare afang soup. Dog meat is a delicacy specially served in joints with bold signs “404 is Ready”. It’s normally served with Ukot – wine from raffia palm. People that eat dog meat always announce its arrival. You as a guest is at liberty to eat or not.

    • You mentioned one Mr. Atsu from Obudu. I come from Obudu and have a good sense of knowing the village one comes from by their surnames. Atsu is a name from either Bebuabong in Urban 1 or Bedia in Begiakah ward. I come from Betukwel where I grew up. Dog meat is not a delicacy in Obudu at all. Obudu people were farmers and hunters and it is dogs that used to help them in hunting. There are no special joints that you see bold signs 404 is ready in Obudu like you see in Calabar. The Obudu man calls the Igbos Bizii-ubuo…. People that eat dogs. If the Obudu man was or is a dog meat eater he will not call the Igbo man a dog eater, that’s like kettle calling pot black. It’s boys that lacked parental care that used to take people’s dog to the bush and do justice to them and when caught the whole village will look at them as badly-brought up children.
    • My grandparents lived in Ndian in Cameroon where my maternal grandfather worked with Pamol and was later transferred to Pamol Calabar. My grandmother’s business was 404 and plantain; the business my grandmother operated in Cameroon and later in Calabar. But after the civil war when my grandparents went back home to Obudu my grandmother stopped that business because it was a “No” in Obudu.

    The typical Obudu man sees a dog eater as a glutton. It’s the young people that want to try new things, like when they go to school or work in Calabar that they try to explore things that ordinarily is not condoned in their village.  You have a choice to eat or not. Dog meat is not a taboo but those of us that were  brought up well will always remember where we come from and desist from eating dog.

    Eating dog meat is not a taboo but the average Obudu man whom the dogs daily accompany to the farm, for hunting, keep guard as security at home and sees a dog as a companion.

    As an adherent of the Grail Message I know what it is to have a loyal pet.

    Obudu people don’t sell dog meat in restaurants and don’t serve dog meat as a delicacy, it is outlaws that express their deviance.

  • Childhood jab: FG worried over dropout rate in Sokoto

    Childhood jab: FG worried over dropout rate in Sokoto

    The Federal Government has expressed worried over the possibility of the high rate of infant mortality in Sokoto State.

    Data from a Federal Government report points to the plausibility of many children in Sokoto State dying or be rendered disabled as a result of infections from childhood diseases such as measles, hepatitis B, polio, tetanus, whooping cough, diphtheria, and other vaccine-preventable diseases. It, therefore, called for urgent measures to tackle the problem quickly.

    According to the Nigeria Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) and National Immunisation Coverage Survey (NICS) recently launched by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), in collaboration with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), World Health Organization (WHO), and other partners, Sokoto State has the highest dropout rate for childhood vaccination in the country. This indicates that the percentage of children at the age of between 12 and 23 months who received one dose in the vaccination schedule but failed to receive a later dose is high.

    The report notes that the benefits of vaccines are fully realised when children receive all recommended vaccine doses promptly.

    Read Also:Sokoto has highest dropout rate in childhood vaccination – FG Report

    The typical vaccination schedule for children in Nigeria includes: BCG (tuberculosis), HepB (hepatitis B), OPV (poliomyelitis), PENTA (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis [whooping cough], hepatitis B and haemophilus influenza type b), PCV (pneumococcal infection), ROTA (rotavirus), IPV (poliomyelitis), measles, vitamin A, yellow fever, and meningitis.

    The report showed that while the national average of percentage of children between 12 to 23 months who failed to received OPV3, DTP-HepB-Hib3, measles 1 and measles 2, were 30.2 per cent, 20.6 per cent, 18.5 per cent and 22 per cent respectively, the situation in Sokoto State is double of the national average.

    In Sokoto State, 50.8 per cent of children failed to receive OPV3; 52.8 per cent failed to receive DTP-HepB-Hib3; 44.4 per cent failed to receive measles 1; while 50 per cent failed to receive measles 2.

    The report further noted that while at the national level, 18 per cent of children between 12 to 23 months did not receive any vaccinations (which is a decrease of 55 per cent from five years ago), 51 per cent of children in Sokoto State remain unvaccinated.

  • Bayelsa Diagnostics Centre: Concessionaire exonerates ex-Gov Dickson

    Bayelsa Diagnostics Centre: Concessionaire exonerates ex-Gov Dickson

    The concessionaire of the Bayelsa Diagnostic Centre (BDC), Trigen-Craton Ltd, has exonerated former Governor Seriake Dickson of allegations by a group that he established the world-class medical facility with the intent to destroy it at the end of his administration.

    The Operations Manager of Trigen-Craton Ltd, Malcolm Okiebai said in a statement on Tuesday that there was no iota of truth in the allegations.

    Okiebai said all the equipment procured by the State Government under the administration of Dickson was in a good and safe condition.

    He called on the public to discountenance the claim that equipment worth billions of Naira was taken away from the centre.

    At its inception in 2016, Concessionaire was given the mandate to maintain world-class equipment and provide international skilled personnel for the Centre with the task of managing it.

    Okiebai recalled that the terms of the concession were that 60 per cent of the profit, was meant for the firm once the centre became profitable to provide effective running of the outfit.

    He said: “Thirty per cent (30%) would go to the Bayelsa State government and ten per cent (10%) in a joint account for routine maintenance and repairs.

    Read Also:Falode applauds Bayelsa Queens on Champions League ticket

    “We wish to state for emphasis that all equipment purchased by the state government is safe and intact; that all the equipment purchased was fully paid for even before the commissioning and commencement of operations and is still top class equipment several years after their purchase

    “In fact, most of the equipment purchased were the first of its kind in Nigeria at the time. We understand the public interest that the centre be reopened in Bayelsa and across the country as a reputable diagnostic center with partners abroad. We state that as soon as the outstanding issues are sorted out, we hope to resume operations.

    “Lastly, we call on general public to ignore the falsehood being peddled by mischievous and faceless characters about the diagnostic center.”

    The firm’s operational manager explained that the Centre was shut down because it could not get subventions from the state government to sustain the services to the public

    He stressed that the initial arrangement between the government and the firm ran into hitches as the centre could not generate enough funds to cover the huge cost of operations.

    END.