Category: Health

  • Nigeria, EU, UNICEF partner on €6.3m project to boost local health commodity production

    Nigeria, EU, UNICEF partner on €6.3m project to boost local health commodity production

    The federal government has entered into a new partnership with the European Union (EU) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) to strengthen Nigeria’s capacity for local production of vaccines, medicines, and nutrition commodities.

    The two-year initiative, Enabling Local Manufacturing of Health, Immunisation and Nutrition Commodities in Nigeria (ELM-N), is part of the EU’s Global Gateway Manufacturing and Access to Vaccines, Medicines and Health Technologies (MAV+) programme, valued at €6.3 million, with the EU contributing €5.5 million and Spain providing an additional €800,000.

    The agreement, which was formalised at the Nigeria-EU Health Investment Forum in Abuja, seeks to reduce Nigeria’s reliance on imported health products by enhancing local manufacturing, improving supply-chain efficiency, strengthening regulatory systems, and fostering technology transfer and innovation.

    The Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Senator Abubakar Bagudu, described the initiative as a major step in Nigeria’s plan to build a stronger, more competitive pharmaceutical sector and attract sustainable investment.

    “This partnership demonstrates our commitment to aligning investments with clear policy priorities and measurable outcomes. 

    “It will expand opportunities for local production, facility financing, and technology transfer, positioning Nigeria as a regional hub for health innovation, research, and development,” Bagudu said.

    EU Ambassador to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Gautier Mignot, who represented Team Europe, said the Global Gateway strategy aims to transition partnerships from aid-based support to strategic, investment-driven collaboration.

    “Through MAV+, we are supporting manufacturers, governments, academic institutions, and other key stakeholders in advancing local production. 

    “This represents a shift toward peer-to-peer partnerships between Europe and West Africa,” Mignot said.

    Additionally, Spain’s Ambassador to Nigeria, Félix Costales Artieda, noted that the collaboration would not only advance local manufacturing but also enhance equitable access to essential health commodities across the ECOWAS subregion.

    “This project marks an important milestone in unlocking Nigeria’s healthcare value chain and boosting health security,” he said.

    Representing the United Nations (UN) system, UNICEF’s Representative to Nigeria, Wafaa Abdelate, who spoke on behalf of the UN Resident Coordinator, highlighted that local production remains vital to achieving universal access to life-saving health products.

    She noted that Nigeria still has more than two million zero-dose children and faces significant maternal health challenges. 

    “It is urgent that investments like this translate into timely, affordable, and safe access to vaccines, medicines, and nutrition products for all Nigerians,” Abdelate added.

    According to the project’s framework, ELM-N will focus on strengthening Nigeria’s health commodity supply chain, promoting innovation in pharmaceutical production, and supporting regulatory harmonisation.

    It will also complement ongoing national reforms aimed at revitalising the local pharmaceutical industry and align with broader EU and multilateral efforts in reproductive, maternal, and child health as well as digital health development.

    Implementation is expected to commence immediately, with stakeholders set to identify potential manufacturers, assess investment needs, and deploy technical assistance to accelerate local production and distribution of essential health commodities.

  • Exceptional trying times for spirit, intellect and body

    Exceptional trying times for spirit, intellect and body

    i imagine that first lady Oluremi Tinubu is standing more solidly in spirit by her husband at this time than at any other. I hope, also, that the president is kitting his health well with the right kinds of food and drinks and, of course, food supplements for the brain, nervous system and the heart. For there is no doubt that the last two weeks or so have been the most stressful of his political career, challenging his indomitable spirit, astute intellect and the dependability of his body to wade through the blast furnace of international politics with a super power unscathed. I recall we discussed stress management tangentially when he was Governor of Lagos State in the early nineties, when I took Shakirat Adeoti to his office on a thank you visit. Although I have to recall that event for the purpose of a good testimonial for a leading Nigerian politician who is friend to christians and moslems alike, the stress load from the pay load of a Governor’s Office is nothing near the worries and burden of the President of a weak country against which a giant, super power nation has declared intent of war.

    Shakirat Adeoti was a microbiology graduate from Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) who, at 33, had bleeding cancers in both breasts. She lived with her father, 92, and mother, 50 at 13, Opeloyeru  Street, off Babs Animashaun area of Surulere, Lagos. When Governor Tinubu heard of her travails in The Comet newspaper, he sent her a cheque for N1 million to clear her medical bills. His wife, Oluremi, added N250,000 to the N1million and provided her family with raw food, cooking oil and sundry other things for their living convenience. I had been taking Shakirat to church on Sundays and mosques on Fridays and secondary school assemblies on Mondays, to raise money for her. Sometimes, we went to those schools in the company of Alhaji Razak Adedigba who was the Managing Editor of The Comet newspaper at that time. I would like to add that, about that time, Edith Ike Okongwu, a former Public Relations Manager of Guiness, who bore the first child of Gen. Yakubu Gowon out of wedlock when he was Head of State, lay languid with breast cancer in an oncology ward of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH). Before she passed, Gen. Yakubu Gowon (rtd) and Victoria, his wife, who took the place of Edith because he could not marry an Ibo during the war against Ibos, went to see her in hospital before she passed. Again, Governor Tinubu moved in compassion to help a dying person. He is a liberal moslem, his wife a liberal Christian pastor. They helped a dying Moslem girl and her distraught family, irrespective of their religion, and a Christian woman again irrespective of her faith. A hardened Moslem as President intent on annihilating christians would not permit that his wife be a Christian pastor and would not appoint Christian service chiefs and a Christian Inspector-General of Police! The generousity of Governor Tinubu and his wife, Oluremi, was not of “peculiar concern” to me at that my first and only meeting so far with him. What was of “peculiar concern” to me then were the stress lines I saw over his face and noticed in his voice. I would learn later from the then commissioner for Information and Strategy in Lagos State, who is now the Minister of Solid Minerals, Mr. Dele Alake, that Governor Tinubu hardly slept. He combined administration in daylight hours with political meetings at night. I did not know how to drive home the points I made about health better than by carrying coal to Newcastle, as they say. Newcastle is abundantly blessed with coal. So, why would I need to ship coal from Enugu colliery to Newcastle? That was what I did in a token obedience to one of The Laws of Nature, The Law of Balance, which demands healthy balance in “giving” when we “take”. So, I purchased some nutritional supplements for coping with stress and sent them to the Governor through The Comet’s State House Correspondent. At that time, I was the newspaper’s Editorial Director/Editor-in-Chief and had adopted Shakirat Adeoti and her parents to be looked after under an upcoming The Comet Cares Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO).

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    The stress of Office Governor Tinubu encountered in Lagos is incomparable with what he must have gone through in the past 30 months in the hands of all kinds of mafias in the Nigerian economy. But all the mafias combined cannot compare to the on-going bombardment of Nigeria as “a country of peculiar concern” over killings of Christians in the North. Only a carefree Nigerian would say this is not an exceptional time for him or her as it would be for President Tinubu and the First Lady. I have not slept well for 48 hours. I have friends and family members who live in the North and are considering relocation to Lagos. Some who have money are making enquiries about property they can quickly buy or let. I guess many persons are bombarded with similar enquiries. The Army had probably found it unstrategic to fight the Northern insurgents and bandits with soldiers of Northern descent and had probably relied more on Southern soldiers to minimise the havocs of moles to strategy and effectiveness. Southerners whose children are in the Nigerian armed forces are restless and sleepless. Would Donald Trump try to do in the North what President George H.W Bush did in Panama in 1989 when American troops kidnapped the defacto ruler, Manuel Noriega, and sent him for trial in the United States on drug trafficking offences? In 1992, Noriega was jailed for 40 years with cuts to 30 years and later 17 years on account of good behaviour in prison! The U.S. says it has information on Nigerian financiers of Gboko Haram which it brands a terrorist organisation! The Noriega news was far far away, and we never thought such things or semblances of them could happen here.

    Possible Nigerian Scenarios

    Many people are wondering about possible scenarios.

    1) Will Nigeria give American soldiers right of way to the North?

    2) If prominent persons in the North are kidnapped by American soldiers, will that not overturn peace in the region? Will the Americans be able to handle the spill overs and not create a real religious crisis in the country?

    3) Will China stand by or concede a share of the spoils of the Nigerian market to another country? Do the Chinese owe Nigerians their lives?

    4) What if the Americans are coming for a do-or-die fight? How will they come in? By sea, with troops and aircraft carriers and through Lagos? Will many people not flee to their homeland and abandon the aborigens to their fate?

    5) Will a Southern soldier lift a finger against the invaders? Will Northern soldiers, therefore, march down to engage the Americans in the South?

    6) An American war anywhere leaves a bad taste in the mouth after, whether in Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq or Libya. Will Nigeria be like them after?

    We never know what may happen until events begin to unfold. Some of the countries on the Northern border who let in Sahelian invaders upon Nigeria, with the connivance of some Nigerians, have not only shut their borders but also barricaded them with military tanks and troops to prevent Nigerian refugee and escapee terrorist influxes into their countries!

    President Tinubu

    I pity President Tinubu because the buck stops in his hands. This problem began not with him. Yet, he has carefully navigated the Northern mines fields, mindful of the explosions a careless step may cause, without losing sight of the goal.

    National Assembly

    The National Assembly had been too slow in segregating the various political zones into semi-independent regions to free the Federal Government of needless administrative pressure. In my widow’s mite contribution made in this column and elsewhere on political restructuring of Nigeria, I suggested that each of the six regions be permitted to elect a Governal General to govern it like a mini President, building upon existing structure in the regions, while the Federal Government is limited to Defence, Currency, Immigration, Customs, Foreign Affairs etc. Each region will keep 40 percent of the resources in its dormains and all local governments 20 per cent while the Federal Government, for now, takes 40 per cent. We may think President Trump is garrulous. But can we any longer when only two weeks ago Amotekun  announced a clear and present danger in Ondo State, one of the six South Western Yoruba states? Amotekun, the unarmed vigilante response to banditry and kidnapping, mentioned that 40 Yoruba men had been recruited by AK 47 bearing Fulani herdsmen and paid N150,000 per person every month to work for them. These 40 men had even been trained to bear AK 47. Wasn’t this a “clear and present danger” ?

    How it all began

    This problem is believed to have begun with the Obasanjo Administration, hidden at that time around the right to Islamic jurisprudence. Obasanjo passed it to Yar’Adua, and Yar’Adua to Jonathan. The world’s powers assembled in Nigeria then to destroy this nagging bed bug. But the North told Jonathan the bandits could not be called terrorists because they were their children , and almost every family could be bereaved if the international army struck. Why could they not speak to their children who were killing and setting up parallel governments in the forests to tax communities and farmers, causing food shortages, unaffordable food prices and probably famine in some circumstances? To worsen matters, some state governments have been reported to be negotiating peace with the terrorists. Americans have no quarter for terrorists. From their perspective, if Nigeria becomes a terrorist haven, terrorism could raise its head again, upsetting the laborious work done in various regions of the globe to subdue it.

    Questions begging for answers

    We should not deceive ourselves in this travail. Why was Borno State the focus of Boko Haram at the start of the proceedings? Why have communities in Benue and Plateau become targets? Because they are flowing more towards the South and abandoning the North? What is the dominant religion of the states? Was the Bornu Kanem empire ever conquered by the Jihadists? It is true Boko Haram, which translates as Western education is poison, targeted niches of Western education, that is christians and later defocused to attack and to murder without reason worshippers on open ground Jumat services and in mosques. The Islamic states of West Africa is unambiguously anti Christian. The burning of christians and moslems believed to denigrate Islam in no small measure added to the conception of a Northern Nigeria intolerant of the religion of other persons.

    President Goodluck Jonathan literally speaking fled from the North when he said he was “Not a Soldier” implying he did not wish to fight the Bokoharam. That was why some of his critics thought he deliberately abandoned the North to self- destruction, a charge he has debunked.

    Muhammadu Buhari

    Many people believe he caused the trouble because he always said he would make “the country ungovernable” if he did not become president. There is no palpable evidence as yet in the public square that he brought in the Fulani herdsmen from the Sahel who are now tormenting Nigeria.

     Some persons have wondered why he did not disarm them if he did not approve of them. To this, I always assume that he was held captive by the radical North who wanted to balloon the Fulani Population for vote power that would always give the North permanent control over the country.

    President Buhari gave credence to this supposition with his half hearted backing for Bola Tinubu even on campaign grounds. What, I always wondered, was the meaning of “Vote For Your Conscience”. Still, I do not think this is sufficient evidence to catch him by the wrist. For I do not think a Christian Southern president could have done with El Zaki what he did to him in the face of the law supporting this malevolent Islamic disciple of Iran. It was in respect of this case that the concept developed of THE STATE is BIGGER THAN THE LAW.

    THE CAN

    If an armed gang is in your home in the dead of the night and the police won’t come, would you not gladly accept help from another or a friendlier gang? It is a person whose life is not palpably endangered who refers to the CONSTITUTION. Even lawyers and judges flee at the sounds of bombarding guns. A man who has lost all members of his family doesn’t understand SOVEREIGNTY. He wants release, vengeance. Although the Bible speaks against vengeance seeking or taking and the Lord Jesus forgave His murderers on the Cross, the leadership of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) are human, perhaps not even fully evolved into human beings. They made so much noise about MOSLEM-MOSLEM ticket as if LATEEF Jakande and RAFIU JAFOJO, once Governor and Deputy Governor in Lagos, were not moslems and ran the best state government. How could they have so easily forgotten that MOSHOOD KASHIMAWO ABIOLA and Babagana kingibe who won the later annuled Presidential election that was the fairest in Nigeria was not another joint Moslem ticket. We must thank Rev. Fr Kukah, one of the lone voices in Christianity, who dismissed the Christian genocide claims of CAN. Dr William Folorunso KUMUYI of the Deeper Life Church, was reported to have made a statement in favour of Nigeria which the church later refuted. General Overseers of the big churches are keeping silent as if a shaky firmament that will not not hurt members of their congregation if it crashes. Religious highway men on radio are busy promising prosperity and dictating bank account numbers as if The Almighty Creator arbitrarily dispenses His blessings on creatures who do not deserve them.

    YOUNG NIGERIANS

    Their displeasure with Nigeria is palpable. They willingly support President Trump. They believe their country had failed them. They probably do not know that President John F Kennedy in his inaugural address on 20 January 1961 told Americans: “ THINK NOT OF WHAT YOUR COUNTRY CAN DO FOR YOU, BUT WHAT YOU CAN DO FOR YOUR COUNTRY” . President Trump may be coming for WHAT HE CAN DO FOR HIS COUNTRY. He is probably focused on Nigeria’s huge lithium deposits which America needs to grow its economy. Elon Musk has come here several times for an export licence. Nigeria said no, set up a company here and export the products to America. Young Nigerians see their country as a blast furnace and America as Eldorado . President Trump may wish to edge China out of Nigeria’s market. What would that mean for Nigeria’s merchants? America doesn’t deal with people like them.

    THE NORTH.

    It has always been the problem of Nigeria or its sick baby. It denied the Government the political will to clear the insecurity mess it causes. When the Army managed to defeat some insurgents, they were not joyfully prosecuted, if they were at all. In the end, we are told they have “repented” ,have undergone psychotherapy and recruited into the armed forces. Hence, they became moles and endanger the lives of our troops. Now, the chicken has come home to roost … So, we should expect that the North would expect President Tinubu, to protect them. They know America knows them…

    PRESIDENT TINUBU

    There he goes, but not as a sacrificial lamb or martyr. He is a strong willed and street wise man with the tinge of heroism in his temperament. On top of that, he is courageous, strong willed, street wise and gifted as well with native Nigerian wisdom. Psychological war does not break him. He carries deep within the grains of diplomacy from his culture. He knows what to give and when to, and what to not take.

    OUR HEALTH

    I submitted a different column last Sunday, but had to write this one all through Monday night to Tuesday dawn when the crisis thickened. Many of us give too much of ourselves to our country. We have had sleepless nights, skipped heartbeats, experienced fear and anxiety since this trouble thickened. We may be close to brain questions, elevated blood pressure, elevated blood cholesterol, nervous system challenges, and other related health blues. For the President, first lady and cabinet, everyone who came to sleep over this “peculiar concern” is missing heart beats or rising blood cholesterol and hypertension, I suggest the following food supplements to be added to the diet immediately

    BRAIN

    Lecithin, Gingko biloba, Gotu kola, ginseng, Omega 3 fatty acid, magnesium threonate, co enzyme Q 10 or ubiquinol.

    STRESS MANAGEMENT

    Lavender, valerian root, kava, Ashwaghandah, chamomile, passion flower, Gingko biloba

    NERVES

    Lemon balm, high dosage Vitamin B Complex,

    HEART, BLOOD QUESTIONS

    Wheat grass, mixed tocopherols, selenium, chlorophyll-2, cayenne or black pepper, regenerating drink, CO Q 10 or ubiquinol. Although Nigeria has become a concern in the thinking of the American Presidency, many Nigerians are still confident to say ALO IRE O, ABO IRE O. (Goodness shall follow you to America and return with you).

  • NCDC Report: Lassa fever killed 176 in 10 months

    NCDC Report: Lassa fever killed 176 in 10 months

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) has said the death toll from Lassa fever in the past 10 months has climbed to 176, representing a Case Fatality Rate (CFR) of 18.4 per cent.

    This is higher than the 16.6 per cent recorded during the same period in 2024.

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) describes Lassa fever as an acute viral haemorrhagic illness caused by the Lassa virus, which is spread to humans through contact with food or household items contaminated by the urine or faeces of infected Mastomys rats.

    The disease is endemic in West Africa and is known to occur in Nigeria, Benin, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Sierra Leone, and Togo.

    According to the NCDC’s latest epidemiological report for Week 43, a total of 955 confirmed cases have been recorded across 21 States and 102 Local Government Areas (LGAs) so far this year.

    The report revealed that 88 per cent of all confirmed infections were recorded in just four states of Ondo, Bauchi, Edo, and Taraba while the remaining 12% came from 17 other States.

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    Ondo State alone accounted for 37% of the total cases, followed by Bauchi (21 %), Edo (17%), and Taraba (13%), the agency said.

    It noted that the number of suspected and confirmed cases declined compared to the same period last year, though the fatality rate has worsened.

    “In Week 43, the number of new confirmed cases rose slightly from nine in Week 42 to eleven, all reported in Ondo State,” the report stated.

    The agency added that the predominant age group affected remains between 21 and 30 years, with a male-to-female ratio of 1 to 0.8.

    While no new infections were reported among healthcare workers during the week, the NCDC said the National Lassa Fever Multi-Partner, Multi-Sectoral Technical Working Group continues to coordinate national response efforts.

    The report also identified key challenges in managing the outbreak, including late presentation of patients leading to higher fatality rates, poor health-seeking behaviour due to the cost of treatment, inadequate environmental sanitation in high-burden areas, and limited community awareness.

    The NCDC urged state governments to sustain year-round public sensitisation on Lassa fever prevention and advised healthcare professionals to maintain a high index of suspicion and ensure prompt diagnosis and treatment.

    It also reaffirmed its commitment, along with partners, to strengthening state capacity for timely detection and response.

  • Anambra doctor regains freedom six days after abduction 

    Anambra doctor regains freedom six days after abduction 

    Dr Tochukwu Mbanugo, who was kidnapped last week in Nnewi, Anambra state has been released.

    Mbanugo, a neurosurgeon working with the Nnamdi Azikiwe University Teaching Hospital, Nnewi, was kidnapped in front of his hospital at Uruagu Nnewi on the evening of Thursday, 30th October, 2025.

    Confirming the release to newsmen Tuesday night, State Chairman, Nigerian Medical Association, NMA, Dr Princeton Okam informed the neurosurgeon was freed on Tuesday.

    He said his release came at the verge of the expiration of the ultimatum they gave the State Government.

    Anambra NMA, on Sunday, gave the State Government 72 hours to secure the release of Dr Mbanugo or face total shutdown of health service in the state.

    Okam said: “We just finished a meeting and if the doctor had not been released, all doctors would have shut down.

    “But, fortunately, we got a call from those who have been in contact with the kidnappers, that he has been released.

    “I have also been able to speak to him and ascertain that he is stable,” Okam said.

    The NMA chief who hinted the kidnappers demanded N100million as ransom for the victim’s release, confirmed that ransom was paid before his release.

    He however declined disclosing how much was paid, citing security reasons.

    Okam expressed worries over growing abduction of medical personnel who provide essential services yet underpaid.

    “It’s worrisome that medical doctors, who are essential services providers, would be targeted by kidnappers, saying that medical doctors are not well-paid to be targeted.

    “If people we are saving are against us, then what is the point? The kidnappers are human beings and they have relatives, who we attend to on a daily basis.

    “So, they should leave us alone! We don’t have any money for ransom. How much are we paid that we will be targeted by criminals.

    “Many doctors are leaving the shores of this country because of the very poor pay. So, those of us, who are sacrificing to stay back must be spared by these criminals,” he said.

    The NMA boss called on government to step up efforts to secure the lives and property of residents in the state, especially the medical doctors and other individuals on essential services.

    “We get duty calls very late in the night, does it mean we can no longer honour such calls?

    “We want a secure environment so that everyone can go about their legitimate businesses,” he posited.

  • NICRAT adopts community-driven strategies to boost cancer prevention, early detection

    NICRAT adopts community-driven strategies to boost cancer prevention, early detection

    The National Institute for Cancer Research and Treatment (NICRAT) has announced new community-based strategies to strengthen cancer prevention, awareness, and early treatment across Nigeria.

    The Director-General (DG) of NICRAT, Prof. Usman Aliyu, disclosed this during a one-day Stakeholder Engagement Meeting for the NICRAT–American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Awareness, Prevention and Treatment (APT) Campaign Project held in Abuja over the weekend.

    The initiative, jointly implemented by NICRAT and AACR, aims to improve cancer prevention and early detection by promoting multi-level community engagement and integrating these services into Nigeria’s health system.

    Represented by the Director of Cancer Prevention and Control, Dr Usman Waziri, the DG said the APT Campaign Project was designed to support Nigeria’s cancer control agenda by enhancing public awareness, improving access to screening, and embedding preventive services within primary healthcare structures.

    “The project is designed to leverage evidence-based strategies and local expertise to build sustainable cancer prevention models across the Federal Capital Territory and, ultimately, nationwide. 

    “Our goal is to harmonize efforts to ensure the success of the APT Campaign. This collective process embodies the very essence of integrated cancer control: shared responsibility, mutual accountability, and evidence-led action,” Aliyu noted.

    He commended the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare under its current leadership for providing the policy guidance that enables such partnerships to thrive, while lauding the AACR for its commitment to advancing cancer research and capacity development in Nigeria.

    In her remarks, the Executive Secretary of the FCT Primary Healthcare Board, Dr Rukkaiya Wammako, expressed concern about the low level of cancer awareness in local communities and called for intensified grassroots sensitization.

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    She emphasized that communication in local languages was vital to changing perceptions and overcoming denial about the disease. 

    “There is a need to constantly engage local communities to ensure attitudinal change. Denial remains a major barrier,” she said.

    Wammako reiterated that cancer is curable if detected and treated early and urged residents of the FCT to embrace the HPV vaccine to protect young girls from cervical cancer.

    She commended NICRAT for leading the initiative, assuring that the FCT Administration would continue to partner with the Institute to strengthen health interventions for the benefit of all residents.

  • Health workers warn of sector collapse, demand action on brain drain, funding, insecurity

    Health workers warn of sector collapse, demand action on brain drain, funding, insecurity

    The Medical and Health Workers’ Union of Nigeria (MHWUN) has warned that Nigeria’s health system is on the brink of collapse unless the government urgently tackles brain drain, insecurity, and chronic underfunding.

    This followed the union’s 51st National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Abuja, which was declared open by Minister of Labour and Employment, Maigari Dingyadi, who praised the workers’ resilience amid economic and workplace challenges.

    In a communiqué signed by MHWUN President, Dr. Kabiru Sani, and Secretary-General, Auwalu Kiyawa, the NEC described Nigeria’s health system as far from the sector of their dream, citing poor infrastructure, inadequate personnel, and insufficient public investment. 

    It urged the Federal Government to prioritize workers’ welfare and commit more resources to strengthen the system.

    The union expressed deep concern over the worsening economic hardship and inflation that have eroded workers’ purchasing power, calling for urgent relief measures and policies that reduce reliance on imports. 

    The union also lamented the massive exodus of doctors, nurses, and other skilled professionals, stating that it has crippled healthcare delivery and exacerbated medical tourism.

    According to the NEC, over 60,000 nurses and 19,000 doctors have reportedly left Nigeria in the past two decades, leaving behind a demoralized and overstretched workforce. 

    Sani described the migration as a rational response to a system that fails to reward diligence or guarantee dignity, urging the government to create incentives that make working in Nigeria a dignified choice.

    MHWUN condemned the country’s persistent failure to meet the 15 percent health budget commitment of the 2001 Abuja Declaration, describing it as unacceptable. 

    It also decried rising insecurity, internal displacement, and economic hardship, saying these challenges are worsening poverty and threatening national stability.

    The NEC called for greater investment in climate change adaptation and applauded the establishment of the National Council on Climate Change. 

    However, it urged the government to declare a national emergency to mitigate the impact of flooding, food shortages, and disease outbreaks.

    On internal matters, Sani announced that the union had implemented a new minimum wage of ₦70,000 for its staff, cleared backlogs of deductions, and ensured the payment of outstanding pension and benefit arrears. 

    He disclosed that discussions were ongoing with the Federal Government to adjust the Consolidated Health Salary Structure (CONHESS) for parity with doctors’ pay under CONMESS.

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    He emphasized that a sustainable health system must be built on respect for collective agreements, warning that ignoring signed pacts undermines industrial peace.

    In his remarks, NLC President, Joe Ajaero, blamed the crisis in the health sector on policies that prioritize profit over people.

    He condemned poor working conditions and underfunding, accusing the government of neglecting public health while officials seek medical care abroad, saying “Our health sector continues to bleed because the government prefers to die abroad rather than fix the system here”.

    He urged MHWUN to rally all health unions under the Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) for stronger collective action, stressing, that only radical and organized mobilization could save the sector. 

    Ajaero also called for greater political participation by workers ahead of 2027, warning that without labour’s influence in policymaking, “the cycle of decay will continue.”

    The meeting also honoured late labour icons, Comrades Ali Chiroma and Kasham Thomas, hailing their integrity, courage, and lifelong service to workers’ welfare. 

    The delegates said their legacy would continue to inspire MHWUN’s pursuit of dignity, fairness, and justice for all.

  • Tonia Anaekwe bridges health equity through community-led training initiatives

    Tonia Anaekwe bridges health equity through community-led training initiatives

    Across parts of West Africa and Southeast Asia, particularly in underserved communities in Nigeria and Cambodia, health inequities remain a growing concern. Many areas still face limited access to quality care, poor health literacy, and systemic barriers that hinder preventive health practices.

    Public health advocate and researcher, Tonia Anaekwe, is among a new generation of Africans working to close these gaps through community-led solutions. Her initiative, Tonia’s Health Equity Bridges (T-HEB), focuses on empowering local communities to become the first line of response in improving public health outcomes.

    The organisation combines evidence-based training, psychosocial support, and community mobilisation to strengthen local capacity. Its approach has produced tangible results in communities such as Igbodo in Delta State, where T-HEB trained over 150 community health workers on maternal and child health practices.

    “Before this training, I didn’t know how important early antenatal visits were, but now I can teach mothers confidently,” said Grace O., one of the participants. Data from the programme showed a 143 per cent rise in collective health knowledge, with average test scores increasing from 35 to 85 per cent. A local clinic director, Dr. Festus Ayangwu, also confirmed the progress. “Thanks to her efforts, our clinic has recorded fewer preventable complications and more residents now seek timely medical advice,” he said.

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    This impactful model has attracted global attention, including a World Bank-funded project in Cambodia to replicate the training framework for community health workers, amplifying its international reach. In the Karu community of Nasarawa State, the impact was also evident. The programme surpassed its initial goal by training 48 Community Health Educators, who later reached over 5,000 households. Data from a partner clinic in the area showed a 22 per cent increase in patient visits for preventive services such as immunisation and antenatal care.

    Tonia’s model also prioritises sustainability through partnerships and replication. The Society for Family Health (SFH) recently invited her organisation to lead an intervention in Gwagwa, Abuja, citing T-HEB’s “proven expertise in delivering community health training for vulnerable populations.” That collaboration trained 70 participants, raising their average knowledge scores from 35 to 91 per cent.

    A participant from Gwagwa, Amina Yusuf, described the training as transformational. “Ms. Tonia helped us see how local barriers affect people’s ability to seek care. Her visit was more than a lecture; it changed how we approach our work,” she said.

    Beyond community projects, Tonia has also worked on broader policy engagement. While at the Society for Family Health, she contributed to expanding female condom access in rural areas and built partnerships with over 50 stakeholders in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Her work aligns with international efforts such as the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).

    Speaking about her long-term vision, she said, “Equity is not a luxury, it is a necessity. Our goal is to build resilient communities by equipping people with the knowledge and confidence to take charge of their own health.”

    Through Tonia’s Health Equity Bridges, she continues to create a data-backed framework for health empowerment that transforms beneficiaries into advocates. Her work is gradually shaping a new model for community-driven health systems across Africa and beyond.

  • Tinubu orders immediate end to doctors’ strike

    Tinubu orders immediate end to doctors’ strike

    President Bola Tinubu has directed that the ongoing industrial action by the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) should be brought to an end as soon as practicable.

    The Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Adekunle Salako, who disclosed this on Monday at a briefing in Abuja said President Tinubu has directed the Ministry to take every legitimate step to restore health services nationwide.  

    Towards this end, Salako explained that most of the union’s 19-point demands are already being addressed through dialogue, recruitment, and financial interventions.

    NARD has, however, dismissed the government’s claims as misleading and far from reality. 

    While expressing regret over the hardship caused by the industrial action, the Minister assured that negotiations with the striking doctors were ongoing.

    Salako explained that a Collective Bargaining Agreement mechanism, chaired by the Minister of Labour, has been in place since August to harmonize the interests of all health professionals. 

    Twelve meetings have been held so far, with an external industrial relations consultant engaged to mediate contentious issues, including pay relativity, remuneration parity, and the creation of a consultant cadre for non-medical doctors. “Healthcare delivery is teamwork, and we must find collective solutions rather than isolated agreements that create further divisions,” he said.

    To tackle manpower shortages, Salako disclosed that 14,444 health workers were recruited across 64 federal tertiary institutions in 2024, while approval was given to employ another 23,059 in 2025, including 2,629 resident doctors and 868 consultants. 

    He added that President Tinubu has approved an increase in the retirement age for clinical staff to 65 years and established a committee, including NARD representatives to develop a universal protocol for hiring locum doctors, with a report expected soon.

    On welfare, the Minister confirmed that the government has begun releasing funds to settle arrears. 

    “A total of ₦21.3 billion has been released, with about 60 percent of affected workers already paid. Another ₦11.9 billion is being processed, while ₦10 billion was earlier disbursed under the Medical Residency Training Fund to support postgraduate examinations,” he said.

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    He also added that the government is also addressing the migration of health workers by expanding medical training capacity to meet local needs and potentially export skilled labour, saying, “Nigeria is working toward transforming its health professionals into assets that contribute to both national service and foreign exchange earnings”.

    He explained that a new recruitment framework now allows annual employment of permanent staff while empowering hospital chief executives to hire temporary workers between cycles. 

    He also announced that a ministerial task force will monitor hospital operations to ensure efficiency among health workers not participating in the strike.

    Alausa confirmed that ₦41 billion in arrears was owed under the 25%/35% CONMESS review, noting that ₦31 billion has already been paid or processed, representing about 83 percent of the total debt, which would soon be completed.

    He also clarified that there has been no downgrade of doctors’ professional qualifications, contrary to rumours circulating among practitioners. 

    The representative of the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) explained that the Council only undertook a categorisation exercise for additional qualifications such as fellowships and memberships, classifying them from categories A to D based on the awarding institution, specialty, and qualification type. 

    The Council advised doctors whose certificates were wrongly classified to resubmit them for correction and urged new colleges to formally notify the Council for proper recognition.

    Despite the strike, Salako assured that consultants across federal tertiary health institutions were working to sustain critical services. 

    He said outpatient and emergency departments remain functional, though at reduced capacity, while surgeries and urgent treatments continue nationwide. 

    He appealed for public understanding, adding that a task force has been deployed to ensure compliance and accountability among health workers still on duty.

    In a statement on Monday by its President, Dr. Mohammad Suleiman; Secretary-General, Dr. Shuaibu Ibrahim; and Publicity Secretary, Dr. Abdulmajeed Yahya, the association said none of its 19-point demands had been fully addressed. 

    The association said only a small fraction of the funds disbursed by the government actually reached resident doctors.

    “Our demands represent the minimum requirements for a functional healthcare system and the restoration of dignity to medical practice in Nigeria,” the group stated.

    The association argued that the strike was not merely about unpaid arrears but about survival and humane working conditions. 

    “Nigerian doctors are collapsing from exhaustion in hazardous environments without recognition or compensation. The ongoing migration of doctors is driven by hardship, not greed,” NARD said.

    While reiterating its openness to dialogue, the association insisted that “industrial peace cannot be achieved through press statements but through justice, sincerity, and respect for agreements.” 

    It urged Nigerians to see the strike as a struggle for the survival of both healthcare workers and patients, not as an act against the public.

  • Foundation delivers 17,416 free medical interventions through UBOMI outreach

    Foundation delivers 17,416 free medical interventions through UBOMI outreach

    The Pistis Foundation has again reinforced its commitment to expanding access to quality healthcare for vulnerable Nigerians through its flagship medical and surgical outreach programme, UBOMI.

    The latest edition of the initiative, the eighth overall and the third held this year, has pushed the foundation beyond its 2025 target, delivering a total of 17,416 medical interventions to 5,635 underserved and economically disadvantaged individuals at no cost.

    The programme had initially planned to provide 10,000 interventions to 5,000 beneficiaries this year.

    This achievement was disclosed in a statement issued on Monday by Sowari Akosionu on behalf of the foundation.

    “UBOMI has been a blessing to many more lives being impacted this year through the Pistis Foundation, which continues to move forward,” said Godman Akinlabi, Global Lead Pastor of The Elevation Church and Board Chair of the Pistis Foundation.

    He expressed gratitude to partners and urged them to continue supporting the initiative so that more lives can be transformed.

    Executive Director of the Pistis Foundation, Leonard F. Thomas, emphasised the significance of the feat, saying, “UBOMI 8.0 reflects what is possible when compassion meets collaboration. Each number represents a person whose life has been touched, healed, and given a new story. We are deeply grateful to all our partners, sponsors, and volunteers for making this possible.”

    The just-concluded outreach ran for five days at the Pistis Annex and Hospital for Trauma & Surgery (HTS) Clinics on Remi Olowude Street in Lekki, Lagos.

    It provided 9,212 medical interventions to 3,667 beneficiaries, delivering critical, life-saving care completely free of charge. The edition was executed in partnership with Pro-Health International as the technical partner, coordinating medical volunteers, and HTS Clinics as hospital partners.

    Lois Isemede, Head of Programmes & Partnerships Engagement, revealed key statistics from the outreach: 121 surgeries were conducted, including 103 eye surgeries. The programme also recorded 1,513 dental procedures, 897 eye care treatments, and the dispensing of 359 eyeglasses.

    Additionally, more than 1,807 medical consultations were carried out by a dedicated team of over 130 medical volunteers and 150 non-medical volunteers.

    The UBOMI initiative, which continues to expand in reach and life-changing impact, is regarded as a major demonstration of the power of community-driven healthcare support. With each edition, Pistis Foundation says it aims to ensure that disadvantaged Nigerians receive the medical attention they need to live healthier and more dignified lives.

    For the foundation, UBOMI is more than a medical outreach — it represents a growing movement for a healthier, more inclusive society.

  • FG calls for release of kidnapped neurosurgeon

    FG calls for release of kidnapped neurosurgeon

    The Federal government has expressed concerns over the abduction of Consultant Neurosurgeon, Dr Tochukwu Mbanugo, in Nnewi, Anambra State, describing the incident as a grave assault on Nigeria’s health security.

    The Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Dr Adekunle Salako, in a statement on Sunday, said the abduction becomes more terrifying considering the implications on the nation’s health sector.

    The Minister revealed that the country has fewer than 150 practising neurosurgeons serving a population of over 220 million people, far below the World Health Organisation (WHO) benchmark of one neurosurgeon per 100,000 people. 

    “Nigeria currently has one neurosurgeon per 1.9 million citizens, making every specialist invaluable,” he said.

    Salako described the abduction as a direct assault on the nation’s health security and a threat to collective well-being. He said the Ministry strongly condemns this incident and every form of violence against healthcare workers, stressing that doctors, nurses and allied health professionals are national assets who must be protected and respected.

    “We therefore call on the Anambra State Government and all relevant security agencies to intensify all efforts toward locating Dr Mbanugo and ensuring his immediate and safe release, unharmed and unconditionally in honour of the humanitarian service he renders to the country,” the Minister added.

    According to the Minister, Dr Mbanugo was attacked around Omatha Junction, Uruagu, Nnewi while returning home after performing multiple critical brain surgeries earlier in the day at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University Teaching Hospital (NAUTH).

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    He said the doctor had just concluded several complex neurosurgical operations, including the resection of a brain tumour, before being abducted. 

    “His kidnapping occurred at the very point where he should have been safest, returning home from serving humanity,” the Minister said.

    According to reports from the hospital, contact was later established by the abductors through Dr Mbanugo’s phone with some of his colleagues. 

    The incident has been formally reported to the Anambra State Police Command, Department of State Services, the Nigeria Police Anti-Kidnapping Squad, and local vigilante structures, the said in the statement.

    Salako said the management of NAUTH is actively collaborating with security agencies, the Nigerian Medical Association and other stakeholders to ensure the doctor’s safe and immediate release.