Category: Health

  • Report carpets state of WASH services in FCT, Niger PHCs

    Report carpets state of WASH services in FCT, Niger PHCs

    By Adekunle Yusuf

     

    Research findings have decried the state of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) services in primary health centres (PHCs) in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), and Niger State. In September 2020, Nigeria Health Watch conducted an assessment of WASH services in PHCs in the FCT and Niger State to gather relevant evidence to help improve WASH in healthcare facilities in Nigeria.

    The assessment evaluated the availability and equitable access to WASH services in primary healthcare centres towards the achievement of Sustainable Development Goal 6: Clean water and sanitation.  The report was a culmination of the assessment, which sought to increase awareness about the need for effective WASH services at all PHCs and to reinforce the need for adherence to policies that ensure that primary healthcare facilities meet minimum standard requirements for primary health care, in line with the Federal Ministry of Health’s guidelines.

    The evaluation was conducted in partnership with EpiAFRIC, in 62 PHCs using both qualitative and quantitative methods. In Niger State, 50 PHCs were assessed while 12 PHCs were assessed in the FCT, across urban and rural communities. Some initial findings were that 25 per cent of the PHCs assessed in the FCT pay for water from their budget, 58 per cent experience interruptions in their water source and 83 per cent do not have infection, prevention and control (IPC) protocols followed by health workers.

    Speaking at the presentation of the findings in Abuja, Managing Director at Nigeria Health Watch, Vivianne Ihekweazu, said the country is striving to meet SDG 6 by 2030 and one of the objectives of the assessment is to provide evidence for action to drive quality improvement in the provision of WASH services in PHCs. The assessment found that inadequate water supply in health facilities was one of the contributing factors to the low rate of deliveries at some health facilities, as many pregnant women preferred to deliver their babies at home where water was available.

    At the time of conducting the assessment, in Pandagi Health Centre of Abaji Area Council of FCT, there had been no water supply in the last year, which greatly discouraged women from giving birth to their babies in the centre. Relatives of the few pregnant women who gave birth at the primary health centre had to source water from a nearby river. “WASH is about equity and justice. Often times, the people that need it the most are those that can’t provide it for themselves. They need the assistance of all relevant stakeholders to provide it for them,” Dr. Tochi Okwor, AMR and IPC Programme Coordinator at the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, emphasised.

    Receiving the report, the Executive Secretary of the FCT Primary Health Care Management Board, Dr. Iwot Ndaeyo, said implementation of findings is dependent on political will. “We appreciate the good job that Nigeria Health Watch is doing and we believe that the necessary authorities will look into the report and do the needful. From the assessment, it is clear that we need to improve the availability and quality of WASH services in PHCs around the country. The resultant effect of the current lapses is poor health outcomes and health-seeking behaviour of community members.”

    The consensus at the end of the launch of the report was improving WASH services also involved improving access to wash and sanitation services in the local community. In addition, the report recommended that the local health authorities need to re-examine the WASH services provided at PHCs and re-equip them with necessary infrastructure to enhance their service quality, in order to achieve universal health coverage (UHC). Multi-stakeholder collaboration that includes the government, private sectors and communities will be required in order to pave a way for Nigeria to attain SDG 6.  Nigeria Health Watch is a not-for-profit organization that aims to advocate for the health of Nigerians, strengthen the capacity of health sector organisations, enlighten Nigerians on good health habits and practices and engage and support government and other partners to formulate and implement positive and effective health policies.

  • Lagos begins campaign to promote voluntary blood donation

    Lagos begins campaign to promote voluntary blood donation

    By Adekunle Yusuf

     

    The Lagos State Government has begun a voluntary blood donation chain campaign tagged ‘Each One Reach Ten’ campaign aimed at evolving a lifesaving culture of voluntary blood donation to meet with the growing demand for blood. The campaign also aims to assist the state to meet up with its blood requirement in line with the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) mandate.

    The campaign, with the slogan Advocate, Mobilise, Donate, is geared towards recruiting and retaining voluntary blood donors by ensuring that each individual  is encouraged to advocate for voluntary blood donation and mobilise at least 10 more people to donate blood voluntarily at least three times every year.

    Speaking at the launch of the campaign at the General Hospital Lagos, the Executive Secretary (ES), Lagos State Blood Transfusion Services, Dr. Bodurin Oshikomaiya, explained that the campaign was initiated because of the urgency of ensuring availability of safe blood and blood products for transfusion.

    “We commenced ‘Each One Reach Ten’ blood donation chain campaign to fulfill our mandate to ensure adequacy and ample access to safe blood in Lagos State through strategies anchored on recruiting and retaining voluntary blood donors as the bedrock for safe and adequate blood supply in Lagos”, she said.

    Emphasising the huge demand for blood and the need for voluntary blood donation, Oshikomaiya disclosed that about 37 per cent of the population are eligible and clinically fit to donate blood. She, however, stressed that only about 10 per cent of blood donated is from voluntary blood donors, adding that someone is always in need of blood every two seconds.

    The ES noted that the state government, through the Blood Transfusion Service, is constantly expanding and improving its blood transfusion programmes to provide safe and sufficient blood for clinical use through voluntary blood donors.

    She added that the blood donation chain campaign is aimed at creating a culture to give, to develop an altruistic and selfless attitude to save lives and provide all-inclusive and innovative ways to encourage voluntary blood donation as well as increase and retain voluntary blood donors to meet with the growing blood demand of the state.

    Osikomaiya stated further that the LSBTS has re-evaluated, re-strategised and re-invigorated its voluntary blood donation drives activities because of the COVID-19 pandemic, noting that campaign activities are now tilting more towards increasing the number and frequency of donation by walk-in donors whilst outdoor external mobile drives are being reduced to prevent and limit transmission of COVID-19 infection.

    While applauding voluntary blood donors who go out of their way despite busy schedules in a bustling city like Lagos to donate blood in order to save precious lives, she appealed to new as well as regular blood donors to create a chain of blood donation by donating blood voluntarily as well as encouraging 10 others to donate so as to increase the availability of blood for transfusion, especially during emergencies.

    She assured that the government remains committed in ensuring best practices in health care delivery across the state, adding that the state will intensify its commitment in maintaining a secure and safe blood supply across the state.

    “For us to move towards 100 per cent voluntary blood donation, government, policymakers, health workers and everyone needs to be a part of this campaign. I would therefore like to encourage everyone who is healthy and fit and weigh above 45 kilograms, aged from 18 to 60, to join this campaign and give blood.

    “People in good health who have never given blood, particularly young people, people who have given blood for other reasons including through cohesive forms of donation, should begin to do so as voluntary donors,” Oshikomaiya said.

    The Medical Director, General Hospital Lagos, Dr. Ismail Ganikale, who was also at the event, applauded the Lagos State Blood Transfusion Services for its professional values in the discharge of its mandate. He also commended various individuals, religious organisations and  non-governmental organisations who have identified with the state in boosting the supply of blood in the state.

    Dr. Ganikale, however, encouraged all donors and various foundations not to relent in their efforts in assisting in boosting the supply of blood in the state. He assured that General Hospital Lagos as a means of contribution to all blood donors is always ready to assist anybody who holds a certificate of blood donation in their own time of need. “An accident by definition is not something that will notify you when it will happen. If blood is not available, how do we save lives? That is why we cannot thank people like you enough for what you do. We appreciate you,” he said.

  • U.S. boosts Nigeria’s TB fight with critical diagnostic equipment

    U.S. boosts Nigeria’s TB fight with critical diagnostic equipment

    The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has supported Nigeria’s National Tuberculosis (TB) and Leprosy Control Programme with a donation of critical commodities for the testing and diagnosis of more than 10,000 patients suspected of having the disease.

    The donation consisted of 86,500 “GeneXpert Ultra” cartridges, which would help Nigerian health workers to optimise the use of molecular diagnosis tools that can detect both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant forms of TB, and improve detection of TB in people living with HIV/AIDS. Compared to standard cartridges, the ultra-cartridge has significantly increased sensitivity of the GeneXpert machine, especially in patients who show low numbers of bacteria, such as those with HIV co-infection and in children.

    “Nigeria has the highest estimated burden of TB in all of Africa. With these cartridges, officials tasked with reducing its burden in Nigeria can identify some of the most problematic strains of the TB bacteria,” USAID Mission Director, Anne Patterson noted after the donation.

    Since 2015, USAID  has donated more than 150 GeneXpert machines to hospitals in Nigeria.  The GeneXpert testing platform improves upon slow and less sensitive conventional diagnostic methods, particularly for HIV-positive patients who are extremely vulnerable to TB. Cutting the period of diagnosis from weeks to a matter of hours represents a significant breakthrough in TB diagnosis and supports earlier treatment and better patient outcomes.

    TB can be spread from person to person through the air when a person with active TB infection coughs, sneezes, speaks, or sings. Symptoms include coughing up blood and chest pain, as well as weight loss, night sweats, fever, chills, and fatigue. Early detection and treatment of TB will stop transmission of infection and move the country closer to ending the TB epidemic.

    USAID has partnered since 2003 with the federal and state ministries of health in Nigeria to build the capacity of healthcare providers, expand TB care and treatment services in the public and private sector, link patients to health services, and roll out new treatment options for multi-drug resistant TB.

    In 2020, USAID evaluated more than one million patients for TB, of which almost 80,000 were diagnosed with TB and started on treatment, including 1,000 cases of the multidrug-resistant strain of the disease. Since 2003, USAID has established 1,700 TB clinics and 700 microscopy laboratories across 18 states to improve diagnosis and treatment. It also helps develop new approaches to engage the private sector in TB control.

    USAID works with Nigeria on TB control under a new business model after entering a 2019 partnership with the Federal Ministry of Health to reinforce the two countries’ commitment to meet the United Nations’ TB targets for Nigeria.

  • Poisons in red meat, Sunday Igboho, herders and national security

    Poisons in red meat, Sunday Igboho, herders and national security

    By Femi Kusa

     

    As my widow’s mite contribution to the search for peace in Nigeria during the EndSARS protests, I suggested a national campaign against consumption of cow meat. I suggested  we  all could stop eating cow meat for health and political reasons. Cow meat was putting billions of naira in the hands of foreigners everyday while young Nigerians were poor and unemployed. If we stopped eating red meat and encouraged young Nigerians to farm smaller animals we could withdraw billions of naira everyday from the hands of foreigners and put it in the hands of our own children. I remembered this appeal two weeks ago after Sunday Adeniyi Adeyemo a.k.a Sunday Igboho launched a campaign to rid Oyo State of terrorist Fulani herders. I believe the appeal fits his goals shared by millions of South Western Nigeria, although from another front. If we do on health grounds, we can escape premature death from such conditions as elevated blood cholesterol, hypertension, heart failure, stroke, diabetes, kidney failure, cancers of all sorts etc. If we do not banish meat from our dining tables, we would not get the cattle herders out of our land…and, eventually, they will take the land by force. For cow business is big business which, if need be, would be defended with AK47 riffles and even bombs, however hard we scream. In Lagos, between 6,000 and 10,000 cows are slaughtered  everyday. The price of one cow ranges from about #150,000 to about #400,000 depending on how meaty it is. If we settle for #200,000 per cow,  6,000 cows will mean  about 1.2 billion naria everyday for the cow chain business. How many businesses earn that from Lagos everyday? When we multiply this across the east and west of Nigeria, what these regions  may be losing everyday to the cow trade with origins outside Nigeria may be more than five billion naira everyday. How many states in Nigeria can raise this as their daily budget?

    The forest trade routes  will be defended with guns against farmers who prevent cows from eating their crops.

    The herders will set up villages and mini towns in Nigerian forests and, eventually, call them their land. They will bring their people from home to settle in Nigerian villages that are being deserted by young sons and daughters of the soil for the lure of Dubai, America and Europe. Eventually, the migrants will out number the aging men and women left behind by their children in deserted villages,  and, through the ballot box, someday become new owners and governors of the land. This is the fix we are all in today nationwide. An intelligent way to peacefully resolve the equation is to mount a vigorous scientific and medical campaign against red meat consumption. If we do not eat red meat again, there will be no market for the cow business causing trouble all over the country. The foreign herders may return home. Meanwhile, we would replace cow meat with the meat of snail, rabbit, grass cutter  periwinkle, chicken, goat, ram and fish of all sorts all of which young people and old people alike can easily farm in the villages.

    The present predicament is the reward we get from the land,  we despise,  curse  as “good for nothing”, claiming it is not permitting us to be flowering and fruitful, when we cannot separate the land  from ourselves and recognise that it echoes  to us only what we call to it, but other people see how beautiful it is, adore it and adorn it with beautiful words.

    When I am asked how we can disperse the gathering clouds without  lightening, thunderstorm and earthquake, I often say I despise violence and prefer to be a mathematician, although I have no head for figures. But I know about equations. All events, personal or group, are reducible to equations. When I do not enjoy the relationships in an equation, I simply remove myself from that scenario and, for me, and perhaps the other values in the equation, the construction collapses. So, how do we remove ourselves from the herder’s billion naria daily income equation in Lagos in which we appear imprisoned, for which they coveth our land and seek which colonise us? Simple.  Let us all stop eating cow meat. They do not eat it in India and the heavens have not collapsed on them. I heard from many people of my age that they no longer eat cow’s meat and that their health has improved. Adherents of the Seventh Day Adventist Mission do not eat meat and they are most probably healthier than many of us who do. There are also vegetarians among us. We can mount powerful campaigns in high schools, the universities, the churches and the mosques on radio, television and the newspapers about the dangers of eating red meat. Gradually, the demands for red meat will reduce, the business will slacken and the herders will return home. You will ask what do we replace red meat with? After all, when you withdraw naked sugar from a sickly child, you have to give him something in return, say molases or pure honey. Yes, we can encourage our young ones to begin the farming of snail, periwinkle, rabbits, grass cutters, squirrels, crayfish, mushrooms, fish, goat, ram etc. I was involved in a similar effort in the 1990s under a Non-Governmental  Organisation (NGO) sponsored by a young man from Edo  State. Former Bendel State Governor Samuel Ogbemudia was our chairman. Former President Shehu Shagari was our life patron. We tried to set up a model rabbit farm in each of Nigeria’s 774 local governments. We wanted each model farm linked to an agriculture institution for support services. We dreamt that the number of rabbit farms will multiply every year and, yield more than 250 million rabbits a year. We would then mount a national campaign for rabbit eating to reduce high blood cholesterol levels from red meat which was damaging blood vessels, causing heart attacks, strokes, cancers and painful, untimely death.  As our forefathers taught us in Youruba land, Ore enuni ota  inu (The friend of the tongue is the enemy of the world within).

     

    Damgers in red meat

     

    In 2011, Harvard University published the findings of a study which linked the processed meat to rising occurrences of Type 2 diabetes in the United States. In the definition of processed meat are such edibles like hot-dog, salami, burger, corn beef etc. The meat in these food products have been “cured” with chemicals to preserve them. These chemicals are not only Not Foodless but poisoning to the body as well.

    Increasingly popular in Nigeria today, especially among young persons, is Sharwama. Inside every pack of it is not just cabbage and chicken parts, among other constituents, but also Hot-Dog and Cured Meat.

    Those of us who do not eat junk food with cured meat may believe we are off the cancer hook and the red meat risk factor in diabetes and other degenerative diseases. But are we safe from tuberculosis?

     

    Tuberculosis

     

    The World Health Organisation(WHO) estimate that about 460,000 Nigerians are infected with tuberculosis every year while about 219 of 100,000 persons die of it every year. Surely not all these cases come from eating red meat. Nevertheless, we shouldn’t ignore the fact that many cows are infected and there are not enough veterinary medicine doctors  to certify them free of tuberculosis and other infections before slaughter. The paradox is that Nigeria may not have enough veterinary doctors to certify all cows for slaughter. If about 10,000 cows are slaughtered in Lagos everyday, how many veterinary doctors do we need to certify them free of tuberculosis? If we assign one doctor to 100 cows, that means we need 100 doctors to do the job. Do we have 100 veterinary doctors at the Lagos abattoir in Abule-Egba where all cows are meant to be slaughtered? No, we don’t. If we do, can one doctor certify 100 cows in one day? No, he won’t do a thorough job. And that is why tuberculosis may have been spreading through the meat industry.

    Doctors advise that red meat be properly cooked before consumption to get rid of not only this problem but of other germs as well. I recall that my mother’s generation did that. Red meat was boiled, fried and then cooked in soups and stews. But that had its problems. Red meat is a load of proteins. As over heating, boiling, frying and then cooking converts the proteins to nitrosamine which are starting blocks of cancer, because they are carcinogenic, eating meat so treated may expose the consumer to cancer risk. These days, many restaurants merely boil red meat and add it to the soup or stew or cook with the sauce. They do this to prevent shrinkage which may devalue the price. The trouble with this is that some germs survive in their cocoons. The tuberculosis agent is most probably one of them. Between the 1990s and 2010, two of my cousins from the same mother and father died in Lagos of tuberculosis of the spinal bones with spread to their livers, damaging them. It was the first time it became clear to many people in their family that tuberculosis was not only a disease of the lungs. As red meat is likely to cause 460,000 new tuberculosis infections every year and 219 in every 100,000 citizens are likely to die in the same period,  isn’t it better to switch to a less hazardous source of protein? What we observe with tuberculosis in red meat consumption is evident, also, in cardiovascular diseases and stroke.

     

    Stroke, CVDs

     

    World Health officials anticipate about 250,000 new cases of strokes every year. Strokes belong to the family of cardiovascular diseases to which belong hardening of the arteries(arterosclerosis), blockage of the arteries (atherosclerosis), elevated blood cholesterol, hypertension or elevated blood pressure, enlarged heart, palpitation of the heart, arythmia(murmuring of the heart), instalmental death of heart muscle fibers, heart failure, rupturing of blood vessels in the brain and so on. Many studies link some, if not all of these deadly conditions to diabetes.

    Diabetes or elevated blood sugar is itself linked to the consumption of red meat and poulting meat which are said to impact abnormal loads of heme iron.

     

    The heart, cholesterol

     

    Cholesterol was such a bad word in the 1980s that Euro-Americans abstained from practically all fats. Yet cholesterol is important for many body functions, including healthy cell walls, the brain, sex hormones and many more. By the 2000s, a unified fat theory established the healing fats and the killer fats…Now, it is suggested that cholesterol may be a killer because the diet is not mineralised and vitaminised enough to support the liver’s efforts to convert excess cholesterol to bile salts. These salts help to digest fats and to evacuate fat-soluble poisons, through the faeces.

    Thanks to the likes of Dr Udo Erasmus, author of Fats That heal and Fats that Kill, we know of the good fat, High Density Lipo Protein(HDL) and killer fat when in excess, Low Density LipoProtein(LDL). But, now, industry sponsored researchers are trying to turn the tables, trying to deconstruct the unified fat theory in order to make all fats appear safe for health. That is the modus operandi of any sagging industry. The sugar industry promoted sugar. So did the cow milk industry despite Professor Pottenger’s experiments see the internet for (Professor Pottenger’s cats). Did the egg industry and the GMO food industries not behave likewise?

    In Nigeria today, many people are coming down or dying from high blood cholesterol diseases such as hypertension, heart disease, heart attack and stroke among others. In many of these cases,  the liver has become weak or even enlarged and become fatty, unable to optimally support digestion or perform its other  functions. Thus, a cholesterol build up continues to mount. Depending on the diet, the  transit time for food in the intestine has been established. The Charcoal Test transit time of about 18 hours suggest that plain food should take no more than 18 hours to transit from the mouth to the anus for the waste to be expelled. The story is different for red meat. According to Google, the stomach should digest red meat in two to five hours, the  small intestine in two to six hours and in the colon10 to 59 hours. In other words, the digestive system should be rid of red meat within about 73 hours, which is about three days compared with 18 hours for red meat free meals. Many people eat three times a day, each meal with either egg, fish, or red meat and void only once a day. Some people eat 21 meals in one week but void two times that week. Thus, not all the food  waste is eliminated. As many adults in Nigeria cannot have a red meat free meal, cholesterol must build up and be  reabsorbed into the blood stream, however diligently the liver may have tried to fractionalise it for evacuation.

    From this stand point,  isn’t it better you do away with red meat and replace it with the lean meat of, say, rabbit, grass cutter, snail, periwinkle, mushrooms, free range chickens , ducks and goat?

     

    A Psychic

    Question

    This is an interesting question I do not wish to dabble into. Some people have examined Google’s account of Nigeria’s farm animal population, and wondered about where the cattle slaughtered in Nigeria are coming from. According to Google, Nigeria’s farm animal population is: Chickens 84•4 million; Goat 34•5 million; Sheep 22•1 million; Cattle 13•9 million. It takes about 400 days for a female cow to be pregnant and be delivered of only one calf. We do not know how many of Nigeria’s farm cattle are female. If about half of them are, that is about 7 million cattle which will produce another 7 million calfs in 400 days which will reach table size in one year or a little over. So, if Lagos consumes about 10,000 cows a day or 3•7 million cows a year and the south west consumes that many, that is about half of Nigeria’s farm cattle population gone in one year.What about the east and north? Will their consumption not wipe off the remainder? So, still, were are the cattle coming from?. Some people have suggested that more events than we can fathom may be going on in the forest. These stories remind me of a fascinating book I read as a boy. It was titled Cinderella! In my village, there lived a man with 32 wives and 87 children. Feeding them was not a problem. Reportedly, a whirlwind swept their grandmother away for seven years and another brought her back. Whenever foodstuff was scarce at home, all hungry children assembled their bowls on the grounds of the courtyard. Their grandmother spread white clothes over the bowls. Steaming hot food that must be eaten before it went cold filled the bowls! There are living witnesses of this Cinderella type of story. Are the cows we eat “Cinderella cows”?

     

    Other questions

     

    Some people believe these cows are abused in the forest. My imagination is inelastic to fathom it. But I do know that these animals are under stress, treking through forest and crossing rivers, and that their bodies are saturated with adrenaline and cortisol. Elevated blood levels of adrenaline, even in humans, can damage blood vessels, cause elevated blood pressure ( hypertension), damage the heart and even cause stroke. Add to this scenario the adrenaline upsurge in the slaughter chamber when the cow behind sees the cow ahead beheaded, and imagine the amount of adrenaline we consume in the red meat. Any one who lives around the Lagos Abattoir will tell you that some cows sometimes escape from the slaughter man and furiously flee through the street.

    These scenarios and a few more encourage me to give up red meat a few years ago. Now, the insult of the foreign herdsmen has added yet another reason for me to say bye bye to red meat. Nigerians need to be educated that the normadic herdsmen now wish to settle down, more than 500 years after most people in this part of the earth did so, and are, therefore, desperately searching for  land on which to settle. Whoever is weak will lose his/her father land for the strong must always overcome the weak. In the southwest, the penchant for naming ceremony feast, house warming feast, wedding feast, birthday feast, funeral feast, school graduation feast, anything feast etc all of which warrants the consumption of red meat should give way so that the cow merchants, finding no more customers, can take their cows elsewhere. Failure to do this may merely postpone the dooms day. Indians don’t eat cow meat, and they are not dead.

  • TRF inaugurates PHC in Lagos

    TRF inaugurates PHC in Lagos

    By Moses Emorinken, Abuja

     

    Total Respite Foundation (TRF) has opened a primary health centre (PHC) in Mowokekere, Lagos. It was facilitated by Chairman/Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Nigerian Diaspora Commission, Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa.

    Its Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Dr. Bolajoko Sogbesan, stated that the Mowekekere Health Centre is one of the four PHCs handed over to TRF under the private-public health SME initiatives of the state government and it is the first to be managed by TRF.

    It is a 12-bed facility with wards, emergency rooms, and pharmacy, among others. “The massive support and the enthusiasm of the members of the community encouraged TRF to kick off its services in Mowokekere. The vision and core objective of TRF is to be the facilitator of accessible, affordable, quality healthcare to rural communities in Nigeria, particularly Lagos. We work to provide high grade, value for money healthcare services at very reasonable and easily affordable cost.

    “TRF hopes to achieve this vision by providing sustainable effective healthcare services backed by modern technology, high grade equipment, cost-effective diagnostic and treatment services and evidence-based medical practice at our rural communities through our well trained and highly resourceful friendly staff. The recruitment policy of TRF is for well trained, trainable, experienced, friendly and highly motivated healthcare personnel in all its facilities,” she said.

    Dr. Bolaji Obadeyi, representing the Chairman of the Lagos State Primary Health Care Board, Prof Akin Osibogun, stated that primary healthcare is the touchpoint where effective healthcare reaches the smallest units of the society through the health posts, health centres and comprehensive health centres.

    The mission is to provide universal coverage and access to qualitative, effective and efficient healthcare in all 329 primary health centres in the state, Obadeyi said.

    “The administration of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has made significant investments in the health system and primary healthcare in particular. Recently, three purpose-built and fully equipped maternal and child health centres were commissioned in the state. I congratulate the Commissioner for Health that these are happening during his tenure. Although we are making progress, there is more work to be done. There is a need for more health facilities in hard-to-reach areas and an imperative to equip existing PHCs with appropriate medical technology.

    “There is a funding gap, which is huge and cannot be bridged by government alone. There is a pressing need for public private collaboration not only for establishing new facilities but also managing existing PHCs. The participation of the private sector in funding and providing healthcare services brings several benefits; we can leverage available funding investments to meet financing gaps. More than 70 per cent health spending in Nigeria comes from individuals and households. There has to be a more inclusive and equitable way of financing the healthcare healthcare in our communities,” Obadeyi said.

    A medical director, Hemeson Edwin, said: “All we are trying to do is bridge the gap between the government and the community. For now, everything we did here is from personal funding with no grant or loan from anyone, but then we hope and pray what is being done here today will bring in other investors and also philanthropists to come and assist.”

  • Don stresses benefits of soybeans, fish

    Don stresses benefits of soybeans, fish

    By Halimah Balogun and Aishah Braimoh

     

    A professor of Fish Nutrition at the University of Lagos, Morenike Adewolu has advised Nigerians to consume soybeans and fish to help improve their diet and reduce the incidence of malnutrition.

    Soybeans and fish are well-known and affordable sources of protein.

    Noting that the benefits of the combination of soybeans and fish consumption are often understated,  Adewolu said soybeans and fish contain vitamins and minerals which are of benefit to the human body and mind.

    “The size of the soybean pales in comparison to the numerous gains of its consumption. Soybean is an excellent source of protein, and it contains fundamental nutrients needed by the human body to function optimally. It is one of the few plant-based proteins that are considered to have all the essential amino acids.

    “Soybeans are low in carbohydrates and have a very low glycemic index (GI), which is a measure of how foods affect the rise in blood sugar after a meal. Soybeans are good sources of several vitamins and minerals, including vitamin K1, vitamins B1-B6, folates, copper, manganese, potassium, phosphorus, and thiamine. They are a rich source of various bioactive plant compounds, including isoflavones, saponins, and lunasin,” Adewolu said.

    She stated that soybeans have high levels of isoflavones and antioxidants as well as immune-boosting properties. “The proteins and isoflavones in soy repair worn-out cells and tissues, and replace blood plasma, which is vital for immune resistance. Isoflavones may be protective against breast cancer later in life. The high levels of antioxidants in soybeans may prevent the onset of several cancer cells and remove free radicals from the body.”

    The professor described the combination of soybeans with fish as a superfood that can lower the risk of diabetes, heart diseases, stroke and obesity.

    She explained that regular consumption of fish (whether oily, shellfish or lean fish) will lower the risk of heart attacks and strokes because of the presence of Omega-3 fatty acids.

    According to the lecturer, fish, which contains Omega-3 fatty acids, will help in the breakdown of triglycerides and fatty acids in the liver, thereby lowering the risk of fatty liver disease. This helps blood flow to the brain and improves its performance during mental tasks.

    Fish are rich in Vitamin A, which can fight radicals and reduce oxidative stress.

    “As long as fishes are included in our diet, be it tilapia, codfish (panla), scumbia, crabs, crayfish, or any type of fish at all, our immune system will be immediately boosted because fishes contain vitamin B12 (cobalamin) and selenium, which are critical in the formation of macrophage cells, which patrol the bloodstreams for harmful bacteria.”

    The nutritionist stated that the immune system is spread throughout the body and it involves many types of cells, organs, proteins and tissues.

    She noted that without an enhanced immune system, the body would be opened to attack from bacteria, viruses and parasites, which is why increasing the dietary intake of soy and fish is important.

    She added that the vitamins and minerals contained in soybeans and fish help to maintain the body’s defence against infections, thereby enhancing the human body’s immunologic system.

    “In Nigeria, the average protein intake is low; it is estimated to be 45.4 grams per day. This is below the WHO’s recommendation of 70 grams per day. A combination of soybeans and fish will definitely meet the recommendation since these two foods are very good sources of dietary protein,” she added.

  • COVID-19: GSK, CureVac in 150m euro deal to produce mRNA vaccines

    COVID-19: GSK, CureVac in 150m euro deal to produce mRNA vaccines

    By Adekunle Yusuf

     

    Pharmaceutical  giant GlaxoSmithKline Plc (GSK) and CureVac N.V. (CVAC) have announced a new 150million euro deal to develop next generation mRNA vaccines.

    The effort, which has the potential for a multi-valent approach to address multiple emerging variants in one vaccine, is intended for pandemic and endemic use.

    GSK said it will also support the manufacture of up to 100 million doses of CureVac’s first generation COVID-19 vaccine candidate CVnCoV in 2021. Through this new exclusive co-development agreement, GSK and CureVac will contribute resources and expertise to research, develop, and manufacture a number of novel mRNA vaccine candidates, including multi-valent and monovalent approaches.

    The aim of this work is to offer broader protection against a variety of SARS-CoV2 variants, and to enable a quick response to new ones. The development will begin immediately, with the target of introducing the vaccine in 2022, subject to regulatory approval, Emma Walmsley, the Chief Executive Officer, GSK, said.

    The increase in emerging variants with the potential to reduce the efficacy of first generation COVID-19 vaccines requires acceleration of efforts to develop vaccines against new variants to keep one step ahead of the pandemic. These next generation COVID-19 vaccines may either be used to protect people who have not been vaccinated before, or to serve as boosters in the event that COVID-19 immunity gained from an initial vaccination reduces over time. In addition, the collaboration will assess the development of novel mRNA vaccines to protect against multiple respiratory viruses, including COVID-19.

    This collaboration will build on CureVac’s first generation COVID-19 vaccine candidate CVnCoV, which is  in Phase 2b/3 clinical trial and on CureVac’s ability to optimise mRNA for a strong immune response, manufacturability, and stability at standard 2-8°C cold chain conditions for vaccines. CureVac’s platform is uniquely adapted to designing multi-valent vaccines with a balanced immune response and a low dose of mRNA.

    “We believe that next generation vaccines will be crucial in the continued fight against COVID-19. This new collaboration builds on our existing relationship with CureVac and means that together, we will combine our scientific expertise in mRNA and vaccine development to advance and accelerate the development of new COVID-19 vaccine candidates. At the same time, we will also support the production of CureVac’s first generation vaccines with the manufacture of 100 million doses in 2021,” Walmsley said.

    GSK is a global healthcare company, which help people do more, feel better, live longer; while CureVac is a global biopharmaceutical company in  messenger RNA (mRNA) technology, with more than 20 years of expertise in developing and optimising the versatile biological molecule for medical purposes.

    The principle of CureVac’s proprietary technology is the use of non-chemically modified mRNA as a data carrier to instruct the human body to produce its proteins capable of fighting a broad range of diseases. Based on its proprietary technology, the company has built a deep clinical pipeline across the areas of prophylactic vaccines, cancer therapies, antibody therapies, and the treatment of rare diseases.

    Chief Executive Officer of CureVac, Franz-Werner Haas, said: “We are very pleased to build on our  relationship with GSK with a new agreement to develop next generation mRNA-based vaccines, in addition to our candidate CVnCoV.

    ‘’With the help of GSK’s proven vaccine expertise, we are equipping ourselves to tackle future health challenges with novel vaccines.”

    As part of the new deal, GSK will also support the manufacture of CureVac’s first-generation COVID-19 vaccine candidate CVnCoV which is in Phase 2b/3 trials. Using its manufacturing network in Belgium, GSK aims to support manufacturing of up to 100 million doses of the vaccine in the year.

    Under the terms of the agreement, GSK will be the marketing authorisation holder for the next generation vaccine, except in Switzerland, and will have exclusive rights to develop, manufacture, and commercialise the next generation COVID-19 vaccine in countries with the exception of Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

    GSK will make an upfront payment of 75million euro and a further 75million euro, conditional on the achievement of specific milestones.

  • COVID-19: Solarised water, vitamin D3, anti-vaccine doctors

    COVID-19: Solarised water, vitamin D3, anti-vaccine doctors

    By Femi Kusa

    This would appear to be the season of radiations.

    On January 7, this column invited attention to human blood radiation as a cure for COVID-19 infection. The week after, the subject was the possibility of laptop and cell phone radiation being a cause of brain tumours. This week we are revisiting the sun’s energy in a bottle of water, also called solarised water. Put another way, that is, the role which the sun’s radiation in a clear glass bottle of water can play in the healing of COVID-19 infections.

    Dr Doyin Okupe encouraged me to revisit the idea of solarised water, which helped me out of “look-alike symptoms” of COVID-19 infection last year with his hypothesis that poor people who spend long hours under sunlight do not fall easy preys to COVID-19. He theorises that, because sunlight helps us humans produce Vitamin D3 which, he says, knocks out the virus, sunlight is a natural medicine for coronavirus. He made the argument interesting by suggesting, though without records, that most of the people who are dying are people who move from air conditioned homes into air conditioned cars which take them to air conditioned offices. On the other side are people who spend almost all their outdoor lives under the sun. In this bracket are market women, bricklayers, labourers, farmers, bus conductors, motorcycle riders, street traders and the likes of them.

    Vitamin D3  is not new on the Alternative Medicine cure menu list. It has been suggested for use in cancer of the breast, colon, lungs and prostate. It is popular also in treatment of  diabetes 1 and 2, rickets, osteoporosis, osteopenia, osteomalacia, cardiovascular disease, auto immune infections, irritable bowl syndrome (IBS), psychological disorders, multiple sclerosis, obesity, rheumatoid arthritis, Lupus, dementia, parkinson’s disease, alzheimer’s disease, schitzophrenia, anxiety disorders, depression.There is hardly any disease that is not connected nowadays to Vitamin D3 deficiency.

    This is easy to understand. The human body is about 70 percent water. The energy for our planet, earth, comes from the sun. We are reminded that the Dinosaurs, the highest evolved animals in their Age, became extinct when a certain cloud stood between the sun’s energising rays of light and the earth, making the planet cooler than is necessary to support life. Just as the plants use the sun’s energy in photosynthesis, the human skin carries out a form of photosynthesis as well. It converts the sun’s energy into vitamin D3 which energises the body. About 40 percent of the sun’s energy is said to come from green plants and oily fish while 60 percent is believed to come directly from the sun. About one billion people on earth are said to suffer from vitamin D3 deficiency because they are under exposed to the sun or cannot make enough vitamin D3 when the sun’s energy touches their skin or because their intestine cannot efficiently absorb vitamin D3.

    When sunlight strikes a water source, it charges the water with energy and the water becomes more reactive to pass on this energy. This is living water or water that is alive. The water many of us drink, cook or bathe with is dead water which has been stored in plastics or piped through galvanised steel or plastic pipes. Drinkable water can be made more alive and living by solarising it. Solarising water means it is kept in a glass bottle from sunrise to sunset to absorb all seven energy frequncies of the sun or specific energy wave lengths, depending on the color of the glass bottle and the needs of the individual. Red, orange and yellow glasses provide high solar energy water. Green, indigo and violet bottles provide calming energy, especially in pain situations (Pls read about solarised water on the internet). During my encounter with COVID-19 look alike symptoms for three weeks about March or April last year, I drank solarised water everyday from clear (white glass bottles) (see www.olufemikusa.com for COVID-19: look alike symptoms join the lexicon). I found solarised water energising and healing. I was encouraged to drink it by the findings of many scientific experiments. I still clearly remember one of them. Before some pigs were slaughtered, they were given high doses of vitamin D3 in their drinking water compared to the control group, their intestines absorbed calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, iron etc better. Their muscles also filled up better with tocopherols (vitamin E), and their bones had higher calcium density.

    Now, I will give Dr Doyin Okupe the floor. About three weeks ago, his idea that vitamin D3 can cure COVID-19 infections featured prominently in social media. Dr Okupe has the floor…

     

    Why COVID-19 spares the poor, by Dr Doyin Okupe

     

    Have you been wondering why  ordinary folks seem to be less affected by COVID-19? Whenever my drivers, house helps and security come back from their leave at home, I always asked them the state of things in their villages. Up till today in the last one year, none has come back with any news of deaths or serious illnesses requiring hospitalisation in their homes or surroundings.

    I visited the Sabo Market in Sagamu (Ogun State) and the tomato market at toll gate in Ogere (Ogun State). I questioned many traders if any stall or store owners have been missing, or did not come to the market or have actually died. Responses were always negative.

    So clearly the prevalence of noticeable infection with COVID-19 is less among the lower class and fatalities appear to be higher among the upper class. However, it is necessary to make some adjustment for the fact that deaths among the elite class readily get media attention than those of regular folks.

    Melinder Gates prediction failed woefully because there was no way she could have foreseen this demographic prevalence factor in the spread of COVID-19. The overall infectivity and fatalities in Africa is disproportionately much lower than the rest of the World!!!

     

    What is the magic here?

     

    Simply put, the magic is Sunlight. People who are daily exposed to sunlight are able to convert some chemicals in their skins to Vitamin D, especially D3. Scientists have incontrovertible evidence that Vitamin D seriously boosts the human immunity and actually have capacity to prevent respiratory and lung diseases. In the case of COVID-19, Vitamin D3 can prevent infection in some people and in others who still get infected, it decreases the severity of the infection and recovery rate is far better.

    Recently, a petition signed by 120 physicians spread across the globe (I have a copy) has been sent to world leaders and governments to treat vitamin D deficiency common in Europe and Americas, who have effective sunlight for just a few months in a year and hence have large numbers of the populace suffering from vitamins deficiency leading to high rates of susceptibility to COVID-19 infections and deaths.

    Many of us elites in Africa are also Vitamin D deficient and this makes us ready targets for COVID-19 infections also. This is because we are hardly in the sun all year round. Yet a 30-minute lounge daily in the bright sunlight gives one about 20,000 iu of vitamin D in our blood. This figure is much much more higher than our daily requirement, which is about 4000 iu of vitamin D.

    This is why young people, students, hawkers, traders and many who toil daily under the sun have very high immunity against COVID-19. So, my dear elders, VIPs and Ogas, please walk leisurely or lounge in the sun for 20 to 30 minutes daily, and with your face masks always on in public and observing normal COVID-19 protocols, with daily supplications to the Almighty, you will place a ban on COVID-19 from affecting you and your household.

    God bless you all.

    Okupe, a Medical Doctor, was Adviser to former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan.

    Thanks Dr Okupe . Up IC. From Dr Doyin Okupe, we move over to COVID-19 vaccine. I salute the courage of the Zambian president who has said no Zambian will take the vaccine. He has even asked us for evidence that the vaccine given to United States President Joe Biden is the same as will be given to Zambians or other Africans. Soon after he threw this bombshell, there were reports of human volunteers abroad who took the vaccines, falling ill and dying. There are reports also of American officials saying the ultimate answer to COVID-19 is in immune boosting and that the vaccine is an emergency measure or a bridge over sub normal immunity at this time and optimal immunity in the future.

    To many people, this suggests there is an attempt to fish in troubled waters flowing under that bridge. Just as many doctors  are  “fishermen” in this human disaster, many others are being faithful to their calling as doctors. They are warning us, like the Zambian president, to not take the vaccine, to flee from it. The internet contact addresses of these doctors are provided below for the benefit of everyone who wishes to know why they are opposing the COVID-19 vaccine.

     

    War on

     

    The Vaccine

    Doctors who explain clearly why vaccines aren’t safe or effective.

     

    1. Dr. Nancy Banks – http://bit.ly/1Ip0aIm
    2. Dr. Russell Blaylock – http://bit.ly/1BXxQZL
    3. Dr. Shiv Chopra – http://bit.ly/1gdgh1s
    4. Dr. Sherri Tenpenny – http://bit.ly/1MPVbjx
    5. Dr. Suzanne Humphries – http://bit.ly/17sKDbf
    6. Dr. Larry Palevsky – http://bit.ly/1LLEjf6
    7. Dr. Toni Bark – http://bit.ly/1CYM9RB
    8. Dr. Andrew Wakefield – http://bit.ly/1MuyNzo
    9. Dr. Meryl Nass – http://bit.ly/1DGzJsc
    10. Dr. Raymond Obomsawin – http://bit.ly/1G9ZXYl
    11. Dr. Ghislaine Lanctot – http://bit.ly/1MrVeUL
    12. Dr. Robert Rowen – http://bit.ly/1SIELeF
    13. Dr. David Ayoub – http://bit.ly/1SIELve
    14. Dr. Boyd Haley PhD – http://bit.ly/1KsdVby
    15. Dr. Rashid Buttar – http://bit.ly/1gWOkL6
    16. Dr. Roby Mitchell – http://bit.ly/1gdgEZU
    17. Dr. Ken Stoller – http://bit.ly/1MPVqLI
    18. Dr. Mayer…
  • Youths, students threaten protest over primary healthcare crisis

    Youths, students threaten protest over primary healthcare crisis

    Our Reporter

    A coalition of youths and student leaders has vowed to embark on a nationwide protest against the state of primary healthcare.

    According to a communiqué after the first meeting of the Nigerian Youth Union (NYU); National Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN); National Association of Polytechnic Students (NAPS); National Association of Colleges of Education Students (NACES); Coalition of Northern Groups (CNG); National Association of University Students (NAUS) as well as National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) Zone A, B, the health sector has been in a parlous state.

    The communiqué signed by leaders of the groups reads: “It has been the subject of our scrupulous observation that hundreds of lives are lost every day in Nigeria, not because of incurable diseases but as a result of a poorly functional healthcare system to offer medical care to citizens especially the average or poor citizens who mostly dwell in rural areas.

    “The findings of our survey reveal that a vast number of local governments do not have standard primary Healthcare facilities. This has left the populace of such communities vulnerable to diseases with attendant high maternal and infant mortality rates.

    “We were perplexed and patriotically disenchanted by the records which show that the Federal Government had made provisions for the state of the art primary healthcare centres to be built across the 774 local government areas through a well thought out public-private partnership contrary to the sordid episode being played out where basic health facilities are lacking in most of the local government areas.”

    They added: “On the heels of these developments, we call on the government to ensure a total revamping of the existing healthcare system in the 774 Local Government Areas in Nigeria.

    “We demand the immediate establishment of a new healthcare system that ensures basic healthcare facilities are built in areas of deficiencies in the 774 Local Government Areas in line with the master-plan of the public-private partnership.

    “We call on the Association of Local Government of Nigeria (ALGON) as a matter of urgency, to mandate and mobilise her contractors- in-charge of primary healthcare to get back to work.

    “We call on the Nigerian Governors Forum to refrain from resisting the efforts to build and equip more primary health care centres particularly in the face of the current spike in COVID 19 cases and other attendant mysterious ailments.

    “Anything to the contrary will paint the forum as anti-masses and will be resisted by the Nigerian youth, students and Civil Society Groups.

    “It should be made emphatically clear that the Nigerian Youths and Students Leaders shall mobilize her members and Nigerians for a national protest after 14days if no proactive action is taken to guarantee a better, accessible, and quality healthcare system for the greater percentage of Nigerians who are resident in rural communities.”

  • COVID-19: Trending Nigeria remedies

    COVID-19: Trending Nigeria remedies

    From the way Nigerians are confronting COVID-19 infections outside hospitals and isolation centres, it would appear to be not what Europeans and Americans have been telling us… That is UNCONQUERABLE except with vaccines.

    These days, all sorts of survival formulas appear in the social media. Nine appeared on these pages last year and in www.olufemikusa.com in the COVID-19 series.

    This week, I took interest in two. One of them came from a man who said he and all members of his family came down. A doctor suggested they make table salt into a warm solution and suck it into the sinuses through one nostril and after another. In four days, they all got well, he said.

    One of my doctor friends in Lagos says he uses ozae injection or Nebuliser to deliver a solution of three percent food grade Oxygen Peroxide into the sinuses and that kills the virus.The trending anti-COVID-19 arsenal now is IVERMECTIN. I have heard no fewer than four survival stories about it. These days, I do not like to transmit information on survival using unorthodox means without first clearing with the source,as many social media posts may be planted. This latest post is credited to a former Vice-Chancellor (VC) of the University of Ibadan (UI) who, in a post, says: Dear Prof, the below message was posted on NINAAFEH WhatsApp page by Prof Kayode Oyediran, former UI VC. What do you think about the drug?

    “I regret to announce that I have contracted COVID-19 and have been seriously ill and probably would have been a dead man if not for the timely application of the drug Ivermectin that saved my life.

    “Before I took this drug, the virus had already eaten so deep into me that I couldn’t even talk anymore, I was so weak that I couldn’t hold my eyes open.

    “I had been ravaged by intense fever and headache, acute cough, sore throat and catarrh, in fact my saliva was permanently gummy just like catarrh. I had complete loss of senses of smell and taste, I was only able to breath through my mouth because my nose was blocked, life felt like hell…

    “Then a friend, a pharmacist in Texas, United States advised that I start taking Ivermectin immediately. He said the drug could be gotten over the counter in any pharmaceutical store in Lagos.

    “Ofala got the drugs and I started taking it as prescribed. Two days after ingesting the first dose, all the symptoms disappeared, two days more, as I completed the full dosage, I am up and about and would want to step out but, unfortunately, I can’t till my test results show ” negative “. God has just used this drug to save my life.

    “I felt it is necessary to share this with you all as I consider this my family. I also want everyone to know that COVID-19 is still very much out there and people are getting infected and losing their lives…

    “I will advise everyone to leave whatever you’re doing and head to a pharmacy store closest to you and pick up Ivermectin, the drug is a cure for COVID-19 and you  can take that statement to the bank. You can also take it for preventive measures as well.

    “Just get the drug!!!

    “I have added a footage on the drug Ivermectin for your perusal.

    “I want to use this opportunity to say a big thank  you to Ofala, for being a brother and for making it possible that all the drugs and the other vitamins that were prescribed along with it got to me.

    “I’m grateful bro, I hail you…

    “Stay safe you all and stay blessed..”