Category: Health

  • Health insurance: NHIA seals data, service delivery deals with NBS, SERVICOM

    Health insurance: NHIA seals data, service delivery deals with NBS, SERVICOM

    The National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) has signed two strategic Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) with the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the Service Compact with All Nigerians (SERVICOM) to enhance data-driven decision-making and improve service quality across Nigeria’s health insurance system.

    The agency explained that the partnerships were necessary because it cannot function in isolation and must work closely with institutions that have complementary mandates.

    “This is the beginning of a long journey toward a more accountable and citizen-focused health insurance system. Our goal is to transform how health insurance works, using evidence, technology, and accountability to deliver the quality of care Nigerians deserve, the Director General (DG) of NHIA, Dr. Kelechi Ohiri, stressed.

    Speaking during the signing ceremony in Abuja on Tuesday, Dr. Ohiri said the partnerships reflect the government’s determination to make healthcare delivery more evidence-based, accountable, and responsive to citizens’ needs.

    “These are not just documents; they represent real commitments to improving the way we deliver healthcare. Our programmes must be guided by accurate data, clear accountability, and the lived experiences of Nigerians.” Dr. Ohiri noted.

    He explained that the partnership with the NBS would strengthen the national health data ecosystem by ensuring that reliable indicators, particularly those affecting the poor and vulnerable, are captured in national statistics.

    Noting that it would also support capacity building and locally relevant research to shape sound policies and evaluate the impact of interventions, the DG said, “People often ask how we measure the impact of what we do.

    “This collaboration with the National Bureau of Statistics ensures that we’re measuring the right things, especially those that truly matter to ordinary Nigerians.”

    Dr. Ohiri added that the agreement reflects a shared commitment between NHIA and NBS to utilize credible data for informed decision-making, track outcomes, and identify areas requiring improvement in the nation’s healthcare system.

    He further emphasized that the partnership with SERVICOM, which coincided with this year’s Customer Service Week, would focus on improving the quality of care for over 20 million Nigerians currently enrolled in various NHIA programmes.

    “For us, health insurance is not only about numbers, it’s about people’s experiences. Partnering with SERVICOM aligns with President Bola Tinubu’s vision for Universal Health Coverage”, he noted, adding that access alone is not enough; quality and accountability must go hand in hand.

    According to him, the collaboration with SERVICOM will strengthen feedback mechanisms, ensure that enrollees are aware of their rights, and make it easier for them to report and resolve complaints at healthcare facilities.

    Explaining that NHIA will deploy an Enrollee Charter, complete with QR codes to hospitals nationwide to guide users on service standards and complaint channels, Dr. Ohiri stressed, “When people go to a facility, if there are complaints, we want to hear them and resolve them.

    “We’ve already managed and resolved about 90 percent of over 2,000 complaints received in the past year.

    “Silence gives the impression that everything is fine when it’s not. Nigerians deserve to be heard, and we will make sure they are heard.”

    He, however, affirmed that NHIA’s enforcement unit would continue to investigate complaints, impose sanctions where necessary, and reward facilities that deliver quality services.

    “Feedback should not only be about punishment; it should also recognize excellence. Those who perform well deserve encouragement, just as those who fail to meet standards must be held accountable,” he said.

    Ohiri added that the SERVICOM partnership would also involve training frontline health workers to improve empathy and responsiveness at the point of service.

    “When people are sick, they are at their most vulnerable. That’s when they need compassion and dignity. Working with SERVICOM helps us build that culture,” he said.

    Reacting, the acting National Coordinator of SERVICOM, Anthony Oshin, commended NHIA for initiating the collaboration and reaffirmed the agency’s commitment to ensuring that public institutions uphold the highest standards of service delivery.

    “The partnership we are entering into today will be a lasting one. It will help us achieve greater heights in promoting excellence and ensure that Nigerians enjoy the quality of care they deserve,” Oshin said.

    He emphasized that SERVICOM’s role would be to strengthen feedback culture, monitor service delivery, and support NHIA in building a system that puts citizens first.

    “When patients visit hospitals, they should know what services to expect and have a voice when things go wrong. Our job is to ensure that complaints lead to corrections, and that quality service becomes the norm, not the exception,” he said.

    Similarly, the Statistician-General of the Federation, Prince Adeyemi Adeniran, described the partnership as a timely step toward integrating health data into national planning and ensuring evidence-based decision-making.

    He said the collaboration would help measure the impact of health insurance on poverty reduction, equity, and access to care, while both agencies will jointly produce research and surveys to track the sector’s role in improving health outcomes and economic growth.

    He also announced that NHIA will join the Integrated System of Administrative Statistics (ISAS), a platform that enables real-time data exchange across more than 15 ministries, departments, and agencies for national planning.

  • Olusola listed among World’s top two percent researchers, Bioclinix celebrates feat

    Olusola listed among World’s top two percent researchers, Bioclinix celebrates feat

    Bioclinix Medical Diagnostics Centre has congratulated its Advisor on Molecular Diagnostics, Dr. Elekofehinti Olusola, for being named among the top two percent of researchers globally, a recognition that highlights his outstanding contributions to science, innovation, and biomedical research.

    Olusola, an Associate Professor of Biochemistry, Federal University of Technology, Akure is widely respected for his pioneering work in bioinformatics, molecular biology, and biomedical drug design and development. 

    His research has advanced global understanding in the fields of computational biology, drug discovery, and molecular diagnostics.

    The recognition, compiled from global citation metrics, places Dr. Olusola among a distinguished group of scholars whose research has had significant impact worldwide.

    Speaking on the milestone, Dr. Isaac Olatunde, CEO of Bioclinix Medical Diagnostics Centre, described the recognition as both an inspiration and a validation of Bioclinix’s commitment to excellence in diagnostics.

    “We are proud to have Dr. Olusola as part of the Bioclinix team. His expertise in bioinformatics and molecular diagnostics is invaluable to our vision of advancing healthcare delivery in Nigeria. This global recognition shows that our advisor is not just shaping science locally, but contributing meaningfully to the global body of knowledge.”

    Dr. Olusola’s role at Bioclinix as Advisor on Molecular Diagnostics is to guide the Centre in developing cutting-edge diagnostic services, build research collaborations, and mentor the next generation of scientists.

    With this recognition, Bioclinix believes that Nigeria’s diagnostic and biomedical research sector can continue to compete on the global stage, drawing strength from local expertise with international impact.

  • WHO raises alarm as e-cigarettes trigger new nicotine crisis

    WHO raises alarm as e-cigarettes trigger new nicotine crisis

    Despite a two-decade global decline in traditional tobacco use, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has sounded the alarm over a new surge in nicotine addiction fueled by e-cigarettes and other emerging tobacco products, particularly among young people.

    According to a new WHO global report, the number of tobacco users worldwide has dropped from 1.38 billion in 2000 to 1.2 billion in 2024 — a 27 percent reduction. However, one in every five adults across the globe remains addicted to nicotine.

    More concerning, the report revealed that over 100 million people now use e-cigarettes, including about 15 million adolescents aged 13 to 15, who are on average nine times more likely to vape than adults.

    WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus described the trend as a “fightback” by the tobacco industry, accusing it of using sophisticated marketing strategies and sleek new nicotine products — such as e-cigarettes, heated tobacco, and nicotine pouches — to hook the next generation of users.

     “Millions are quitting thanks to tobacco control efforts,” he said. “But the tobacco industry is fighting back with new products aggressively targeting young people. Governments must act faster and stronger in implementing proven tobacco control policies.”

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    For the WHO Director of Health Determinants, Promotion and Prevention, Dr Etienne Krug, “E-cigarettes are fuelling a new wave of nicotine addiction. They are marketed as harm reduction but, in reality, are hooking kids on nicotine earlier and risk undermining decades of progress.”

    The report shows that women are leading the global quit revolution. Between 2010 and 2024, the number of female tobacco users fell sharply from 277 million to 206 million, reducing global prevalence among women from 11% to 6.6%. Women met the global 30% reduction target for 2025 five years early, in 2020.

    Men, however, lag behind. With nearly one billion still using tobacco, men account for over 80% of global users. Their prevalence dropped from 41.4% in 2010 to 32.5% in 2024, but at a pace too slow to meet global targets before 2031.

    WHO’s analysis presents a mixed picture of global tobacco use. South-East Asia recorded the most progress, with male tobacco use nearly halved, from 70 percent in 2000 to 37 percent in 2024, accounting for over half of the global decline.

    The Americas followed with a 36 percent relative reduction, bringing prevalence down to 14 percent.

    In contrast, Africa recorded the lowest prevalence globally at 9.5 percent, but population growth continues to push up the absolute number of users.

    Europe now stands out as the world’s highest-prevalence region, with 24.1 percent of adults still using tobacco. European women also have the highest female tobacco use globally, at 17.4 percent.

    The Eastern Mediterranean region reported a prevalence rate of 18 percent, with some countries showing rising trends, while the Western Pacific region showed the slowest progress. 22.9 percent of adults still use tobacco, with men in the region recording the world’s highest prevalence at 43.3 percent.

    WHO is calling for urgent action from governments to step up the fight against tobacco and nicotine products. The global health organisation recommends countries adopt and enforce the MPOWER package, a set of proven tobacco control measures under the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC).

    Key actions include raising tobacco taxes, banning advertising and sponsorships, closing regulatory loopholes for emerging products like e-cigarettes, and expanding cessation services to help millions quit.

    “Nearly 20% of adults still use tobacco and nicotine products. We cannot let up now,” warned Dr Jeremy Farrar, WHO Assistant Director-General for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. “The world has made gains, but stronger, faster action is the only way to beat the tobacco epidemic.”

    The WHO’s warning underscores a troubling paradox: while traditional tobacco smoking is declining, the nicotine industry is reinventing addiction through modern technology and youth-focused marketing.

    Without stronger regulations and renewed political will, experts warn, a new generation could be trapped in the cycle of nicotine dependence just as the world was beginning to win the fight against it.

  • UBTH CMD warns internship applicants against paying for placement

    UBTH CMD warns internship applicants against paying for placement

    The Chief Medical Director of the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), Prof. Idia Ize-Iyamu, has warned candidates seeking internship placements at the institution to desist from paying anyone for assistance, stressing that the process is entirely free.

    Prof. Ize-Iyamu gave the warning while addressing about 1,500 candidates attending the internship interview exercise at the University of Benin CBT centres.

    She assured the candidates of fairness and transparency in the selection process, urging them to focus on excellence as the only criterion for securing placement in the hospital.

    According to her, only candidates who perform exceptionally well during the interview would be shortlisted for selection and placement.

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    Prof. Ize-Iyamu further cautioned against any form of malpractice or backdoor dealings, emphasizing that “there is no favoritism or special list for candidates.”

    “This interview is to ensure that only the best is shortlisted. Connections will not be used. Do not give anyone money to help you secure placement . 

    “We have observers from the Federal Ministry of Health and the Federal Character Commission both from Benin and Abuja. We have an official from the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation to monitor the exercise. Do your best, and I wish you good luck.”Ize-Iyamu said.

    Representative of the Federal Ministry of Health, Kayode Oke, lauded the hospital for the hitch free exercise. 

    Edo State Director Federal Character Commission (FCC) , Barr. Simon Ehigie, said the exercise was in line with approved guidelines and in compliance with the Federal Character Principle.

    He noted that candidates seeking placement were drawn from across all the 36 states of the federation, stressing that ” the FCC would not sacrifice merit on the alter of balancing.” 

  • Empowering Girls: AHF Nigeria commemorates international day of the girl

    Empowering Girls: AHF Nigeria commemorates international day of the girl

    In commemoration of this year’s International Day of the Girl (IDG), a non-governmental organisation, AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) Nigeria is set to host an educational and empowerment event at Community Commercial Secondary School, Ikot Oku, Ubo, Offort, Uyo.

    International Day of the Girl, observed annually on October 11, is a time to celebrate girls’ accomplishments, amplify their voices, and advocate for policies that protect their health and futures.

    The event scheduled to hold on October 10th, is aimed at helping to protect girls from HIV, honor their achievements, and reinforce the urgent need to expand opportunities for them to thrive and stay healthy.

    A statement by AHF said: “Globally, adolescent girls and young women face a disproportionate HIV burden. AHF calls for greater investment in HIV/STI prevention, testing, and treatment programs and supportive policies that expand access to healthcare, including sexual and reproductive health services, while addressing period poverty, promoting comprehensive sexuality education, and tackling the drivers of health inequality, such as gender-based violence and child marriage.

    “AHF Nigeria’s IDG event will include menstrual health management education, leadership empowerment talks, presentations by participating schools and out-of-school girls on their ideas of what girls deserves, while we shall honor outstanding ideas with gifts as we also distribute free sanitary pads (both reusable and disposable) and link adolescent young girls to mentoring opportunities in Akwa Ibom state.

    “AHF Nigeria is being joined by her CSO partners in the state, including the Civil Society for HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (CISHAN), Center for Clinical Care and Clinical Research in Nigeria (CCCRN), Excellence Community Education Welfare Scheme (ECEWS), as we expect the State AIDS and STIs Control Program (SACP) to also grace the occasion, while the Akwa Ibom state Hon. Commissioner for Women Affairs, Hon. Inibehe Silas shall be leading other government officials to the commemoration.

    “At AHF Nigeria, we are particularly concerned about the challenges that young adolescent girls are faced with – lack of access to education, poor menstrual health management, gender-based violence and a lack of access to comprehensive sexual and reproductive health (SRHR) services, which puts many young girls at risk” said Dr. Echey Ijezie, AHF Nigeria Country Program Director (CPD).

    “Despite progress, the numbers remain alarming. Every week, 4,000 young women aged 15–24 become newly infected with HIV, with more than 3,300 of those cases in sub-Saharan Africa.

    “In 2023, 1.9 million adolescent girls and young women were living with HIV, compared to 1.2 million boys and young men of the same age. Education barriers are also severe, with 133 million girls worldwide out of school, cutting off vital pathways to future independence and healthy lives.

     “Through its Girls Act program, AHF empowers girls and young women in nearly 40 countries with the knowledge, support, and resources to remain free from HIV and other STIs, adhere to treatment for girls living with HIV, stay in school, and avoid unplanned pregnancies. Learn more at GirlsAct.org.”

  • ACPN declares October as Pharmacy Rx emblem month

    ACPN declares October as Pharmacy Rx emblem month

    The Association of Community Pharmacists of Nigeria (ACPN) has declared October as Pharmacy Rx emblem month to promote public awareness of the role of community pharmacies in healthcare delivery across the country.

    The declaration was made by the national chairman of ACPN, Pharm. Ezeh Ambrose Igwekamma, during a press conference held at the association’s national secretariat on October 4, 2025.

    Pharm. Ezeh described the initiative as a major milestone in the advancement of pharmaceutical practice in Nigeria.

    “It gives me great honor and joy to formally declare this month as Pharmacy Rx Emblem Month,” he said. “This special designation is not just symbolic but a powerful statement that reaffirms the central role of community pharmacy in safeguarding the health and well-being of our people.”

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    He explained that the Rx emblem—the universal symbol of trust, professionalism, and healing—represents the integrity and credibility of community pharmacists who provide genuine medicines and expert care.

    “By dedicating this month to the Rx emblem, we are showcasing our community pharmacy premises as unique sanctuaries where patients can confidently access authentic medicines, professional pharmaceutical care, and comprehensive healthcare services,” he added.

    Pharm. Ezeh emphasized that community pharmacies serve as vital health hubs within neighborhoods, providing more than just prescription dispensing.

    “In an era where counterfeit and substandard medicines threaten public safety, the Rx emblem stands as a beacon of assurance and authenticity, guiding patients to where quality and professionalism are guaranteed,” he noted.

    He outlined the objectives of the month-long campaign to include promoting public awareness that pharmacies bearing the Rx emblem are trusted centers of excellence in healthcare delivery, as well as reinforcing the bond between pharmacists and the communities they serve.

    Showcasing the wide range of services offered by community pharmacies, such as patient counseling, chronic disease management, preventive care, and wellness support.

    Pharm. Ezeh called on Nigerians to recognize the strategic position of community pharmacies as the most accessible healthcare facilities for millions seeking medical attention.

    “Let us use this month to boldly tell our story, that community pharmacy remains the most accessible and trusted healthcare facility,” he said.

    In his closing remarks, he urged government authorities, healthcare stakeholders, and the general public to support community pharmacists in their mission to deliver quality healthcare, protect lives, and build healthier communities.

    “Together, let us make the Rx emblem shine as a trusted guide to safe medicines, professional care, and healthier living,” he concluded.

    The ACPN reaffirmed its commitment to empowering community pharmacists and strengthening the delivery of quality pharmaceutical care across Nigeria.

  • Postpartum depression: What every husband should know

    Postpartum depression: What every husband should know

    Bringing a baby into the world is beautiful, but let’s be honest, it can also be overwhelming. Sleepless nights, new routines, and the pressure to “get it right” can take a toll on both parents. What many people don’t talk about enough is postpartum depression (PPD), and the truth is: your wife might not just be “tired.” She might be struggling with something deeper.

    As a husband, knowing what to look out for, and how to show up, can make all the difference.

    What Is postpartum depression?

    Postpartum depression is more than mood swings or the so-called “baby blues.” It’s a serious condition that can affect how your wife feels, thinks, and bonds with the baby. It usually shows up within the first few weeks after delivery, but sometimes it comes months later.

    Signs to watch out for:

    1. Persistent sadness or hopelessness
    2. Irritability or unexplained anger
    3. Loss of interest in things she used to enjoy
    4. Trouble bonding with the baby
    5. Extreme fatigue or changes in sleep and appetite
    6. Thoughts of guilt, worthlessness, or being a “bad mother”

    Why husbands matter

    Here’s the part many men miss: you play a central role in her healing. Your support, patience, and understanding can ease her load more than you realize.

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    How you can help

    1. Listen Without Judging: Sometimes, she just wants to talk. You don’t need to fix everything, just be present.
    2. Step In at Home: Diaper duty, late-night feeding, helping with chores, these small acts are big gestures. They show her she’s not alone.
    3. Encourage Rest; Gently insist she takes breaks, naps, or even short walks. Rest is fuel.
    4. Normalise seeking help: Therapy or professional care isn’t a weakness. Encourage her to talk to a doctor if symptoms persist
    5. Take Care of Yourself Too

    Supporting her is easier if you’re also physically and mentally okay. Don’t neglect your own health.

    The Nigerian reality

    In many Nigerian homes, conversations about mental health are still whispered. Cultural expectations often tell women to “endure” or “pray it away.” While faith and prayer are important, they don’t replace emotional care. As her husband, you can break that silence and lead with compassion.

    Final Note

    Postpartum depression doesn’t mean your wife is weak or failing. It means she’s human. And your role isn’t just to provide? it’s to partner. If you step in with empathy and patience, you create the space for her healing, for your baby’s growth, and for your family’s peace.

  • Newdigit powers Nigerian healthcare with clean energy

    Newdigit powers Nigerian healthcare with clean energy

    Newdigit says it is revolutionising healthcare in Nigeria by providing hospitals with reliable electricity and medical-grade oxygen through an innovative clean energy system.

    Supported by the initial round of the Powering Healthcare Innovation Fund, this project enhances healthcare delivery with a modular solution powered by water and solar energy.

    In a statement, Derick Nwasor, co-founder and CEO of Newdigit, says the organisation designs and manufactures advanced Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) fuel cells, electrolyzers, and related components, supporting healthcare and agriculture for both small and large-scale applications.

    According to Nwasor, their innovation, the “Just Add Water” system, is specifically designed for the healthcare sector and combines solar power with PEM technology to produce electricity, oxygen, and clean water, all essential resources for healthcare facilities.

    “Many hospitals in Nigeria experience unstable grid electricity, with 8-10 hours of daily power outages, forcing them to rely on polluting diesel generators for backup. With Just Add Water, hospitals can power critical equipment, generate life-saving oxygen on-site, and even recover clean water, leading to better healthcare services.” he said.

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    Nwasor explained that the system integrates three key components: a PEM Electrolyzer, which separates water into hydrogen and oxygen; a PEM fuel cell, which converts hydrogen into reliable electricity; and a solar PV array, which powers the entire process using renewable energy.

    Together, these components provide hospitals with 12-15 kW of continuous, clean power, 10-40 liters of medical-grade oxygen per day, and a consistent supply of clean water as a byproduct. The system also features a plug-and-play design for quick installation and easy expansion.

    He noted that the Newdigit’s Just Add Water systems are being installed in three hospitals across Lagos, Nigeria, serving a combined patient population of over 24,000 people annually.
    Nwasor stressed that by lessening the dependence on unreliable grids and expensive diesel generators, the systems will prevent over 150 tonnes of CO₂ emissions each year and produce approximately 274 MWh of clean electricity in their first year of operation.

    To ensure long-term viability and local expertise, Nwasor said Newdigit is training hospital staff and local technicians to operate and maintain the systems.

    This practical training ensures facilities can maximize uptime and independently manage their clean energy and oxygen supply.

    “We’ve started in Lagos, but our goal by 2030 is to reach at least 1,000 hospitals across Nigeria,” said Joy Princess, co-founder and COO of Newdigit. “We aim to improve the lives of millions of patients every year.”

    Newdigit Technologies’ project was funded by the Powering Healthcare Innovation Fund, which Sustainable Energy for All (SEforALL) launched in 2024 with UK aid from the UK government through the Transforming Energy Access (TEA) initiative. This fund supports innovative solutions for healthcare electrification.

    Newdigit Technologies was one of three grantees chosen from 84 applicants in the first round, receiving a USD 50,000 grant to implement their clean energy and oxygen generation solution. The project began in September 2024 and is expected to finish this month.

    Charlie Knight, Senior Energy Officer at SEforALL, stated that Newdigit’s approach is revolutionary for creating resilient health systems in Africa. Knight highlighted how combining renewable energy and innovation can provide reliable electricity, oxygen, and water using clean technologies.

  • The quiet tech upgrade helping Africa stay polio-free

    The quiet tech upgrade helping Africa stay polio-free

    When people think about the fight against polio, they picture vaccination teams crossing rivers to reach remote villages or laboratories racing to confirm a suspected case. What they rarely picture is the reporting infrastructure that proves those efforts are working.

    Yet in the WHO African Region, home to 46 countries and more than 1.2 billion people, the ability to document, review, and validate polio programme performance has become a frontline requirement. Since global eradication efforts began in 1988, polio cases have fallen by over 99 percent, but the job is not finished. In just the past two years, hundreds of circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus (cVDPV) cases have been reported across Africa, demanding faster detection, tighter surveillance, and stronger accountability.

    That pressure has turned reporting systems into mission-critical infrastructure.

    In response, WHO Africa quietly replaced decades of email-based reporting with a digital platform now handling more than 165 annual polio programme reports across 47 countries compressing reporting cycles from weeks into days and giving regional teams near-real-time visibility into programme performance. The system is known as the Electronic Annual Reporting Tool (EAUR).

    After Victory Comes Vigilance

    Africa’s certification as free of wild poliovirus in 2020 was a historic moment. But eradication did not mean the programme could slow down. Vaccine-derived poliovirus outbreaks which occur when immunization coverage drops and weakened vaccine strains circulate have become the primary threat. For children under five, the risk remains the same: paralysis, lifelong disability, or death.

    Stopping those outbreaks depends on strong surveillance systems  and on the ability to continuously assess and improve those systems. Annual programme reports are not just paperwork; they are accountability tools that inform outbreak preparedness, funding decisions, and certification oversight.

    Until recently, however, the reporting process itself was one of the slowest parts of the system.

    The Hidden Bottleneck

    Before EAUR, annual polio programme reporting relied almost entirely on Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, and email exchanges. Countries submitted files, reviewers sent comments back as attachments, and multiple versions of the same report circulated at once.

    According to WHO AFRO’s internal review, this process typically took three to six weeks from submission to approval. Feedback loops were fragmented, version control was inconsistent, and retrieving past reports often meant digging through inboxes. In a programme that must react quickly to new outbreak signals, that lag reduced regional visibility at a critical time.

    As polio shifted from emergency response to sustained vigilance, those delays became increasingly risky. Surveillance quality, outbreak preparedness, and immunization coverage must now be assessed continuously not months after the fact.

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    Turning Reporting Into a Workflow

    EAUR transformed that process into a structured digital workflow. Countries now submit reports through a secure web platform, complete standardized sections online, and upload supporting evidence directly. WHO AFRO reviewers access submissions instantly, leave comments within the system, and track revisions through automated version control. Once approved, reports are locked and converted into official PDFs with a single click.

    What once existed as a loose chain of email attachments is now a transparent, traceable reporting system.

    Since rollout, 46 reports have already reached full approval status, 31 more have completed regional review, and all submissions are archived in a centralized repository accessible across the region. Instead of scattered documents, WHO AFRO now has a living digital record of programme performance.

    The platform was designed and developed by David Oviaesu of WHO AFRO’s Data and Information Management Unit, who translated years of operational reporting bottlenecks into a scalable digital platform. Under his technical leadership, EAUR moved from concept to continent-wide adoption in months, supporting 165 real programme reports, onboarding all 46 Member States, and maintaining 99.8 percent system uptime. By treating reporting as infrastructure rather than paperwork, he helped turn a chronic administrative bottleneck into a real-time governance tool for polio eradication.

    Faster Cycles, Fewer Errors

    The operational gains have been dramatic.

    Since EAUR’s rollout, report turnaround times have dropped from 3–6 weeks to just 3–5 days  an 85 percent reduction. Submission accuracy has increased from roughly 70 percent to 97 percent, thanks to built-in validation rules that catch inconsistencies early. Duplicate versions have been eliminated, replaced by a single authoritative submission. Reviewer feedback cycles have shortened from up to ten days to less than two. And for the first time, all reports are centrally accessible across the region.

    These improvements do more than save time. They shorten the distance between national reporting and regional decision-making, allowing faster identification of risks and gaps.

    Built as Infrastructure, Not a Pilot

    EAUR was engineered as long-term digital infrastructure, not a short-term fix. Built on a modern web framework with a secure database backend, it includes role-based access controls, automated version tracking, multilingual interfaces, and cloud-ready deployment. It was designed to perform reliably even in low-bandwidth environments, maintaining 99.8 percent uptime during early operations.

    That reliability is crucial in a region where digital connectivity varies widely but reporting responsibilities remain constant.

    Continental Adoption

    Digital health tools often struggle to scale beyond pilot projects. EAUR moved quickly. Within months of launch, all 46 WHO AFRO Member States were onboarded, and hundreds of annual reports now move through the platform each cycle. Pilot evaluations showed strong acceptance, with most users reporting that the platform made reporting clearer, faster, and easier.

    Structured training and focal-point support helped ensure adoption across both English- and French-speaking countries, turning a technical transition into a workflow improvement.

    Why This Matters

    Polio eradication today depends less on emergency campaigns and more on sustained system performance. Surveillance quality, outbreak readiness, and immunization coverage must be continuously monitored and documented. Certification bodies and global partners rely on trustworthy data to verify that progress is being maintained.

    By making reporting faster, more accurate, and more transparent, EAUR strengthens that trust. It improves accountability, comparability, and institutional memory the governance pillars needed to keep Africa polio-free.

    And its influence is spreading. EAUR’s architecture is already being adapted for other WHO AFRO digital platforms, positioning it as a blueprint for multi-country health reporting systems beyond polio.

    The Infrastructure You Never See

    Public health victories are often measured in lives saved and outbreaks prevented. Rarely do we talk about the systems that make those achievements credible.

    EAUR is one of those systems the quiet digital backbone that ensures Africa’s polio story is not only a success in the field, but a success in data, governance, and accountability.

    In the long tail of the polio endgame, that invisible infrastructure may prove to be one of the most important tools of all.

  • Lymphoma: far from the ‘belu belu’ razor sharp curved knife

    Lymphoma: far from the ‘belu belu’ razor sharp curved knife

    Every September 15, reminds me of the neighbourhood surgeon of the 1950s and 1960s and his dangerous but seemingly unblemished surgical prowess. Mothers and fathers invited him to remove enlarged lymph nodes from the necks and armpits of their children and drooping tonsils from their mouths. The Yorubas call a swollen or drooping tonsil “BELU BELU” . They believed contents of the swellings were poisnous enough to kill anyone who swallowed them if the “belu belu” bursts. So, they invited home any mallam who specialised in the art of surgical removal of an infected tonsil. I witnessed some of these surgeries between the ages of nine and 10, but escaped them. Often, the local surgeons were malams from the north of Nigeria. They came in with unsterilised curved, sharp knives and other implements. The children who were to be operated upon were tricked indoor and forced down by about three hefty men. One sat behind him or her, and, with hefty muscular arms, arrested the child and tightly bound the young one’s body to his own. Another man steadied the head which was, also, under arrest. Finally, the third man sat on the child’s legs to ensure they did not move during the operation. The man who had the child’s head manipulated the cheeks to force the mouth open. Before these procedures, the mother and other females were forced out of the room. Outside, the women paraded the environment, praying or crying. The children who saw their sibling or playmate abducted and knew what was going on fled to safety. The native surgeon pressed down the tongue of the child with a wooden or bamboo appliance, and probed the distended inflamed tonsil or a drooping one with his knife to the root, on the plate of the upper jaw. He strikes. And down comes the infected organ, which is a member of the immune system of the body. Blood erupts. The surgeon’s aids force the patient’s head down and warns him to not swallow the blood or the excised tissue. He spits all out. He is given plenty of water to rinse his mouth and rid himself of remnants of the dismembered parts of his body. His mother is summoned into the “theatre” which often times was the family’s single room tenancy. Her job was to immediately provide hot peppered soup she had been advised to keep on stand by. The patient will snack on it all day or for several hours until the post surgical bleeding was arrested!

    Procedures for removing enlarged lymph nodes in the neck and armpit were similar except that the patient’s lot was not hot peppered soup plastered on open knife wound. I do not know the mechanism for stopping bleeding in these surgeries, but they were equally dangerous procedures in which blood vessels and muscles were often exposed. I do not recall now if the patients fell ill afterwards from infections or anyone passed as a consequence.

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    My childhood memories were lit up by announcements that  September 15, 2025 was yet another global Lymphoma Day.

    Lymphoma is what medicine calls a dangerous disease which may cause some of this swellings in the neck, armpits and groin which the crude medicine men of those days treated according to their limited understanding of the construction of the body and of how it works. Their “patients” probably survived because their conditions were not full blown Lymphoma. I told Udeme Edet James that she was a lucky girl in the 1990s when her father, a palm wine tapper and Brewer of local gin, ogogoro used razor blade incisions on growths or swellings in her armpits and swellings below the ear lobe to aspirate through finger pressure whatever pus and fluid they haboured. She is from Ekwere Itam, near Uyo, Akwa Ibom State. She grew up in a culture in which children and adults alike often developed swellings around the neck which, today, are known as MUMPmumps. Pharmaceutical drugs prescribed by doctors often did not help the sufferers much. They recovered more, as I witnessed a case weeks ago, on a therapy of White Cocoyam meal at a special ceremony beside a plantain plant.

    Lymphoma

    As it is known today, lymphoma is a cancer in the Lymphatic System, a part of the Immune System. That is why surviving it may be difficult because it weakens the immune system which is meant to destroy it. It is like the bombardment of a military defence headquarters!

    To make a challenged person appreciate what is going on, I often play around the question: What is the colour of blood? I guess you too would say it is “RED”. Absolutely, the colour of blood may not be RED. It only appears so because red blood cells are plentiful in what we call blood and , therefore, give it its red colour. What gives the red blood cell its red colour is haemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying pigment of red blood cells.

    Blood, or the River of life as many physicians call it, is the liquid transport system in which are to be found such components as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelet cells, nutrients, hormones, oxygen, antibodies and PLASMA, the liquid portion of blood. Blood circulates in blood vessels such as arteries, capillaries, veins and organs.

    Lymphatic System

    Side by side with the blood circulatory system is the Lymphatic Circulatory System. This is leading to the realm of theLYMPH, which circulates in the LYMPHATIC system where LYMPHOMA takes place. Many persons know of blood vessels but not of lymphatic vessels.

    PLASMA, a pale yellow or straw coloured liquid in the blood circulation which accounts for about 55 per cent of the total volume, separates from the blood and leaks out of the vessels. It leaks into the spaces around the 100 trillion or so cells known as the INTERSTITIAL SPACE, forming the interstitial fluid. Plasma is about 92 per cent water and comprises proteins such as albumin, globulins, fibrinogen, Hormones, nutrients (such as proteins, glucose and lipids). It transports waste products as well. There are as well electrolytes such as potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium etc. Gases such as oxygen , carbon dioxide and nitrogen are in the mix, too. These nutrients diffuse into the cells through various mechanisms. Toxins and wastes from the cells also diffuse from them into the interstitial fluid outside.

    The interstitial fluid carries away the wastes and toxins into special cells, the LYMPHATIC CAPILLARIES which take them into primary lymphatic vessels called AFFERENT. The drained waste loaded interstitial fluid is now known as THE LYMPH. The AFFERENT drains into larger lymphatic vessels. In this system are LYMPH NODES which filter the lymph of wastes and toxins, causing triggers of immune responses when the toxin load is overwhelming.

    Lymphatic vessels pass filtered lymph to lymphatic ducts from where it enters the blood circulation through certain veins. The returning fluid may be described as BLOOD PLASMA which has completed its cycle or journey which is to take nutrients to the cells, remove their wastes and toxins for removal by the lymph nodes in the lymphatic system, thereby supporting fluid balance, living process, immune function and, if we like, homeostasis.

    Lymph Nodes

    They are among our STOP OVERS in the exploration of LYMPHOMA or cancer of the lymphatic system. There are about 500 to 800 lymph nodes in the body of an average person. They are in the head and neck, behind the ear, in front of the ear, arms, armpits (40-49 nodes), above the elbow joints, chest , abdomen, groin , behind the knee . Where are they not present in the masterpiece construction of the human body, each group servicing a specific area of the body?

    The lymph nodes often mentioned in lymphoma are those in the neck , armpits and groin. As a child, I often had swellings in the groin which the Yorubas call PETELE(m:m:m). It often came with bad, open infections in the lower limbs, was painful and caused restricted mobility, but was easily resolved with warm or hot water presses. Those in the armpits cause women some extra worry because the armpit is connected to a breast and terminal breast cancers sometimes present large lymph node swelling there.

    In the neck, the swellings were surgically defused through extraction by crude surgeons of the 1960s and perhaps 1970s as well. They did not realise they were thus removing road blocks against poison overload. Many doctors believe a cancer in this region, known as non Hodgkin’s LYMPHOMA, is a death sentence. However, herbal medicines sometimes prove them wrong. TINA ADUGBE can bear testimony of the case of an Editor who survived it. A director-general in Lagos State who later became provost at the College of Education at Ijanikin fared well on Amazon A-F until the medication became scarce. It was a proprietary blend targeted at bacteria and fungi while AMAZON A-V went straight for viruses. On his hospital clinic days, the doctors wondered if a mistake was made about his diagnosis. Sadly, he passed after the resurgence, shortly after a pilgrimage. Mrs. Folake Sanusi and I reminisced recently about the younger brother of one of her close friends, a woman from the Southeast of Nigeria who is a teacher in Lagos. The young man was dying in Enugu from chemotherapy and other pharmaceutical drugs when her sister contacted Mrs. Sanusi. Amazon A-F, guakatonga and Bell’s supreme immune booster were among the several herbal recipes sent to him. He came alive, filled with energy enough to continue his treatment in Lagos. His problem was that he had no money. His half siblings sister, a conventional medical consultant in England, was picking his hospital bills while his father was taking care of his wife and four children. His sister in Lagos could do only very little. His doctor sister insisted on chemotherapy. She and I spoke on the telephone. She agreed the herbs could help him from the descriptions of the chemistry of their actions. Nevertheless, she insisted on chemotherapy, if she would continue to fund his protocols. He obliged her. He died…

    Lymphoma Types, Presentations

    A hallmark of lymphoma is that LYMPHOCYTES, a group of soldiers in the immune system, become uncontrollably cancerous.

    LYMPHOCYTES are found in different parts of the body, including the lymphatic vessels, blood stream, lymph nodes, adenoids, tonsils and spleen, for example. We may speak of two types of lymphoma… HODGKINS LYMPHOMA and NON-HODGKINS LYMPHOMA. Both may affect LYMPHOCYTES and lymphoid immobile lymph tissues such as lymph nodes, tonsils, adenoids and spleen. Non Hodgkin’s is differentiated in terms of the systemic manner by which it spreads.

    Some of the presentations of both include swollen lymph nodes, fatigue, fever, itching, weight loss, coughing and chest pain, loss of appetite, abdominal swelling and pain, shortness of breath, inexplicable weight loss. However, not all swellings of lymphoid tissue are due to lymphoma. Other causes may be irritation, infection, inflammation and immune response. My generation of children whose swollen lymph nodes were invaded by “crude” surgeons using unsterilized knives may have survived infections and death largely because the swellings were not lymphoma, that is not cancerous and the tormented tissues were deadened with hot spices.

    Lymphoma in Nigeria

    According to the GLOBAL BURDEN OF DISEASES, a comprehensive research effort which examines 459 health outcomes and their risk factors, 5,194 cases of non Hodgkin’s LYMPHOMA hit Nigeria in 2022. The rate could have been higher but for under reporting of cases. This was about 4.1 percent of all cancer cases which numbered 127,763. The others were breast cancer 32,278 cases; prostate cancer 18,019 cases. Children are more susceptible, especially to burkitt lymphoma, which affects B lymphocyte cells and grow rapidly. The symptom may include swollen lymph nodes, weight loss, abdominal pain, swelling, fatigue and fever, among others. Survival rate is poor, largely because of inaccessibility to medical care and treatment abandonment which, in Kano for example, a study said could be as high as 85 percent. In respect of Non Hodgkin’s LYMPHOMA(NHL), survival rate may be as high as 11 years, according to another study. Even then, disease groups within this ambit exhibit different time lines.

    Herbal Remedies

    The starting point is to remember that LYMPHOMA is a cancer and to treat it as such. In such a matter, I always remember DR MAX GERSON who taught us that tumours such as uterine fibroids and cancers develop when the cells lose potassium and are infiltrated by sodium. This alters their existence from oxidative (oxygen dependent) life to fermentative (non oxygen dependent) metabolism. Out of touch with the body’s signalling systems, tumours and cancers defy control and grow rapidly. They poison surrounding cells and incite them into a possible death-causing rebellion. Thus, Dr. Gerson suggested massive dietary infusion of potassium into the body through the consumption of fruit and vegetables juices which are potassium rich. He came by this idea when he used them, on the advice of a medical lay person, to cure his terrible migraines which knocked him out of work for about two weeks in one month. He later prescribed them to cure some cases of cancer and other debilitating diseases. (Please check his work online under Dr. Max Gerson or the Gerson Institute).

    Dr. Gerson also advocated organic coffee enemas. The coffee must be organic, please. It detoxifies the liver and the colon. A liver and colon may breed toxins which consume metabolites such as potassium which the body recalls from the cells to neutralise ACIDOSIS in the bloodstream. Acidosis causes de-oxygenation, a cause of cancer, and irritation, a cause of INFLAMMATION, which is present in cancers.

    Dr. Gerson also improved the nutrition of his patients to neutralise free radicals with anti oxidants and to boost immune function.

    Modern herbal medicine therapies against cancer have built on foundations provided by physicians before and after Dr. Gerson. Thus, today, it is possible to speak about a SEVEN-STEP THERAPY. These are 1) detoxification 2) oxygenation 3)anti-oxidation 4) immunity boosting 5) energy boosting 6) anti- inflammation and 7) nutrition and healing.

    Certain herbs are specific for each of these therapies. I have mentioned Dr. Gerson’s ORGANIC COFFEE ENEMAS. The entire body requires DETOXIFICATION. Milk thistle is a super protector of the liver against toxins. Jerusalem artichoke, too is good. So are common club moss, dandelion root, cleavers, bitter cola and bitter leaf among several others. Carqueja clears out this organ. On the Nigerian market today, there are many proprietary medicines for DETOXIFICATION. Among them are EDIMAS DIFFENS, a 12 herb warehouse which kills bacteria, viruses, fungi etc always found in cancer tissues. There are also, several colon cleansers .

    As for oxygenation, I doubt if we still have OXYGEN TABLETS on the market. The HYPERBARIC OXYGEN CHAMBER may be trickling in. Green plants, in liquid, tablet or powder forms, provide OXYGEN molecules through their CHLOROPHYLL, as does a chlorophyll powder supplement itself.

    There are many antioxidants on the market, some of them specific in action, others multilateral. CoQ10 provides energy to cancer cells to not grow but to have the strength to commit suicide (apoptosis) by activating their P.53 gene, as Dr. Karl Folkers did in a landmark Finnish experiment which resolved about 30 hopeless terminal breast cancers. Vitamin C at about 6000mg daily in divided doses is an antioxidant which boosts production of white blood corpuscles.

    In the days of the SUPREME IMMUNE BOOSTER, it was a first choice supplement for this purpose. Upcoming now is REGENERATING DRINK, designed to activate STEM CELL production. These cells replace damaged, aging, dying or dead cells . It also combats inflammation.

    Among my favourites in the nutrition category are ANTI AGING 247, which is contra indicated for persons below 30 years of age, and DAILY BUILD. They come with more than 50 nutrients which the body requires everyday to keep itself in top form.

    Anti oxidants are everywhere in nature. The trouble is that many people are not aware of them. Banana peel for example is a richer source of potassium. Avocado pear is potassium dense. Unripe plantain are. Its peel, are similarly, potassium packed. Banana peel may be eaten raw with meals. Plantain peel may be cooked. ORANGE PEEL is a blood cleanser and anti microbial. STINGING NETTLE leaves and root are alterative, that is blood cleansing herbs. Burdock root, yellow dock are also worth trying. Sugar should be cut off or minimised as cancers feed and grow on it. The more alkaline the diet is the better are the chances of victory. Bitters help the liver and the kidneys. The Yorubas say OTA ENU NI ORE INU. Enemies of the mouth are friends of the organ. Any wonder my generation of children developed “dirty “ blood hemorrhoids and lymph node swellings and lymphoma. We ate too much sugar and carbohydrates as many children still do today, with some coming down with leukemia very early. The message of LYMPHOMA DAY is: report any growth early to your doctor or healthcare provider.