Tag: Doctors

  • Doctors on alert as Lassa fever kills one in Plateau

    Plateau State government has confirmed that Lassa fever has killed one.

    The state has placed medical experts on the alert to prevent its spread.

    Lassa fever has been noticed in five local governments; Jos North, Mangu, Langtang South, Pankshin and Shendam.

    Commissioner for Health Dr. Kuden Kamshak, who briefed reporters in Jos yesterday, said: “The state, with support from the World Health Organisation (WHO), is working to contain the spread of the virus.

    “The government has appointed Disease Surveillance and Notification Officers (DSNOs) in each of the 17 councils to monitor and manage the health challenge.

    “As you are aware, the Federal Ministry of Health has confirmed that the country has been experiencing Lassa fever in the last few weeks in some states, including Bauchi, Nasarawa, Niger, Taraba, Kano, Rivers, Edo and Oyo.

    “Lassa fever is a Zoonotic disease, which means human beings become infected through contacting infected animals. The host of the virus is rat and it sheds it through its urine and faeces.

    “Human beings can become infected by getting exposed to the urine and faeces of the carrier animal.

    “Person to person transmission occurs in crowded communities. The disease spreads fast in crowded environments, especially under poor sanitary conditions.

    “Health officers can be at risk if they don’t use barrier nursing and infection control practices.”

    He added: “Lassa fever is difficult to distinguish from other viral haemorrhagic fevers, such as the Ebola virus and other diseases that cause fever.

    “The symptom is usually gradual, starting from fever to general body weakness and malaise. After a few days headache, sore throat, chest pain, muscle pain, nausea, diarrhoea, abdominal pain and cough follow.

    “When it becomes severe, facial swelling, bleeding through mouth, nose, ear, anus and genitals occur.”

    The clinician urged people not to panic, adding that they should report to the nearest hospital.

    He advised people to clear their homes and surroundings of rats, maintain good sanitary habits and keep cats at home to keep off rats.

  • Alumni doctors give back to UNILAG

    The 2005 graduates of the College of Medicine University of Lagos (CMUL) have donated items, including training mannequins for medical students.

    They also organised career fair for the students worth N2.6 million.

    Speaking at their reunion dinner at the Four Points Sheraton Hotel, Victoria Island, Dr Omolabake Okunubi, a Medical Scientist with GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), said the alumni saw the need to give back to their alma mater having realised some of the gains of Medical practice after graduation.

    She said the idea of the reunion was to meet colleagues again after 10 years of graduation and exchange ideas on ways to move the nation’s health sector forward.

    Okunubi, who noted that about 400 students were trained at the fair, said: “One of the things we are doing is to organise a career fair for medical students in the College on prospects of medical practice which we were not privy to until we graduated from the College. Some of the students don’t know what next after graduation, so this informed the title of the career fair: ‘After Medical School, What Next?’”

    Dr Ini Usoro, an occupational physician with IBM, Lagos, said students must add value to their degrees while still in school.

    “Medical knowledge can be applied to any field. I want to advise those young ones coming behind us not to leave the College with the degree alone but with something extra such as the desire to make a difference wherever they find themselves.  They should strive to be solutions and create change in their environment,” he said.

  • Doctors’ quarters razed in Rivers hospital

    The doctors’ quarters at the Rivers State government-owned Braithwaite Memorial Specialist Hospital, near the Government House in Port Harcourt, the state capital, was razed yesterday.

    The affected doctors and their families were relocated to the government guest houses, following Governor Nyesom Wike’s directive during his visit to the hospital.

    It was learnt that the fire started at 3 p.m. from the top floor of the two-storey building and destroyed the floor.

    Wike, who joined fire fighters and sympathisers to put out the fire, directed that the occupants, including five doctors and the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Health, be relocated to the government guest houses.

    A panel of enquiry is to establish the  cause of the fire.

    Wike said: “I want to sympathise with the doctors affected by this fire. We thank God that no life was lost.

    “I have directed the Health commissioner to set up a panel of enquiry to find out what led to the fire. If it is as a result of negligence, those involved will be sanctioned. We must endeavour to protect government property.”

    Wike pledged that his administration would rebuild the quarters.

    The governor hailed the firemen from the state’s Fire Service, the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) and the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) for preventing the fire from spreading.

    He was accompanied by the Head of Service (HOS), Rufus Godwin and Health Commissioner Dr. Odagme Theophilus.

  • Seven-day ultimatum for Osun’s striking doctors

    The Osun State government has given striking medical doctors seven days to resume or be sacked.

    In a public service announcement on behalf of the government, the Permanent Secretary, Human Resources and Capacity Building,  Sunday Festus Olajide, said whoever failed to resume at the end of the ultimatum, which started last Friday, would be considered to have voluntarily resigned from the public service.

    The government berated the doctors for what it called their inconsideration.

    According to the announcement, despite series of appeals from the government to doctors of the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (Lautech) Teaching Hospital, Osogbo and other government health institutions, the striking doctors have remained adamant.

    The government lamented that the doctors have received their salaries in the last two months.

    Declaring the strike is illegal, the government said it did not follow due process, thereby breaching the professional Hippocratic Oath.

     

  • Varsity inducts 118 doctors

    To ensure it makes a huge contribution to the realisation of Nigeria’s Millennium Development Goal in the health sector by 2020, the Faculty of Medical Sciences, College of Medicine of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) inducted 118 young medical doctors into the health sector.

    Inducting the medical graduates before a capacity audience on the campus, the Registrar, Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN), Dr. Abdulmumini Ibrahim, urged them to practice within the limit of their competence and shun indulging in sharp practices in order to make quick money.

    Ibrahim warned the doctors not to be in a hurry to establish clinics or hospitals and never to tout or canvass for patients or be involved in fee splitting. He also added that those bad conducts are usually common temptations which young Nigerian doctors are faced with.

    He said: “As you take the physicians’ oath today and issued with your licences to practise, I implore you all to imbibe the culture of best practices and conducts throughout your practice to safeguard the lives of patients and maintain the integrity of our noble profession.”

    The Dean, Faculty of Medical Sciences of the University, Prof. Uche Nwagha told the large crowd that the young medical doctors of the 2015 class, had been equipped with one of the finest degrees in medicine available anywhere in the world as the faculty had the obligation to educate them in the various convoluted and sophisticated ways of modern medical training.

    Nwagha, who expressed deep regret on the sudden death of one their students recently, said throughout their period of study, lecturers in the faculty had worked untiringly to mentor a sense of mastery so that medicine might feel, in your hands, comprehensible, familiar and responsive.

    He continued: “Our teachers have transferred to you their appetite for medicine and research, and in the progression, they have persistently transformed the horizons in which you shall cruise into your life. They have armed you copiously with medical armaments and charging you to go into the world and begin to heal.”

    While praying for the young graduates to become world-class healers and great leaders in their chosen field, the Dean stated that, as they watched them from afar, they should never forget them but should remember to come back and sow a seed in the faculty of their Alma mater.

    Also speaking, the chairman of the occasion and traditional ruler of Amaofuo, in Imo State, Prof. Peter Ebigbo, expressed satisfaction with the rapid progress of the college of medicine since its inception, pointing out that the performance of the doctors produced by the medical school had given great joy to the founding fathers of the University of Nigeria.

    He also praised the ingenuity and personal commitment of the Provost, Prof. Ernest Onwuasigwe to move the college forward.

    The guest lecturer, Dr. Ejike Orji had called for better funding of the health sector and advised sick medical doctors to always seek the services of their colleagues for treatment.

    The Vice-Chancellor of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Prof. Chukwuma Ozumba, had revealed that three new institutes had been established within his one-year of administration while 230 research groups had been set up as part of aggressive measures to boost learning in the institution.

    Prof. Ozumba expressed joy that since his appointment as the Vice-Chancellor last year, UNN’s ranking had improved massively and was now only standing behind the University of Ibadan (UI), even as he vowed to move the school to number one within the shortest possible time.

    He also promised to complete the seven-storey building complex of the UNN medical school within his tenure, stressing that new staff had been injected into key areas to enhance learning.

    The Vice-Chancellor praised the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, Prof. Nwagha for his managerial ingenuity and leadership style; describing him as a pride of the College of Medicine of the University of Nigeria.

    The Provost, College of Medicine, Prof. Ernest Onwasigwe, former Dean Faculty of Dentistry, UNN, Dr. Linda Oge Okoye, Dr. Tunde Omotowo and doyen of Paediatric Medicine, Prof. Gilbert Adimora, were among personalities who attended the event.

     

  • Doctors present health plan to Ugwuanyi

    Doctors present health plan to Ugwuanyi

    A delegation of the Enugu State branch of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) has visited Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, presenting him with their blueprint for improved health of residents.

    The governor said his administration will ensure that the people of the state enjoy effective healthcare delivery services including working hand in hand with the doctors.

    While thanking the doctors for coming up with a clearly stated roadmap that will help improve the health sector in the state, Gov. Ugwuanyi assured the doctors that the state government will ensure the roadmap is put to use.

    He urged the doctors to remain dedicated in their duties as life savers, adding that their service contributes in no small measure to nation development.

    The chairman of NMA in the state, Dr. George Ugwu said that the roadmap was a product of intense consultancy services on how best to improve the health condition of people of the state.

    According to Ugwu, the roadmap features some factors hindering adequate healthcare delivery in the state and also how best to correct these factors.

    “For instance, the upgrade of some district hospitals to specialist hospitals will provide higher quality clinical services to our people, provide training grounds for interns and other health workers and employment for young consultants”, he noted.

    While reiterating the commitment of doctors in the state to ensure maximum healthcare delivery to the people, he said: “we are ready with with technical partners who can help to recruit appropriate health personnel and assist to ensure our colleagues are at work in their duty posts in all parts of Enugu State.

    He expressed their hopes and optimism that the roadmap will be put to great use by the state government as according to him, it will go a long way to bring about the improvement of health services in the state.

    Ugwu hailed the governor’s health programmes and policies.

    “Within the first 24hours of assumption of office as governor, Governor Ugwuanyi visited hospitals in the state. In a compassionate manner, you asked after the sick and the less privileged, in details and with deep concern,” he said.

    He therefore pointed out that this singular gesture by Ugwuanyi has “stimulated the deepest instincts in doctors in Enugu State who now yearn to work for you and work with you.”

    He further called on the governor to come to the aid of doctors in the state by providing them with some basic needs hindering their effective performance.

  • Medical council to review punishment for doctors

    Medical council to review punishment for doctors

    The Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) said yesterday that a review of the law governing the conduct of doctors had begun.

    The Registrar, Dr. Abdulmunin Ibrahim, said greater part of the work was concluded by the last board, which was dissolved by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The review, among others, is aimed at ensuring commensurate punishment for erring doctors.

    The present law stipulates between three to six months suspension for any doctor, who falls foul of medical ethics.

    Addressing reporters in Abuja, Ibrahim said the act setting up the council was obsolete and weak, as it could not mete out strong punishment to doctors found wanting in the discharge of their duties.

    He noted that the review became necessary, following the magnitude of cases of negligence against doctors, especially cases concerning life.

     

  • Blame health  tourism on doctors, says CMD

    Blame health tourism on doctors, says CMD

    The Chief Medical Director, University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, Prof. Temitope Alonge, has blamed medical tourism in Nigeria, which results in billions of Naira lost in capital flight yearly on doctors.

    Delivering a paper entitled: “The Nigerian Health Sector: Maladies and Remedies” at the inauguration of Tri-State Heart and Cardiovascular Centre, Babcock University Teaching Hospital, Ilisan-Remo, in Ogun State penultimate week, Alonge alleged that some Nigerian doctors and most dishonest businessmen connive with foreign agents to send patients abroad in order to make profits.

    He said: “Medical tourism is common on our lips. But medical tourism is not the fault of the tourist. The major problem in medical tourism is doctors in Nigeria and businessmen in Nigeria. The doctors in Nigeria tell their friends abroad, ‘we cannot do it in Nigeria so I am going to ship them over to you’.

    “The Indian government established a system in UCH that is called the Pan-African Network. And they wanted me to refer patients to India. And I told them not in your life will I do that. If I can’t manage a case in UCH, that will be part of one per cent that we cannot cover. Because we have more than enough manpower; what we need to do is to strengthen the resources.

    “I have colleagues in Lagos who do nothing but medical tourism. They are certificated as doctors but what they do is to ship patients abroad. This is because, for every sixth patient you send to India or America, the money that is supposed to be used for that patient will be paid to you. So, if I send 10 patients, only eight patients will pay. The remaining five million will be paid to the doctor.”

    Alonge praised the inauguration of the state-of-the-art centre, saying it was fulfilling the specialist care that many public tertiary institutions could not fulfil because of poor funding.

    Also speaking, Chief Bisi Akande, chairman of the Tri-State Heart Foundation, which was launched at the event to raise funds for heart surgeries for the under-privileged, accepted the challenge of helping to fight heart disease because of its prevalence in the country.

    “The Tristate team are here in Nigeria on a national medical mission to a country where heart-related diseases are becoming a national disgrace. However, Tristate Cardiovascular Associates have reversed this trend; the team has performed 43 open-heart surgeries in a space of few months of operation in Nigeria,” he said.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain was also optimistic the centre would help reverse medical tourism in Nigeria.

    “If you are still grappling with the reality of what is happening here today, then, let me make it more graphic. The fact is that Nigerians no longer need to travel abroad to get treatment for heart-related diseases, many of which are correctable with surgery.

    “It also means that Nigeria’s mortality rate will improve significantly since people suffering from this kind of ailment do not need to pass through the rigours of queuing for a visa or struggling to fund the cost of travelling abroad,” he said.

    Praising the initiative, the Emir of Kano, HRH Muhammadu Sanusi II, advocated for low-interest financing for similar projects by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    “As a former governor of the CBN, I do hope that some of the initiatives started by the Central Bank in getting long-term loans to critical areas will be extended to health care and education. I do not see many of these centres being built with short term money at 20 per cent plan. And just as we tried to help agriculture and manufacturing; given the great outcome that we have from improving health care and education, the education and health care sectors should have major interventions that allow these kind of centres to be built all over the country,” he said.

    After the inauguration, Prof. Kamar Adeleke, President/CEO, Tristate Cardiovascular Associates, conducted the Emir and other dignitaries on tour of the centre. The N2 billion-worth centre has ultra-modern equipment for the CT laboratory, operating room and the wards.

    Vice-Chancellor, Babcock University, Prof. Kayode Makinde, said Chief Kessignton Adebutu, who donated the BUTH Accident and Emergency Centre, also promised to sponsor patients identified by his foundation; while the Acting Chairman, Nigerian Health Insurance Scheme, Mr Femi Agunbiade, promised to send 10 patients to the centre under the scheme; and five every month if the centre works well.

  • ‘Nigeria not meeting WHO  standard on number of doctors’

    ‘Nigeria not meeting WHO standard on number of doctors’

    Association of Colleges of Medicine of Nigeria’s (ACMN) Chairman Prof. Folasade Ogunsole yesterday expressed sadness at the shortage of the required number of doctors in the country.

    She said Nigeria was yet to meet the World Health Organisation’s (WHO’s) benchmark of one doctor per 600 persons.

    Prof. Ogunsole noted that it would take Nigeria about 101 years to meet the standard, even if all medical graduates did not migrate from the country or remained in the profession.

    She spoke in Abuja at the opening of a three-day capacity development programme for Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) Academic Staff in Nigerian universities.

    The ACMN chairman explained that the nation would need about 277,000 doctors to meet WHO’s requirements, noting that about 35,000 doctors work in Nigeria.

    She said the nation’s medical schools trained more than the number of doctors practising in the country, adding that majority of them were either practising outside the country or had changed profession.

    The Executive Secretary, National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof. Julius Okojie said NUC has established Best Minimum Academic Standard (BMAS) for all its approved courses and continues to review it routinely based on perceived needs and recommendations from stakeholders

     

  • At the  mercy  of fake  doctors

    At the mercy of fake doctors

    The medical profession has been infiltrated by fake practitioners leading to avoidable deaths and complications. Innocent Duru in this report goes into the world of the dupes. 

    In a not too distant past, the existence of fake doctors was restricted to only private hospitals. Not anymore, the dupes have spread their poisoned tentacles into public hospitals. How?

    Within the space of two months, two suspects Nwosu Angela Njide and Martins Ugwu Okpeh, were arrested. They had plied their nefarious credentials for a long time before nemesis caught up with them.

    Angela,30, claimed that she had worked with the British American Tobacco (BAT) clinic, Ibadan; the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) and Rauz Hospital, Apo, Abuja, before she was arrested by the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) and handed over to the police. She is said to be the first female fake doctor to have been arrested by MDCN. Strangely, a presenter with Africa Independent Television (AIT), who was once her patient, described her as a caring ‘doctor’ whose kindness, belied her alleged criminal tendencies.

    Forty-four-year-old Okpeh, on the other hand, had for nine years paraded himself as a medical doctor and even rose to become the chairman of a branch of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) before he was arrested. The suspect, a secondary school certificate holder and father of five, confessed to having stolen copies of the medical and academic credentials of his childhood friend, Dr. George Davidson, a medical doctor based in Jos, Plateau State, and used same to secure employment in the Federal Ministry of Health. He was said to have been exposed by an anonymous petition that prompted the police to launch investigation into his activities.

    He question is: how safe is medical care in a country where a fake doctor could work in a public hospital for a decade and even rise to become a branch chairman of the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), the umbrella body of medical doctors, without being detected? This is a question that agitates the minds of many Nigerians on account of rising cases of fake medical practitioners arrested by security operatives in recent times. Findings made by our correspondent revealed that the ugly trend has shaken the faith of the people in the sector and caused them to despair in seeking medical help in hospitals across the country.

    If gold rusts

    Before now, the popular belief was that the existence of fake doctors was restricted to private hospitals. But recent developments have however shown that they have also infiltrated state-owned hospitals where the best hands are believed to be engaged to deliver the best of medical service to the people. How did they gate-crash into the esoteric profession? How do they treat patients who seek treatment from them? Could they have been responsible for wrong diagnosis and avoidable death of some of their patients? These and other questions have left the people bewildered.

    The Head of Department of the Inspectorate Unit of the MDCN, Dr. Henry Okwuokenye, who carried out the arrest of Angela, said her cover was blown off a year ago when she went to Oyo State to register for licence to practise at the Ministry of Health under the Oyo State Director, Medical Services. Luck, however, ran out on her as the officials of the ministry became suspicious of her qualifications and approached the MDCN to verify the authenticity of her claims. Nwosu claimed to have graduated from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka Medical School in 2005 and did houseman ship at UNTH. In spite of her claims, she failed simple questions any medical student is expected to know.

    After the Oyo State Ministry of Health refused to register her, she was said to have relocated to Abuja and audaciously went on her own to the MDCN to attempt to register for her licence.

    According to Okwuokenye, “Nwosu came to the council to apply for a new folio number, unique to every practising doctor in Nigeria, in an attempt to get full registration. We checked and she was not on the list. She claimed to have graduated from UNN, but we went to verify and discovered that it was all lies. As at this time, she was on the run. We later got to know recently that she had been working with Rauz Hospital, Apo, for almost a year.”

    Okpeh, an indigene of Ogbadibo Local Government Area of Benue State, appears to be a master in his game. He confessed that he actually took the certificates from his friend to join the Health Ministry in order to unearth the fraud and mess there as an insider. Wanting to use fraudulent means to cure a fraud?

    According to him, “I never opted for clinical services to avoid the damage that might occur. I went into administration and research. It is in the health services, research and statistics that all the fraud in the health sector is found. I have great remorse, but it was the desire to save my country that pushed me into this.”

    Perhaps in an attempt to justify his perfidy, he added, “I have great passion for Nigeria. I participated in the Ebola mission and much more and have not even been paid. There have been several biometric verifications and I survived all of them. I was the NMA chairman in 2008 at the Federal Ministry of Health. The Ministry is porous.”

    Commenting on Okpeh’s arrest, the Deputy Force spokesman, CSP Abayomi Shogunle, said: “What was perceived as an unprofessional conduct and unwholesome behaviour of inciting trouble and blackmail by the self-acclaimed medical doctor, Martins Ugwu Okpeh, prompted an anonymous petition against him to the Federal Civil Service Commission in May 2015. Investigation conducted through the records available at the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria showed that Okpeh adopted the identity of Dr. Davidson, a true medical doctor on residency training in Jos.

    “He has been parading himself as a medical doctor in the Federal Ministry of Health in Abuja for almost one decade, and was among the medical volunteers trained by the ministry in conjunction with African-Union Support to Ebola Outbreak in West-Africa (ASEOWA) mission in Liberia.”

    The suspect was said to have never passed any examination set by the ministry to warrant his promotion.

    Gale of arrests

    Before the arrests of Okpeh and Angela, the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other-Related Offences Commission (ICPC) had earlier arrested a suspected fake medical doctor, George Dawari, who was said to be deceiving his victims through visa scams.

    Dawari, who was arrested on June 5, 2015 following a petition filed before the commission, was said to have claimed to be on the staff of the National Hospital, Abuja. It was, however, discovered during interrogation that he was neither a medical doctor nor an employee of the hospital.

    ICPC’s Resident Consultant (Media and Events), Mr. Folu Olamiti, said: “After obtaining a warrant, a search on the residence of Dawari, who had earlier offered to administer drugs on one of the petitioners, a female, under the pretence of being a medical doctor, ICPC operatives discovered some medical equipment, including a stethoscope and medical coverall with his name engraved on it.

    “Also discovered in the suspect’s house were six green Nigerian passports, four of which had been stamped with the United States visas. The passports were subsequently sent to the American Embassy for authentication. But the US embassy declared the visas fake and the process for its procurement fraudulent.”

    Within a space of 24 hours in February 2014, nemesis caught up with another two suspected fake doctors, who identified themselves as Awotoye Ayodele and Tajudeen Dosunmu.

    Awotoye, who claimed to be an undergraduate of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso, was said to have practised at Military Hospital, Yaba and St. Claire Hospital, Surulere, both in Lagos before he was arrested.

    He was first arrested in December 2012 and charged to court over a forged certificate which he used to practise as a House Officer with Military Hospital, Yaba.

    He was said to have written an apology letter to the MDCN after his first arrest. But while his case was being reviewed, the council was hinted that he had relocated from Yaba and had been practising with St. Claire Specialist Hospital with a different licence.

    Worse still, Dosunmu, a 65-year-old man, allegedly added robbery to his medical quackery before his arrest. He was alleged to have been a member of the deadly robbery gang that attacked the Ayobo branch of Access Bank in November 2013. Before his foray into the world of crime, he claimed to have worked with the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital before establishing his personal hospital at Okeoluwa area of Igando, Alimosho Local Government Area, Lagos State.

    According to him, “I attended a university in Osun State but dropped out at 400 Level. One of my elder brothers arranged my medical certificate with the help of some lecturers at the university. They paid N20, 000 for it. They also arranged my houseman ship at a university in the North and also assisted me to gain employment with the then Ikeja General Hospital now Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) where I worked for 14 years. I later established my own hospital.”

    Dosunmu said he joined the robbery gang because he needed money to renew his operating licence, adding: “I was one of the gang’s transporters. I usually helped to transport their gas cylinders to robbery scenes. I am the owner of Boluwatife Kola Hospital, located at Igando, behind the police station. In 2012, my operating licence expired. I had no money to renew it and I closed it down.

    “One of my younger brothers later introduced me to this gang and all they needed from me was to transport the gas cylinders they used in opening the ATMs (automated teller machines), after which they would give me between N20,000 to N30,000. I thought I could make some money from it and then go back to my job. But on November 1, I followed them to Ayobo. While we were waiting at the spot, we heard gunshots and I quickly drove out with my car. I didn’t know that policemen were killed in that operation, as I have not heard from any member of the gang.”

    Prior to their arrests, an alleged fake gynaecologist had also been nabbed in Lagos. The suspect, who identified himself as Dr Sunday J. Bassey, claimed he was an indigene of Cross River State and had been helping the government to reduce unemployment through his nocturnal business. He claimed that he had on his payroll three midwives, a matron, a radiologist and other staff who rendered medical services to both in and out-patients.

    He had on top of the one-storey building located at 163, Itire Road, Mushin, Lagos, the bold inscription ‘JOSSY-JD LTD, Obstetrics and Gynaecology.’ The poster of an expectant mother adorned the upper floor of the building, which was used as a private hospital. The poster indicated that any pregnant woman who patronised the hospital’s Radiology Department would be entitled to a gift.

    The hospital was said to be a beehive of activities for couples seeking the ‘fruit of the womb’ until the scam was busted and it was sealed off by a team of medical personnel from MDCN and Health Facility Monitoring and Accreditation Agency (HEFAMAA).

    He was said to have been carrying on as a medical staff of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) and only went to work in the clinic after closing officially at LUTH. The 37-year-old claimed to have graduated from the University of Calabar in Cross River State before proceeding for further studies in India.

    HEFAMAA’s Executive Secretary, Dr Asuni, alleged that Bassey had been operating in the area with doubtful certificates. He claimed that Bassey did not possess any certificate of competence as required by the medical profession.

    “Unfortunately, he included year 2002 MDCN licence with the forged signature of Dr. Oshoba Festus who only worked with us between 2006 and 2008. It was easy to identify the fake document because the Council’s Registrar as at 2002 was Dr. Okwudili Ezeani.”

    In August, 2013, the Lagos State Police Command paraded two suspected fake medical doctors for operating an unlicensed hospital named Care Hospital at Omotoba Street, Unity Estate, Iba, Lagos. The fake doctors were identified as Gabriel Onyema Ihejiero, and Stephen Nwankwo.

    Nwankwo, in his confessional statement, said: “The Managing Director (Ihejiero) is my friend. He came to me for advice, I suggested to him that we should start a hospital business and he agreed. I only worked for two years in his hospital before I stopped. I trained as an auxiliary nurse in Ondo State for two years.”

    The police said their investigation revealed that the two suspects never attended any medical or nursing school and that they had conducted over 80 deliveries for pregnant women in the hospital!

    Corroborating the police report, Nwankwo said: “I have delivered more than 90 pregnant women of babies and they were all successful.”

    In his own confession, Ihejiero, who claimed to be selling bond paper in Ghana before he began the hospital business, said: “I own the hospital located at Iba. Although I am not a medical doctor, I employed a doctor with two years medical experience.”

    Later in October 2013, a 40-year-old suspected fake doctor, Adeyemi Stephen Akintolure, was arrested in Lagos. The suspect claimed to be an employee of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), with card No. 13541 identifying him as a surgeon and gynaecologist.

    Akintolure, who claimed to hail from Ondo State, said he studied Marketing at Obafemi Awolowo University, Ife, as a part-time student and graduated in 1997.

    He claimed that, “I have not treated more than 10 people. I just treat them for malaria and typhoid. I gave injections too because of my experience at Rivic Hospital in Akure.”

    When asked how he got the identity card, he said he got it from a business centre and that the computer operator signed it for him.

    Shaken confidence

    Investigation conducted by our correspondent revealed that the activities of fake doctors are casting doubts in the minds of would-be patients about their safety in hospitals. Some of the respondents said the fear of falling into the hands of fake doctors have made them to resort to using local herbs to treat their health challenges.

    Comrade Debo Adeniran, a human rights activist and Executive Director of Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), is one of such Nigerians.

    He said: “I have always been apprehensive of going to hospital. I prefer taking care of myself using herbs. There are occasions when even qualified doctors would continue to give the same drug until you get addicted to it. They don’t vary their treatment. In fact, I don’t believe that most of the doctors are qualified. I view them with suspicion each time I have reasons to go to hospital with anybody. Many doctors would just keep administering treatment in a way that suggests that they lack knowledge of the ailment.

    “If a fake doctor happened to have treated my relation, the hospital, the government, whether federal or state, the regulatory body that failed to do its duty and the doctor himself would have me to contend with at the law court. Quacks should not be allowed to take over a sensitive profession like medicine.

    “We have had occasions where surgeons forgot instruments in the bodies of their patients. This kind of negligence should have no place in this age and time.

    “The regulatory bodies are not diligent in controlling the practitioners. The regulatory bodies ought to be proactive, especially in the medical profession where human lives are meant to be safeguarded. There is supposed to be strict adherence to recruitment procedures, especially in the public sector, but the craze for money has affected this.”

    A civil servant, who identified herself as Bose Lawal, said it was discouraging and frightening if one looks at the activities of quacks in the medical profession. “How can one be encouraged to go to hospital with all the stories we have been hearing about fake doctors? Many of us would always visit public hospitals because we weren’t sure of the expertise of many of the doctors in the private hospitals but recent developments have proved that the public hospitals have also become breeding grounds for fake doctors. Is it not disheartening?

    “If you know the number of people that an average doctor attends to in a public hospital, you would begin to appreciate the harm they would have done to many lives. You really don’t know who is a fake doctor, so it is better to avoid them. For these ones to have been exposed there would be so many others out there still wreaking havoc in the name of treating patients.

    “I would rather go for herbs than sacrifice my life and those of my family members in the hands of a fake doctor. At least it was herbs that our forefathers were using before orthodox medicine came.”

    Chief Ladi Williams, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, said: “I am very disturbed to hear such. It is a shock that there was such a case in a government hospital and the person was prescribing drugs, performing surgery and drawing salaries for a long time. It shows the level of decadence in the society. Does that mean if President Muhammadu Buhari had not won, this illegality would have continued unchecked?

    “It is despicable. I could never have believed that there is a fake doctor. I have heard of fake lawyers but not fake doctors because theirs is a very sensitive job. It has to do directly with life. Police detectives would have to find out if there are people conniving with fake people to get employed as doctors in both private and public hospitals.

    “Both the suspects and their collaborators should be prosecuted. And if any of their patients could be traced to have died as a result of their incompetence, they should be held for murder.

    “In any case, the least offence they can be charged for is fraud. If I were a patient of any fake doctor, I would sue the hospital and not the doctor. The doctor is just an agent while the hospital is the principal expected to take due care in employing doctors. I will only join the doctor in the suit.

    “As a legal practitioner, I have over the years taken time to scrutinise all my employees not just to make sure they have all the necessary certificates but to make sure they are competent. This is to make sure that we don’t employ anybody that could tarnish our image. Nigerians whose relations have been treated by these fake doctors should sue the hospitals.”

    Dr. Dipo Okeyomi, a security expert, is of the opinion that security operatives and the regulatory bodies should immediately swing into action to nip the problem in the bud, stressing: “If the development is not arrested, it would have a telling effect on the lives of the people. This would eventually kill people’s confidence to go to the hospital when they are sick.

    “Adequate punishment must be meted out to the perpetrators and those that aid and abet their activities to serve as deterrent to others. If this is not done, it will encourage so many others to continue with their unholy business. If this happens, it would spell doom for the people and the country at large.”

    The sensitive nature of the profession, for Kenny Saint Best (KSB), a leading gospel artiste, is too grave for anybody to toy with.

    She said: “It sounds unbelievable because the medical profession is the most sensitive in human endeavours. I believe that it is desperation and insensitivity of man to his fellow man that is responsible for this kind of thing.

    “Those people have dead conscience, because if their conscience were alive, they would not venture into anything that would amount to toying with human lives. But the truth is that somebody employed these fake doctors. Why didn’t they do thorough check on their qualifications and professional competence before engaging them?

    “If I find out that any of such doctors treated my child, I will sue the hospital and the doctor. If for any reason a child dies in the hands of such a doctor, I will make it an international case. It is devilish and has no justification. It must be condemned in all ramifications.

    “But this does not take away the fact that we have competent and diligent doctors in the country. It is not enough for us to rubbish all the efforts and contributions of the good ones because of the callousness of the bad eggs among them.

    “We saw what the Nigerian doctors could do when Ebola broke out in the country last year. It is on record that even the international community came to see what we did differently.”

    Test of integrity

    The Nation’s investigation revealed that the ugly trend has also left many medical doctors sad. Those who spoke with our correspondent described it as ridicule on a profession that thrives on integrity and competence.

    Decrying the danger posed by the activities of fake doctors, Dr Lawal Bakare, the Executive Director of Ebola Alert, said: “I can bet that 80 per cent of what they would have done over the years was wrong. Medicine is evidence-based. I don’t need to go to the case notes to know what they have done. Even where they have done or got it right, the fact remains that their actions were illegal.

    “Medical profession is a combination of skill and knowledge. I can watch my uncle dress a wound and later do the same thing, but I may not have the knowledge about why he has applied XYZ to treat a case. These fake doctors must have under-studied genuine ones for some time before embarking on their nefarious mission.”

    For Dr. Sunday Amosu, a consultant at Neuro Psychiatric Hospital, Aro, Abeokuta, Ogun State, “it is the height of professional misconduct and neglect.” He said: “I don’t know how the suspect that worked in the Federal Ministry of Health found his way there. I don’t know if he had collaborators. But I know that there is no smoke without fire.

    “Every doctor, after training, has temporary registration that qualifies him to do houseman ship. After this, your supervisors would sign you off for full registration. You will have a folio number and the Nigerian Medical and Dental Council number after registration. These numbers are peculiar to every doctor and cannot be used by another person.

    “Even when you want to become a Fellow like me, there is another round of registration you will have to do and everything is documented. When you want to get employment, you are required to submit your original certificates for verification. This is why it is befuddling.”

    Expressing concern about the patients the fake doctors must have attended to, Dr Rotimi Adesanya, a public health physician, said: “It actually calls for concern for a fake doctor to have worked his way to work as a medical doctor at the Federal Ministry of Health and worked for close to a decade before being arrested. It is a grave act of negligence.

    “Most of them would have been carrying out wrong diagnosis over the years and putting the lives of unsuspecting members of the public, especially their patients, in serious danger. They must have sent a lot of innocent people to their early graves through their actions.”

    Implication for genuine practitioners

    Speaking on the implication of the incidents for genuine practitioners, Dr Adesanya said: “It has serious implication for us because it would make the public not to have 100 per cent belief in us. It will fuel serious doubts about our competence as medical doctors.” He is worried that these quacks are giving the profession a bad name thus making many people to travel abroad even for common ailments.

    He added, “It also buttresses the point some people make for going abroad to get medical help. Developments like these justify their reasons for doing that because they can tell you that they don’t want to risk their lives in the hands of a doctor they are not sure of his competence.  Another implication is that it would aggravate the negative perception of our doctors by the international community. This would go a long way in compounding their suspicion about us. It may lead to a situation where doctors who want to go for short courses abroad would have to face strict scrutiny before he is admitted, and this may discourage a lot of people.

    “Impersonation is a criminal offence. The law should be allowed to take its full course on the suspects. The name of any of them that is on the list of practising doctors should be struck out.”

    The consequence in the opinion of Dr Bakare is: “If two fake doctors were exposed within a space of time, it buttresses the fact that the system is loose. These are the ones we have seen. I am sure that when you visit rural communities, you will find more of such fake doctors.

    “Performance of the health sector is measured by developments such as these. It is a negative mark on all of us because it portrays us as people that are not competent enough. Foreigners who hear this kind of report would not be encouraged to go to our hospitals for treatment. Instead, they would prefer to go to their countries or a more trusted nation for treatment.”

    Dr. Amosun said: “We are in bad light when things like this happen. The NMA and the MDCN should look inward. It is ridicule on the medical profession which has integrity and competence as its hallmark. This could make every doctor to be seen as a quack.”

    He added: “Medical practice is a life and death profession, and this is why people who study in some non-English speaking countries still sit for examination when they want to practise in the country just to validate their competence.

    “Doctors go for continuous medical education and they are expected to have a minimum of 20 units to have their licence renewed. If you don’t meet up, your licence will not be renewed. That is how serious the profession is and that is why it has integrity. It is unfortunate that some people are out to mess up the good image of the profession.”

    He sees the problem as wider than where people focus on as, “The challenge we have here is that any male who works in the hospital is often called a doctor. Unfortunately, they answer when they call them so. If the trend is not arrested and people continue to die carelessly in the course of being treated by fake doctors, it is the future of the country we are mortgaging.

    “In child health care management, it is a serious matter because if you kill a child, they will not take it lightly. They would tell you that it is possible that you have killed the future president.”

    Solution

    Dr. Lawal Bakare, the Executive Director of Ebola Alert, blamed the menace on shortage of manpower, saying: “The development clearly shows that there is shortage of manpower in the health care sector. This is why fake doctors could be employed without proper investigation. By 2050, the population of this country would be in the region of 300 million. How many doctors will Nigeria produce every year to take care of that population?

    “Right now, you have a good number of doctors in Lagos State but the number reduces as you move out to other states and rural communities. This is why fake doctors would continue to spring up here and there to fill the vacuum because they know that people need health care delivery and would find ways of getting solution to their health challenges.

    “The second problem we have is with regulation. The various regulatory agencies need to strengthen their operations. They should be carrying out surveillance in the manner that Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) and Vehicle Inspection Unit (VIO) would do to motorists. They should randomly go to hospitals to carry out checks on the personnel. They cannot tell me that they don’t have the funds to do that. They have the funds and should do it. When they do it, any hospital habouring fake doctors should be held liable. They should make the data of all doctors in the country public the way we have it abroad.

    “The third solution is for the citizens to be alive to their responsibilities. Many people go to hospitals without bothering about who the doctor is. It is wrong because here, we are talking about life. It is not out of place for patients to ask for a doctor’s licence before accepting to be treated by such doctors.”

    His views were also echoed by Dr Adesanya, who added that “doctors should be made to place their certificates in the consulting room. It is actually what should be the practice, but many people don’t follow it. There is also nothing wrong about doctors wearing their practice number.”

    For Dr Bunmi Omoseindemi, Chairman Lagos State Traditional Medicine Board, the solution lies in total overhaul of the entire system in the country, which he said is riddled with fraudsters.

    He said: “I was not surprised by the report because we have fraudulent people in every area of our society. The system is bad and regulation is not at its best. The employers of labour don’t do thorough check before employing staff. The problem is not limited to medicine; it is a societal problem and it is present in every profession. The solution should be across board and not in medical profession alone.

    “If we have a national database, it would be easy to identify everybody. I can’t expressly say that there could be more of such fraudulent people in the profession. You can’t really rule it out. The MCDN should be more vigilant.”

    Calls and text messages to Dr. Lanre Obembe, the national president of Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), were neither answered nor replied. The management of LASUTH has, however, denied claims by Angela and Dosunmu that they worked at the hospital before their arrest.

    The Public Relations Officer, Mr Olasunkanmi Idowu, said: “We don’t have such names in our records. They have never worked here. Their claims are spurious and should be disregarded.”

    But the question remains: how do we curb this game of playing kite with human lives?