Tag: Doctors

  • OAUTH doctors threaten strike

    Resident doctors at the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital Complex, (OAUTHC), Ile-Ife have threatened to go on strike unless the management employs more doctors.

    Addressing a news conference yesterday in Ile-Ife, the President of the Association of Resident Doctors (OAUTHC), Ile-Ife chapter, Dr. Adeola Ajibare, said the need for more doctors to assist them had reached a critical situation.

    He said management had ignored their call for more hands, adding that they would embark on an indefinite strike from August 1 if it failed to publish the names of doctors that passed the last employment interview conducted by the hospital.

    Dr. Ajibare said: “Many of us are working under intense pressure to the extent that some of us collapse on duty and many have lately been hospitalised. We cannot continue with the stress.

    “We are tired of waiting for empty promises by the management to recruit more doctors to fill the vacancies created by those who have retired. We are not fighting for money but for a good ground to do our work in the interest of the patients, ourselves and the hospital.”

    He said going by their estimation, 100 new doctors across many departments and units in addition to 300 doctors and 140 consultants are needed in the hospital.

    He pleaded for the intervention of the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), the Medical and Dental Council Association of Nigeria and well-meaning Nigerians to prevail on the management to fulfil its promise.

    The management has assured that soon more doctors would be employed.

    Speaking on behalf of the management, the Deputy Director, Corporate Service, Mr. Olu Bello, said the doctors should be patient.

    Said he: “Management will not only release the list of successful candidates, but will also employ them soon. They went on strike on this issue sometime ago and the management board led by its Chairman, Mr. Mathew Urhoghide, a pharmacist, intervened. I assure you that soon, the list of successful candidates will be released.”

  • Resident doctors accuse FG of N300m shortchange

    The Association of the Resident Doctors (ARD), University College Hospital (UCH), Chapter has accused the federal government of shortchanging the teaching hospital in the country of N300 million from the personnel subvention fund in the last six months.

    The president of ARD, UCH chapter, Dr TundeBabasanya disclosed this yesterday while addressing reporters at the union’s office in Ibadan.

    He said: “The initial money meant to be paid monthly to all

    teaching hospitals in Nigeria is N700 million but it has been short of N50 million monthly and the government keep promising to pay, while the nature of the health sector is in failed state.

    “The policy makers can go abroad to receive treatments, while the

    masses that cannot afford it die due to poor funding and diversion of funds meant for the upgrading of the hospitals facilities”.

    He alleged that whenever the money was released to the teaching hospitals, the government removes N50 million illegally, a development he said contributed to the paucity of funds to maintain the hospital facilities.

    The ARD president also stated that teaching hospitals are short of doctors.

    “Due to heavy workload by the doctors in aunconducive environment, we have lost four doctors in the last 2 years and we are tired of this.

    We represent the future but we are not receiving the best training we deserved and we are been over stressed. The last time this hospital recruited was in 2010 and the recent one has not been approved due to the pending 2013 supplementary budget which has not been signed,” Babasanya said.

  • Doctors begin warning strike tomorrow

    The National Association of Resident Doctors of Nigeria (NARD) yesterday instructed its members nationwide to begin a three-day warning strike.

    It is to protest poor budgetary allocation for Residency Training programme for members in the 2013 budget by the Federal Government.

    This followed the expiration of the 21-day ultimatum given to the President Goodluck Jonathan administration to “urgently correct the gross budget deficit inherent in the budgetary appropriation for residency training in all training institutions” and its subsequent reluctance to act upon the demand.

    In a statement issued following the meeting of the National Executive Committee of NARD last Saturday, the President, Dr. Ismail Lawal, said the warning strike is also to express their “disaffection” over the ill-treatment of members at the Irruah Specialist Hospital, Irruah, Edo State, by the hospital management headed by Prof. George Akpede.

    Dr. Lawal, therefore, called for the suspension of Prof. Akpede as the Medical Director of the hospital.

    He said the Residency Training Programme (RTP) of members may collapse with the attendant setbacks in skills development in Neurosurgery, Pathology, Gynaecology, among others, following “inadequate funding” by the Federal Government.

    According to him, the paucity of funds allocated to the RTP in the 2013 Appropriation Bill is inadequate and will cripple the scheme as “update courses, exams and other course fees” for members are not being settled by the Federal Government.

    Lawal said the development is exposing members’ career and specialised healthcare delivery service to Nigerians to a risk.

    Citing Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital as one of the cases of under-funding of NARD’s members’ knowledge upgrade, Dr. Lawal noted that the Medical Director of the institution had made a proposal for N200 million for the RTP for over 500 resident doctors there, but only N19 million was approved by the authority.

    The NARD President deplored victimisation of members at the Irruah Specialist Hospital, as evidence in the non-payment of their salaries, training allowances as well as unjust termination of members’ training by the hospital management headed by Prof. Akpede.

    He described the plight of members at Irruah as “highly unacceptable” and urged the Minister of Health to prevail on the management to reverse acts of victimisation and pay outstanding salaries and training allowances to them.

  • NMA urges FG to hire more doctors

    NMA urges FG to hire more doctors

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) on Monday in Abuja called on the Federal Government to address the problem of shortage of qualified medical doctors in government hospitals.

    The National President of the association, Dr Osahon Enabulele, made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    He said that addressing the problem quackery in the health sector would eliminate the activities of unqualified medical personnel operating in the country.

    “We have acute shortage of medical manpower in Nigeria, acute in the sense that more people are leaving but the shortage has been there for years unattended and that has huge implications, because we are going to have a few specialists attending to patients coming to the teaching hospitals; and that of course that will impact on quality health care which will impact on the lives of Nigerians.

    “So, it has very immense implication because when somebody comes to the hospital that has one or two doctors attending to several hundreds of patience, he or she has to stay on the cue.

    “In the process, some would be discouraged and resort to quarks; an alternative that could lead to more complications in terms of their care.

    ”So, it is something that government needs to address by devoting more resources committedly to the recruitment of more medical personnel for the various health institutions.

    “Indeed, it will help manpower, it will help human resources in our various institutions so that there will be enough encouragement for those who are left to continue to render care and not increasingly find themselves giving up.

    ”A lot of doctors are dying because of the exhaustion they face due to the stress they go through from doing the work of several persons as a result of the shortage of qualified personnel in the industry.’’

  • Doctors won’t join strikes, NMA promises

    Doctors won’t join strikes, NMA promises

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) yesterday said doctors would no longer abandon their duty posts during strikes.

    Its President Dr Osahon Enabulele said the assocaition has put in place a surveillance to ensure strict compliance of doctors to the directive.

    Enabulele, who addressed reporters during the association’s visit to the Health Writers’ Association of Nigeria (HEWAN), said doctors who default would be penalised.

    He said the NMA would discourage strikes in the health sector, adding that the proposed strike by the Joint Health Workers’ Union should be stopped because the association is illegal and does not represent the interest of the workers.

    The union leader berated the Federal Government for endorsing international treaties that it cannot meet, especially the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), because it was not ready.

    Enabulele said: “Lack of adequate power supply, good roads and other infrastructure are factors that should be addressed before it (govt) can achieve any goal.

    “But to be realistic, Nigeria cannot achieve it because it doesn’t have the same condusive environment and manpower like some developed countries. The country can have a projection of 2030, after it must have put in place necessary measures.”

    The union leader recalled that Nigeria, at the Committee of African Heads of States meeting in Abuja in 2001, agreed in principle with other governments on the continent to devote 15 per cent of its budget to health care but only devotes about five per cent to it yearly.

  • Laparascopic doctors trained in Nnewi

    About 30 medical doctors have received training in Minimal Access Surgery (MAS) at the Life Institute for Endoscopy, Nnewi, Anambra State.

    The trainees included medical doctors and peri-operative nurses. The proprietor of the Endoscopic Institute/Medical Director of Life Hospital, Prof Joseph Ikechebelu was praised for his feats in laparoscopic surgery.

    A consultant Gynecologist and one of the trainees, Dr Kayode Obende from Garki hospital, Abuja described the training as excellent stressing that it exposed them to the theoretical and practical knowledge of MAS.

    He said he would return to Anambra State for the advanced course in MAS urging other doctors to undergo the training as he was impressed by the facilities in the hospital which he said exposed them during the training.

    Obende, who received an award as the most improved doctor, called on the concerned authority to revive the Nigerian chapter of the World Association of Laparoscopy (WAL) to bring members together in Nigeria.

    In his address, Ikechebelu congratulated the participants, who came from the six geopolitical zones, for the successful completion of the eight basic MAS.

    He said the institute conceived in 2010, is the first to offer structured MAS training in Nigeria resulting in the first Laparoscopic Myomectomyn in the Southeast.

    “The journey has not been easy. The faculty, according to him, has sacrificed much of their time, knowledge and energy to achieve this. They have persevered because of our common desire to transfer technology to others,” he said.

     

  • Firm partners with doctors

    Graduating medical and dental doctors from Nigerian universities will receive basic practice tools free from May & Baker Nigeria Plc.

    This, the company said, would enable them start off smoothly in their profession.

    This was through a partnership between the premier pharmaceutical manufacturing company and leading Nigerian Colleges of Medicine

    The project, which is designed to run in 11 Colleges of Medicine this year, kicked off with the graduating medical and dental doctors of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH).

    It said 150 graduating doctors of LUTH received their first stethoscopes and ward coats from the company.

    In addition, the best graduating students of medicine and dentistry also received cash prizes and plaques from the company as a form of encouragement for academic excellence among these group of professionals.

    Head, Pharmaceutical Sales and Marketing Division of the company, Mr Chukuka Chukutem, who represented the company’s managing director, said the project is a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) undertakien by M&B.

    He said the idea is to support the students with the basic take-off tools to give them a good start.

    He said the company intends to run this project in phases. Phase one comprises of 11 Colleges of Medicine with the Lagos University Teaching Hospital as the pilot roll out. Other institutions in the first phase include Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital, Nnamdi Azikiwe University Teaching Hospital, Awka, University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Usman Dan Fodio University, Sokoto and University of Jos Teaching Hospital. Others are University of Ibadan, Obafemi Awolowo University and the University of Benin.

  • Doctors, pharmacists, others disagree on Health Bill

    Doctors, pharmacists and other stakeholders have disagreed over the propriety of the National Health Bill (NHB), which has passed second reading in the National Assembly.

    The Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) is backing the bill, the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN), and Association of Medical Laboratory Scientists of Nigeria (AMLSN), among others are against the bill.

    PSN and others are calling for the bill’s amendment before passage. The bill, they said, favours medical doctors than other professionals.

    PSN enjoined the National Assembly to amend Section 1(1), Section 6(2) (f), (g) and (h), Section 9(2) (a) and Section 13 to make room for a law that protects the interest of all and ultimately serve the public interest.

    Its President, Mr Olumide Akintayo, said the Federal Ministry of Health must be compelled to exercise its supervisory functions over agencies of the Federal Government under it, especially National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) and National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS).

    He said: “We have no hesitation that Nigeria deserves a Health Act but such Acts of Parliament must be packaged to be time tested by removing all tendencies to confine requisite personnel permanently to “Senior” and “Junior” partners in endeavours that should revolve around a team spirit.”

    AMLSN described the bill as controversial and unacceptable.

    Its Lagos State branch chairman, Mr Olawale Oladubu, said: “If the argumen ts in the Senate, at the public hearing, was anything to go by, the bill will be not implementable, especially if the views expressed by stakeholders are not adequately documented in the proposed law.”

    Oladubu said statistics showed that of the 66 clauses in the bill, 48 attracted heavy criticisms from the stakeholders.

    “For instance, Section 53 of the bill provides that only medical practitioners are eligible to take blood samples from patients. Such provision relegated medical practitioners who are trained for higher career challenges and positioned for technological advancements, and should therefore be reviewed,” he added.

    Dr Olalekan Olubajo of National Primary HealthCare Development Agency (NPHCDA), said: “It is a bill of inclusion, which is aimed at protecting and prioritising the rights of Nigerians to get basic minimum package of health care. For instance, there is no protection for anybody who is involved in a motor accident when brought to any health facility if such cannot pay. But with the passage of the NHB, such accident victims can receive free health care and by so doing lives are saved.

    NMA President Dr Osahon Enabulele, said NHB has provided a framework for the regulation, development and management of a national health system, adding: “It sets standards for the provision of health services in the federation, and other matters connected therewith.”

    Enabulele said the National Assembly’s failure to pass the bill would worsen limit access to health care services, especially at the primary health care level.

    He said: “Indeed, the National Health Bill, 2012 substantially captures the legitimate aspirations of Nigerians for greatly improved access to quality health care services; indeed aside from engendering an equitable health care system, the bill seeks to ensure that no Nigerian, particularly the rural poor, dies as a result of his inability to pay for health care services, including medical care for emergencies, accident and gunshot injury victims.”

    He said the passage of the bill would address medical tourism through which Nigeria loses over $500 million yearly.

    The Civil Society Organisation (CSO) want the National Assembly to remove what they described as offensive sections of the NHB 2008 that are replicated in the NHB 2012.

    The CSOs are opposed to provisions of the bill, which it said encourage abortion, cloning and giving the Health Minister absolute powers over human embryos and other matters.

    Their spokesperson, Sonnie Ekwowusi, said except the contentious sections were removed, the NHB may not achieve its ultimate goal of providing adequate health care for the people.

     

  • I had cancer, but fully okay now – Chime

    I had cancer, but fully okay now – Chime

    Governor Sullivan Chime of Enugu State on Tuesday opened up on his health condition, admitting to journalists that he had cancer of the nose.

    Chime, who returned to the country after almost four months stay in United Kingdom, was quick to add that he has been given a clean bill of health by the British doctors.

    “I have been completely cured and declared cancer free by the doctors,” he told journalists.

    Looking hale and hearty, the governor spoke at length on his sojourn abroad and the unfair publicity given his absence by the Nigerian press.

    “When I read in the papers how I died in India, we then turn Nigerian papers to entertainment forum. We read what they wrote about me and laughed. It became an amusement kind of thing,” he said of Nigerian papers.

    Chime, who has fully resumed duty said although cancer is a deadly disease, he was never admitted in the hospital as in-patient but was going for treatment from his apartment in London.

    According to him, the treatment took complete 12 weeks and the doctors advised that he should be out of work for at least six months to ensure full recovery.

    But the doctors were amazed at the speed of his recovery and declared him cancer free and completely cured on December 14.

    “I left London a healthy man. I went on my own and not on emergency, and insisted that the lump I noticed be removed. Cancer is curable once you discover it early,” the governor admonished.

    He thanked the people of Enugu for their prayers, patience and for “rebuffing those from outside who came to deceive them and cause confusion while he was away.”

    Chime declared: “I have fully resumed. There is no doubt about that. I’m back and I’m back. No regrets whatsoever for going for treatment while on my vacation. If I have the opportunity again, I will do it.”

     

  • Judge strikes out doctors’ suit against Lagos

    Judge strikes out doctors’ suit against Lagos

    Justice Benedict Kanyip of the National Industrial Court, Lagos, on Wednesday struck out a suit filed by doctors under the employment of Lagos State Government against their employers.

    Kanyip struck out the suit, earlier slated for hearing, following the application by the doctors that it no longer represented their current positions.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the doctors, under the aegis of Medical Guild, Lagos State chapter, had filed the suit on May 9, 2012.

    They were challenging the issuance of queries to them by the state government for embarking on a three-day warning strike on April 11.

    The strike was to demand for the implementation of the Consolidated Medical Salary Scale (CONMESS) approved by the Federal Government in 2009.

    The guild also demanded for a downward review of the taxes paid by its members and the teaching allowances paid to the doctors on internship.

    NAN recalls that the state government had on May 7, 2012 sacked 788 doctors for alleged insubordination and absence from duty without leave.

    The counsel to the doctors, Mr. Bamidele Aturu, represented by Miss Omolade Idowu-Kuola, had filed an application to discontinue the case.

    “We are going to discontinue the case against the defendants because events have overtaken the course of action, “ he said.

    The state Attorney-General, Mr. Ade Ipaye, represented by Mrs. Kemi Olugbode, did not object to the application.