Tag: Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital

  • Yaba Psychiatric Resident doctors on indefinite strike

    RESIDENT doctors of the Federal Neuro Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba, Lagos, are on an indefinite strike.

    The strike started on Wednesday afternoon after the doctors rose from a congress.

    According to the doctors, worsening conditions of service resulting from non-employment of more doctors necessitated the strike.

    Speaking to The Nation newspaper, the President of the Association of Resident Doctors (ARD) of Federal NeuroPsychiatric Hospital, Yaba, Dr. Enifeni Afeez, a senior registrar, said that the doctors are overworked and stressed, having to attend to huge number of patients. He said that as a result of this, doctors don’t have enough time to see patients.

    He also complained that this workload was affecting their studies.

    According to Afeez, in 2014, there were 56 resident doctors but the number has dwindled to 33 resident doctors presently.

    Prior to the strike, he said the doctors had complained to the hospital management for over a year and had met the Hospital Governing Board in the first week of July but nothing was done to look into the matter.

    “Now, it’s not a good thing but it’s become a tradition of the hospital for Residents to always have to get to this point,” he said.

    “Even before now, we had given a warning. And because we’re quite reasonable persons, we looked at the situation and we gave them more time. We halted the warning strike action and we went back to work. We did all we could. We continued engaging them. We also wrote letters. We met with the governing board of our hospital. But nothing came out of it all,” he said.

    Speaking on the response of management, Dr. Emeifeni said: “At some point in time, they said the letters they’ve sent to the ministry for employment got missing in transit. If they had done it at the right time, we wouldn’t be at this position.

    Read Also: Inside LASUTH’s psychiatric ward

    “And during all these time, we have made resolutions. We’ve also even given them way out or stop gap measures or other measures they can take but they were all bluntly refused.”

    Also speaking on the strike action, an ex-officio II, Dr Ajayi Dami, said: “When we resumed in 2014, all the residents were 56 and for four years, residents were leaving the system on a yearly basis, sometimes, twice a year. And they (Hospital Management) were not replacing them. So much so that now, we have 33 resident doctors. And the resident doctors are the ones who are on ground, who are taking calls, they are the ones who are seeing the patients.”

    Dr. Ajayi said the management reneged on an agreement that employment of residents should be on a regular basis. “But they would go and lump employment of all staff together when all other staff are permanent staff and residents are contract staff. It is disheartening. Senior registrars are supposed to be doing research. We’re supposed to have mastered clinical work but a lot of us don’t have registrars to work with. We just are by ourselves. I’m running a ward by myself. “

  • Ruined by substance abuse (1)

    Like a time bomb that is bound to explode if not urgently detonated, the rising incidence of drug abuse which has been resulting in mental health illnesses  among the citizens, precisely teenagers and youths,  may in the near future spell doom for the country if not quickly addressed. The Federal Neuro Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba few days ago said the facility recorded  50 per cent  increase in the number of patents treated for drug and substance abuse last year. The worrisome development  according to experts has ruined the lives of many  promising young boys and girls and rearing to destroy more if not immediately tamed.  INNOCENT DURU who visited some psychiatric homes reports:

     

    “This boy  has dented my image. As a pastor,  how can I explain it that my son indulged in drug abuse, to the extent that he has developed mental illness? What on earth led him into this demonic venture?”

    The above was the lamentation of a clergyman whose son had developed mental illness after a period of indulging in substance abuse.

    Frustration was written all over  him as he paced up and down wondering what had befallen him and how he would have the courage to still mount the pulpit to ask  wayward church members to turn a new leaf.

    “I am at loss over what has happened to me. He had always been a good boy and everybody around could swear that he couldn’t have touched a cigarette before. If I were not around and somebody had said this to me on the phone, I would have refused to believe it because I trusted him. There was no sign that he was into such. How he got into all this remains a mystery to me,” the distraught father said.

    A relation of a female  victim,  who gave his name simply as John, was  embittered as he shared the story of his sister’s plight.

    He said: “We saw all this coming and all our efforts to stop her was rejected by her. Unfortunately, we are the ones still bearing the brunt of her recklessness. She is in her late teens but she has always lived a wild life. She goes out and returns to the house anytime she likes. At times, acrid smell of alcohol would be oozing out  from her mouth.

    “The first time I saw cigarette in her bag, she said it was her friend that forgot it  and she decided to keep it for her. I foolishly believed her without knowing that was one of her tools of self-destruction.”

    “It has been financially and psychologically challenging taking care of her. The stigma alone is worse than anything you can think of because everybody now uses that to describe our family.”

    A relation of a sickle cell patient, who is also mentally sick, said he developed the illness after getting addicted to injecting himself with tramadol meant to relieve pains.

    “They sometimes give them such powerful pain killer whenever they have crisis. But he got addicted to it and always used it even when he didn’t have pains. That was what resulted in her mental problem.

    “The problem we are facing is now two folds. From dealing with sickle cell problems, we are also now faced with the problem of managing his mental illness. All this costs a lot of money and it is  physically, emotionally and psychologically distressing.”

    An undergraduate in one of the rehabilitation homes visited by our correspondent, according to the  care giver, suffered the fate after recklessly indulging in consumption of cannabis.

    “I learnt that he started indulging in hard drugs by  mixing  the cannabis leaf with beans. He subsequently moved from there to smoking it. At that point, he became very daring and began to bully  people around.

    “ It is a very unfortunate development because all the efforts to give him a very sound education in a private university appears to have become a huge waste.  Where are the people that led him into this? Have they not all gone their various ways?”

    At Abeokuta, another care giver said he had tried to stop the child from the unholy practice of drug abuse to no avail.

    “He was always going to some bad joints at Lafenwa where all manner of wayward children converge to  indulge in reckless use of drugs. If you get a part of the area, you will find a heap of cough syrups that these people have drunk. Apart from cough syrups, they also indulge in the use of cannabis, codeine and tramadol. There is one thing that they call sokudaya that they also use.

    On several occasions, we tried luring him away from that place but he kept returning there but it was as if he was under a spell to consume drugs. I am seriously worried that in spite of the large number of security outfits we have in the country, drugs are still being publicly sold. If the drugs are not so much available, many of our children would not have access to it.”

    Experts decry the  rise mental illness among substance users. There have been growing concerns among psychiatrists about the wave of mental illness among substance abusers.

    The 2018 annual report of the Federal Neuro Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba, obtained by our correspondent, showed that there was 5o per cent  increase in the number of patents treated for drug and substance abuse last year.

    The annual report showed that a total number of males treated in the facility rose from  133 in  2017 to 195 in 2018.  The figures of the females rose from 24  in 2017 to 40 in 2018.

    Speaking on the development, a psychiatrist in the hospital, Dr Modupeola  Omotojesi, said:

    “Our statistics has shown us that the use of substance has increased, especially in age groups. We are seeing it in younger individuals  between  15 and 16 years . We are increasingly seeing it.  Statistics has shown us that most children are beginning  to use it more from primary six to Junior Secondary School 1  level as their first level of introduction.  What we see is just a tip of the ice bag compared  to what is happening in the society.

    “It is on a very increased level  and it is something that everybody, the government, the society, the family  needs to be seriously concerned about.  The number of patients using substance has increased in the facility.  Substance abuse is like a monster. We really don’t know what has hit us as a country .”

    She noted that the development  portends a lot of danger locally, nationally and internally. “One of the major dangers it posses is the quality of the next generation we are going to produce because the use of substances itself has shown that when it gets to addiction level, it is a brain disease.

    “Imagine having a population of young people who are the future of tomorrow  already having impaired functioning because of the use of the substances that they have taken, what would be the quality of our leadership in future if we don’t  start attending to it now and begin to take care of it as an epidemic? It is at an epidemic level.  Measures have to be taken. We need a lot of advocacy, a lot of education,  and we need to be aggressive educating the young ones about what these substances are, and what implications they have on individuals and the nation as a whole”.

    She advised  there should be control on the availability of these substances, adding: “We need to tighten availability. We should not be talking about it in hush tones. Drugs abusers could be infected with HIV in the course of sharing needles; the y could have liver damage, Hepatitis, lung infections  and cancer. The person can have personality problems

    “When you have an individual that is anti- social, and you are having them on the increase,  they could cause a lot of violence. Once you are under the influence of substance, you can do anything.

    The use of substances is also a factor for the increase in crime rate in the society because if you do a screening for a lot of people that are violent, many of them have some form of substance in their system. Substance facilitates violence.”

    One of the consultants managing the drug abuse unit at Neuro-Psychiatry Hospital, Aro, Abeokuta, Ogun State, Dr Sunday Amosu, also lamented the development. “In recent times, drugs have become ubiquitous. It is in every nook and cranny of the society and there is no class distinction. The adults are there and the youths are predominant.  The old men also  have their alcohol problems too.  Those drugs that were not with us before are now here. In the past, there were some synthetic drugs like Adam and Eve  and MMVA  that were used abroad but one way or the other they have been smuggled to Nigeria .

    “Some cliques have access to these drugs. Some few years back, a lab was discovered at Satellite Town  where some of these synthetic drugs were being produced here for export. Definitely, such drugs would get to the market here too.   Drug is a big problem. Even in our environment,  cannabis is the number one illicit substance.

    “Studies in our environment as far back as  the 90s by the late Professor Odejide  say that the first exposure to drug is in the early teenage years.

    “ However, before parents get to know,   it is always some months later. People have seen children who are 10  or 11 years doing drugs but parents may not know until much later. but on the average, majority started in secondary school”, he said.

    Amosu, who is a  senior consultant psychiatrist at the Abeokuta hospital, described drug abuse as  a robber, noting that it makes the person to lose everything as he would not be able to play his role in the society. He can’t contribute to the GDP of the country. Such people make unemployment rate to increase.   He could develop  mental illness and liver problems. If they are hospitalised, man –hours are lost and the families are affected.

    “When one person in the family is sick, it affects the others and they have to cough out the money that is not enough. It is a vicious circle because everybody will be affected.  Even when they have this problem, they also recruit some other people. Drug abuse does no one any good in the society.  All hands must be on deck  to tackle it. There is no doubt about the prevalence.”

     

    Tell- tale signs that your child is abusing drugs

    Delving into his wealth of experience, Dr Amosu enumerated some  tell-tale signs   that show somebody is abusing drugs. “Some of them can be smelling of alcohol,  some people  could have angular stomatitis  that show this person has been long on alcohol. Those indulging in cannabis can have blood- shot eyes. On those who inject needle, you can see needle track.

    “ Even at home, you can notice it when somebody develops sudden change in behaviour, an easy going guy confronting his father and warning him.  When you see that  the behaviour of your child suddenly changes and he is becoming more secretive, you have a high index of suspicion. When the circle of friends changes and the ones he comes home with look wild and like yahoo yahoo boys, you should be suspicious of him. Confront him and if he denies, bring him to the hospital so that we can run a test.  There are many things that when we even get from the client, we don’t tell the parents so that we don’t break their hearts.  We may not tell them the extent because when they hear,  it would break their heart”.

    Parents, he said, should have the spare keys of the children’s rooms and should find time to go there to carry out some checks. “Sometimes, you can find what we call paraphernalia of drugs like matches, lighter  and so on.

    “ Some of them try to mask it by eating  candies that have mentol flavour.  Some use perfume and roll on. They tend to be secretive  and would not come to the sitting room when everybody is there.  When a child repeatedly takes  his bath, it  could be an attempt to mask the odour of the drugs.”

    He added: “When you are in doubt, there are tests that you can do if you have the facility. You can do urine screen  and that will pick out cannabis and other drugs.  Those who have breathe analyser, it could pick out acceptable alcohol level  and also detect if it is higher than normal from the breath.

    “When you pick it and the person denies, you can do a confrontational interview by saying the test reveals this, what do you have to say? At that point, you will see them stammering.  Some  at an anxious stage would be the one to come out and  say, I have this problem, please help me. “

     

    Stages in drug abuse

    Dr Amosu went on to list the four stages in drug abuse. “The first is the stage of experimentation or the stage of initial contact.  At that stage he is taking it only once in a while. At this stage there is no tell-tale sign. People may not even know unless somebody stumbles on him.

    “The second stage is that of more regular use.  Here he uses it and can now go and buy it  and still managing to function at home and in the society and as long as he is functioning, nobody might know. There is no curiosity around him.

    “The third stage is the stage of abuse when they would begin to develop problems like drunk driving, involving in auto-crash, having issues at work.  Before they get to that point, some five, six years might have added to their age.  That is why you could see them in their late teens and 20s.

    “The final stage is the stage of dependence or stage of addiction.  The hallmark of that stage is what is called tolerance and withdrawal syndrome.  Tolerance means that he needs to increase the dose to get the desired effect. That is the addiction we are talking about. It is a stage where the person cannot do without it.  The withdrawal symptom is the psycho-psychological symptoms that are specific to the substance.  When  the person does not have access to the substance, he would begin to develop these symptoms.

    “Those who take drugs like heroine and petazozin, when they don’t have access to them,  they would begin to have flu-like symptoms as if they have malaria.They would be drooling saliva, drooling water from the nose , water from the eyes and goose pimples all over the body.  That is what is referred to in street parlance as jonsing. Immediately he takes the drug again, the symptom vanishes. People on this stage are less compared to other stages.

     

    NDLEA yet to speak

    Contacted for the reaction of the agency on  the  menace of drug abuse and its attendant consequences on the citizens, the spokesperson of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) , Jonah Achema, promised to provide a response.  He was, however. yet to respond as at the time of filing this report.

     

     

  • Pay our promotion arrears, psychiatric workers pray in Calabar

    The Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU) and Assembly of Health care Professionals (AHPAN) of the Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital in Calabar have demanded the payment of their promotion arrears from 2014 till date.

    Rising from a Congress in Calabar, Chairman of the Senior Staff Association of the hospital and Secretary of JOHESU, Comrade Ken Bassey, who presented the communique, called for immediate and unconditional payment of the arrears.

    According to Bassey, they have given the authorities up to December 31 for the matter to be addressed.

    The communique, signed by the Chairman, Comrade Dan Odo, Secretary, Doris Nso and member, Godwin Adede read: “The congress drew the attention of the office of the Accountant-General of the Federation that promotion arrears from 2014 until date have not been paid to our members. We call for the immediate and unconditional payment of same to enable us to celebrate Christmas with our kith and kin.

    “That the management of the Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital Calabar should immediately and unconditionally release the result of this year’s promotion exercise for senior members of staff.

    “The congress commended the courage and resoluteness of President Muhammadu Buhari to fight corruption in all its ramifications.  The congress prayed that God should renew his vigour and patriotism in order to succeed despite daunting challenges.

    “The congress expressed appreciation on the setting up of the 30-man committee on the national minimum wage and called for speedy action to ensure that Nigerian workers heave a sigh of relief with the much-expected living wage early next year.

    “The congress applauded the bravery of the Nigerian Armed Forces to decimate the dreaded Boko Haram sect. As they intensify efforts to mop up their remnants, they should also direct attention to renewed incidences of kidnapping and robbery across the country.

    “The congress equally appeals to her members to show more commitment to their duties by shunning absenteeism, lateness to work and truancy.”

     

  • Borno malnutrition crisis will soon be over, says Health Minister

    Borno malnutrition crisis will soon be over, says Health Minister

    The Minister of Health Prof. Isaac Adewale has said that the malnutrition problems in Borno state will soon be over with the identification of the three major problems.

    The three major problems according to the minister, were malaria, diarrhea diseases, and upper respiratory track infections  which have ravaged the population.

    The mister who was addressing the press at the Teachers Village IDP Camp in Maiduguri, Borno State after a three day official visit for the Mid Term Review of the Health and Nutrition Emergency Response Project which was launched in the State in January this year after the Federal Government declared a state of emergency on malnutrition in the state, said he is pleased with the progress made so far in the last three months of the programe.

    “I am highly impressed with what we are doing because no intervention is hundred percent perfect. What we are here to do is to review what we have done, assess progress and tinker with the plan so that we can really become perfect. What is on ground is excellent. The drugs are being distributed, people are being seeing on ground and we have identified the three major diseases, which is malaria, diarrhea diseases, upper respiratory track  infection which are the three common problems and we are happy about this because a problem identified is as good as the solution has been found. So this problem will soon be over.  We want to make sure that people are healthy and are well fed. If people are well-fed, then we can jokingly say that  we are investing in cerebral architecture”, the minister said.

    Prof. Adewale who also visited the Federal Neuro Psychiatric Hospital in Maiduguri where he interacted with psychiatric  patients as part of the psycho-Social aspect of the intervention expressed happiness that the psycho-social aspect of the intervention is the most organized, adding that it requires a lot of coordination and planning.

    “The psycho-social aspect is not neglected. It requires better planning and coordination and others. We need to plan carefully and be coordinated before it is done.  It is not like malaria and if you look at it critically, it is one of the most organized of all the intervention and the level of care is excellent. Looking forward is to more ,  in term of providing  support for the people, putting in place an excellent system that is  robust, resilient, that is patients  centered and caring for the people of Borno State,” Prof. Adewale informed.

    A part of what came out at the technical review of the program on Saturday where some stakeholders called for the extension of the program, the minister said; “We know that this program cannot end in six months. The drugs that we brought to Bono state should last them for two years. We are quite confident that extending it will not be expensive as the initial flag off. We will not need to buy new ambulances, new delivery trucks or  buy new drugs. What we need to do is keep the personale going and some money for logistics and running cost,” The minister assured.

    While   stressing the importance of accurate data for the success of the program, the minister disclosed that each team at the local Government has a data officer  which after collation at the local government levels will be centrally collated, adding that the data will help in measuring up the program and planning.

    “In every endeavor, what we see in program that does not have data  mean it has not happened.  Data is what tell us that it has happen. Data is what we need to assess progress. Data is what we need to actually evaluate and also think cost. Each of the team has a data person. What we do is to integrate all the Data persons from the teams so that we can collate centrally. I think we are doing well in that area,” the minster explained.

    On the issue of Drug Abuse the minister disclosed that more awareness is been created with many of the victims realizing the dangers of drug abuse.

    “As a scientist, I wouldn’t take it that it’s on the rise. What I believe is that there is more awareness now than before. When there is awareness, things will get better. I saw a student at the Nureo Psychiatric Centre who admitted that he was on drug. To me that is a step forward. If you can admit that you are on drugs then the solution is almost done. I think collectively, we will have a drug management program that will be responsible for rehabilitation, re-integration and detoxication become part of what we do”, Prof. Adewale said.

    The Director/ National Coordinator, Health Sector Response Humanitarian Emergencies in Nigeria, Dr.Ngozi Azodoh said the malnutrition crisis in Borno State has significantly improved from the last time its was reported and with the Emergence Response Project which she described as the most comprehensive and most coordinated intervention currently in place in Borno State.

    Dr. Azodoh assured that all the gaps identified in the mid-term review will be bridged in order to strengthen the project to be more impactful to the people of the state.

    The Country Reps of WHO Mr. Wondi Alehu said he is pleased with the progress made so far on the project.

    According to him,  he joined the team of the Honorable Minister to enable him have firsthand experience of what is going on in the project.

  • Kaduna Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital union floats football team

     

    The Medical Director, Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital, Barnawa, Kaduna, Prof. Taiwo Lateef commended the Medical and Health Workers Union of Nigeria (MHWUN) of the hospital for floating a football team.

    Lateef, who led top members of staff of the Hospital to watch training of the team on Thursday, said he was impressed with the zeal of the team in projecting the health institution positively.

    He said the team would bring unity of purpose and healthy rivalry within the institution.

    The medical director assured the team of his support whenever necessary and tasked members of staff to take advantage of the sporting facilities provided in keeping themselves healthy.

    The Chairman of the MHWUN in the institution, Mr Atule Emmanuel told newsmen that the team was being funded by the union, adding that the team would be supported to qualify into the national Division One League.

    “Our intention is to form a club that will play in Division One, so that we can discover talents that will play for the national team from our hospital,” he said.

    According to him, other unions will be co-opted to support the team.

    He stated that he was optimistic that the team would get corporate sponsorship and reap from the publicity they would get.

    Earlier, the technical Adviser/Chief Coach of the team, Paul Hossana said the team was working hard to make progress and expressed the hope tat it would blend and become a force to reckon with.

    “We have played several friendly matches and I am convinced that my players are ready to shine.

    “I appreciate the medical director, Prof. Sheikh and I am urging the players and entire management of the hospital to support me fully so that we can move this team to a higher level together,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the institution is billed to host a sports fiesta, as other institutions which include the Federal Medical Centre Lafia, and the National Ear Care Centre, Kaduna have indicated interest to participate.

  • Lagos Psychiatric hospital doctors protest,wear black bands, coats

    Lagos Psychiatric hospital doctors protest,wear black bands, coats

    The Association of Resident Doctors, Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba in Lagos, on Tuesday complied with the directive of the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) by wearing black bands and coats to register their grievances.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that this was in line with the NARD directive to its members.

    The national body of the association had directed its members to wear black ward coats and conduct rallies at the expiration of initial ultimatum given to the Federal Government on Jan. 2.

    NAN reports that NARD had on Dec. 19 given the Federal Government up to Jan. 2 to implement the National Health Act 2014 and address other demands of the association.

    The |National President of NARD, Dr Kenneth Uwajeh, told NAN in Lagos that doctors at the hospital complied with the directive of the national body.

    Uwajeh said, “We have black bands on our arms, some of us are wearing black jackets.

    “We want the masses to be aware of the plights of the patients, doctors and the society as regard the medical profession.

    “If they are not catered for, the health is not catered for; many people cannot afford healthcare because they have no insurance or access to facilities.

    The doctor said that the demands of the association had been abandoned for long; this had jeopardised the future of medicine in the country.

    According to him, the government should do the needful in order to move the medical profession forward.

    “We are asking for a white paper on the residency training programme; basically, it is part of the legal framework.

    “We need that because the residency training programme is being conducted in a haphazard fashion.

    “We want a document so that residency programme can be consistent across the country; we need a clear-cut document that is consistent, objective and void of bias.

    “The National Health Act 2014 has not been implemented.

    “This basically will cater for the needs of the patients largely and improve the nation’s health indices and practice of the profession, “ Uwajeh said.