Tag: health

  • Health benefits of garlic

    Health benefits of garlic

    Whole books have been written about garlic, an herb affectionately called “the stinking rose” in light of its numerous therapeutic benefits. A member of the lily or allium family, which also includes onions and leeks, garlic is rich in a variety of powerful sulfur-containing compounds including thiosulfinates (of which the best known compound is allicin), sulfoxides (among which the best known compound is alliin), and dithiins (in which the most researched compound is ajoene). While these compounds are responsible for garlic’s characteristically pungent odour, they are also the source of many of its health-promoting effects.

    More recent research has identified additional sulfur-containing compounds that are responsible for garlic’s star status as a health-supporting food. These sulfur compounds include 1,2-vinyldithiin (1,2-DT), and thiacremonone. The hydrogen sulfide gas (H2S) that can be made from garlic’s sulfides has also been the subject of great research interest. When produced and released from our red blood cells, this H2S gas can help dilate our blood vessels and help keep our blood pressure under control.

    Finally, when thinking about the sulfur compounds in garlic, it is important to remember that sulfur itself is a key part of our health. Several research studies have noted that the average U.S. diet may be deficient in sulfur, and that foods rich in sulfur may be especially important for our health. In addition to all of the sulfur-related compounds listed above, garlic is an excellent source of manganese and vitamin B6, a very good source of vitamin C, and a good source of selenium.

    Cardiovascular benefits

    Most of the research on garlic and our cardiovascular system has been conducted on garlic powder, garlic oil, or aged garlic extracts rather than garlic in food form. But despite this research limitation, food studies on garlic show this allium vegetable to have important cardioprotective properties. Garlic is clearly able to lower our blood triglycerides and total cholesterol, even though this reduction can be moderate (5-15%).

    But cholesterol and triglyceride reduction are by no means garlic’s most compelling benefits when it comes to cardioprotection. Those top-level benefits clearly come in the form of blood cell and blood vessel protection from inflammatory and oxidative stress. Damage to blood vessel linings by highly reactive oxygen molecules is a key factor for increasing our risk of cardiovascular problems, including heart attack and atherosclerosis. Oxidative damage also leads to unwanted inflammation, and it is this combination of unwanted inflammation and oxidative stress that puts our blood vessels at risk of unwanted plaque formation and clogging. Garlic unique set of sulfur-containing compounds helps protect us against both possibilities—oxidative stress and unwanted inflammation.

    • Source: www.whfoods.com
  • Nutrition facts and health benefits of corn

    Eating whole grain corn regularly may have a number of health benefits:

     

    Eye Health

    Macular degeneration and cataracts are among the world’s most common visual impairments and major causes of blindness. Infections and old age are among the main causes of these diseases, but nutrition may also play a significant role.

    Dietary intake of antioxidants, most notably carotenoids, such as zeaxanthin and lutein, may have considerable benefits for eye health. Lutein and zeaxanthin are the predominant carotenoids in corn, accounting for approximately 70 per cent of the total carotenoid content. However, their levels are generally low in white corn.

    Commonly known as macular pigments, lutein and zeaxanthin are found in the human retina, the light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, where they protect against oxidative damage caused by blue light. High levels of these carotenoids in the blood are strongly linked with reduced risk of both macular degeneration and cataracts.

    Observational studies have also shown that high dietary intake of lutein and zeaxanthin may be protective, but not all studies support this.

    One study in 356 middle-aged and elderly people found a 43 percent reduction in the risk of macular degeneration among those with the highest intake of carotenoids, especially lutein and zeaxanthin, compared to those with the lowest intake.

    Taken together, regular consumption of foods rich in lutein and zeaxanthin, such as yellow corn, may have beneficial effects on eye health.

     

    Bottom Line: Being a good source of lutein and zeaxanthin, corn may contribute to the maintenance of eye health.

    Prevention of Diverticular Disease

    Diverticular disease  (diverticulosis) is a condition characterised with pouches in the walls of the colon. The main symptoms are cramps, flatulence, bloating, and less often, bleeding and infection.

    Despite lack of evidence, avoiding popcorn and other high-fiber foods, such as nuts and seeds, has been recommended as a preventive strategy against diverticular disease. However, one observational study, which followed 47,228 men for 18 years, does not support this recommendation.

    In fact, popcorn consumption was found to be protective. Men who ate the most popcorn were 28 percent less likely to develop diverticular disease than those with the lowest intake.

     

    Bottom Line: Corn does not promote diverticular disease, as previously thought. On the contrary, it seems to be protective.

     

    Corn Oil

    The fat content of corn ranges from five to six percent, making it a low-fat food. However, corn germ, an abundant side-product of corn milling, is rich in fat and used to make corn oil, commonly used for cooking.

    Refined corn oil is mainly composed of linoleic acid, a polyunsaturated fatty acid, while monounsaturated and saturated fats make up the rest. Corn oil also contains significant amounts of vitamin E, ubiquinone (Q10), and phytosterols, increasing its shelf life and making it effective for lowering cholesterol levels.

    However, there are still a number of concerns with refined seed oils like corn oil. Whole corn is fine, but corn oil is not recommended.

  • Samsung: tough driving HSE awareness in workers

    Samsung Heavy Industries Nigeria (SHIN), yesterday, said it has been tough driving awareness about Health, Safety and Envronment (HSE) among its workforce in the country.

    Despite this challenge, it said it achieved 1,000 injury free days in its fabrication and integration yard in Lagos.

    The firm, in a statement, said the development was borne out of the need to continually promote the health and safety of its workers.

    Its Senior Health, Safety and Environment (HSE), Bala Adjuya said the achievement has demonstrated the resolve of the firm to guarantee the safety of its past, present and future workers.

    Read also: Samsung reaches 1,200 days with no lost time injuries

    Adjuya said: “The main challenge for Samsung is that we have many employees who have never worked in the industry before. So it is hard to instill an awareness of health and safety. But once you train them, it becomes a skill for life.

    “The feat begins from the day that new people come into the yard. We first take people to HSE training even if they only come onto the site for a job interview. It makes me proud that during the massive Egina FPSO Project,  we were able to pull through with no sanction from regulators.”

  • Ganduje distributes safe delivery kits to expectant mothers in Kano

    Kano State Government has distributed over 10,000 Delivery Kits worth N150 million to Pregnant Women in the State.

    The distribution exercise covered 15 Local Government Areas with each package containing basic items needed during and after delivery.

    The State Governor, Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje disclosed this on Thursday, during the launch of the distribution of the Free Delivery Kits to 2,000 expectant mothers at Gama Primary Health Centre, where the re-run will be held in Nassarawa Local Government Area.

    Dr. Ganduje, represented by his deputy, Dr. Nasiru Yusuf Gawuna stated that the present administration has given priority to free Maternal care for the protection of mothers and children.

    “Today’s Programme is a continuation of the Kits distribution exercise whereby 2,000 women beneficiaries are going to collect delivery Kits containing items needed for by every pregnant Women” he stated.

    Ganduje disclosed that the administration had organised 18 Months training programme on Midwifery after which the trainees were posted to rural areas to assist in ensuring safe delivery.

    According to the Governor, about 1,936 midwives were given special training on how to address contemporary challenges of the profession, adding that the government had equally procured tricycles for conveying pregnant Women to health facilities in their localities.

    He noted that the government also conducted free eye treatment across the state, adding that the exercise which took place at Isa kaita Primary Health Care centre, where over 150 people benefitted, has recorded a huge success.

    He pointed out that over 3,000 people with eye problems also received free medicine and eyeglasses.

    Gov. Ganduje assured the people of his administration’s commitment to continue to execute more projects meant to improve their wellbeing.

    Earlier, the State Commissioner for Health Dr. Kabir Ibrahim Getso said in an effort to improve the Health Sector, the administration of Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje had renovated over 300 Hospitals across the State.

    He maintained that plan was underway to upgrade more Hospitals to allow people in the State get easy access to medical treatment.

    ” Apart from this, the State has recruited more Staff on health to address manpower shortage and create high productivity in our services ” he added.

    Dr. Getso urged the beneficiaries to make the good use of the materials given to them and make sure they reciprocate the gesture by coming out enmass to vote Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje on the 23rd March 2019 supplementary election.

  • London patient ‘cleared’ of HIV

    A London patient has become the second known man to be cleared of AIDS virus after receiving a bone marrow transplant from an HIV resistant donor, according to his doctor.

    The patient has shown no trace of previous HIV infection since he underwent the transplant operation three years ago.

    “There is no virus there that we can measure. We can’t detect anything,’’ said Ravindra Gupta, a professor and HIV biologist who co-led a team of doctors treating the man.

    However, Gupta described his patient as “functionally cured’’ and “in remission,’’ rather than “cured. It’s too early to say he’s cured,” he said.

    The first known patient to be functionally cured of HIV is an American man, Timothy Brown, who also underwent similar treatment in Germany in 2007.

    Both patients received bone marrow stem cells from donors with a rare genetic mutation known as “CCR5 delta 32,” which confers resistance to HIV.

    Between Brown and the new London patient, scientists made several attempts to cure other AIDS patients using the same method, but failed in all of them.

    Gupta said the method used is not appropriate for all patients but offers hope for new treatment strategies.

    The study is to be published on Tuesday in the journal Nature.

    As of 2017, there were approximately 36.9 million people worldwide living with HIV/AIDS.

    AIDS-related deaths have been reduced by more than 51 per cent since the peak in 2004, according to the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS.

    The authors of the study published Tuesday have also said the technique may not necessarily be effective for all HIV-infected individuals, specifically those carrying the gene CXCR4.

    CCR5 is the gene allegedly edited by Chinese scientist He Jiankui, which led to the birth of babies in 2018, who are said to be HIV resistant.

    Sarah Palmer, the Deputy Director of the Centre for Virus Research at The Westmead Institute for Medical Research in Sydney, said the study “further confirms the promising HIV curative effects of bone marrow transplantation from the relatively few persons, who have the HIV resistant cells.

    “However, this curative process is not yet applicable to tens of millions of other HIV-infected individuals worldwide. The next steps should be focused on how to do so,” she added.

  • Cancer biggest killer in Ibadan, says UCH CMD

    The Chief Medical Director (CMD) University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, Prof. Temitope Alonge, has revealed that cancer is the commonest cause of death in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital since 2015.

    Alonge disclosed this while reflecting on his eight-year tenure in an interaction with reporters in Ibadan.

    The Orthopedic surgeon explained that data generated from the hospital revealed that cancer has been the leading source of death in the hospital along with infections including HIV/AIDS, injuries and Cardiovascular diseases since 2015.

    To address the ugly trend, Alonge said the hospital acquired two 22-channel brachi-therapy machines able to treat the three commonest types of cancer.

    He added the machine can treat minimum of 50 patients a day.

    According to him, most of the infections are HIV/AIDS-related, dismissing the impression the killer virus has been largely stamped out as a ruse.

    He said the campaign against stigmatisation may have contributed to the spread of the virus again, as infected people live without stigma, get more comfortable but go round to infect unsuspecting members of the public.

    Alonge said he was leaving the position fulfilled because he succeeded largely in his dream of transforming the UCH.

    He added his goal was to build the people, build a system and build service and infrastructures that will enable the hospital regain its status as the leading teaching hospital in West Africa.

    He pointed out that he succeeded in the goal, hence his feeling of fulfillment.

    The outgoing CMD said he enjoyed the support of the staff and Board of Management in his efforts to transform the hospital, stressing that he was leaving the hospital better than he met it.

    His successor, Prof. Abiodun Otegbayo, takes over at the end of the month.

  • Will Nigeria’s comatose health sector get better?

    Monday, February 4, was World Cancer Day and the narratives concerning the country’s health sector were anything but inspiring. The day after, the headlines were dominated by cacophonous rant and hollow promises made by politicians of different shades and hue on the campaign train. Little or sparse commentary was reserved for health news on cancer awareness campaign and they were mostly buried in the pages with faint headings. For me, it was an irony of unimaginable tragedy that we were busy celebrating the action and inaction of the same characters that fleece our treasury and use part of the loot to procure medical cards for themselves and members of their families in the best medical facilities in Europe and America when we could have seized the opportunity to draw the government’s attention to the rot within. For, if the truth must be told, our health system requires urgent attention to save it from a terminal sickness and a seeming permanent amnesia. Some of these persons, I was told, have upgraded their medical cards to gold to add some panache and class to the treatment of their ailments just as they fly only First Class and lodge in only five star hotels across the globe. Even when they die, their remains stay in the best morgue until when freighted home for burial in golden caskets. Vanity!

    Amid the chaos, figures relating to Nigeria’s losses to medical tourism are varied and equally depressing. Latest reports indicate that losses to medical junkets by Nigerians were more than the entire appropriation for the health sector by the Federal Government in 2018. For now, the authorities are yet to disprove the claim made by the National Secretary of the Academic Staff Union of Research Institutions, Dr. Theophilus Ndubuaku that over N359.2bn was being spent annually to access medical care abroad while the entire budget for the sector in the 2018 budget was just N340.45 billion. Breaking it down to what that means for you and I, Ndubuaku said the health cost per citizen for that year was a meagre N1.888. Shocked? Well, I’m not. The sad tale did not start today. It was for that reason that, many years back, our hospitals were ingeniously tagged ‘mere consulting clinics’ until the latter days when they were downgraded to ‘death centres.’ The big question is: How bad would things get for the poor and vulnerable millions before the leadership would have the courage to declare an emergency in our health sector?

    In a country with less than N2000 per head for annual medical treatment, Ndubuaku, in a report published by the Vanguard on November 20, 2018 at the launch of a state of the art surgery equipment by a private hospital in Abuja, explained that the nation records an average 9000 medical tours monthly with “India being the major beneficiary of 500 visits monthly while many of these travelers often have to go back monthly for checkups and sometimes for corrective surgery.” He didn’t mince words that these medical feats could have been carried out here if the required facilities were to be on the priority list of medical expenditures and procured for our medical centres. Well, that remains a dream yet to be realised in the long list of items stocked in the pipeline. Instead, a handful of private medical centres feast on the few who could afford the expensive bills while the government hospital groan under a debilitating regime of paucity of funds and management crises with threats of strikes and counter strikes from both medical and non-medical staff standing out as visible signs of the putrefying decay.

    In 2017, the Minister of State for Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, lamented that about $1bn is lost annually to medical tourism in spite of a troubling report that over 2,300 under-five children and 145 women of child bearing age die daily in Nigeria due to the challenging condition of mother/infant access to quality healthcare. That is outside the mounting figures of those who die from terminal diseases and even common ailments daily either due to negligence, lack of drugs, poverty or ignorance.  And, in December 2017, a former Health Minister, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, made startling revelations about the comatose state of our health sector and the implications for national growth. He said, aside the N175bn lost yearly to medical tourism, the collateral damage could be gleaned from skill proficiency as “both trainers and trainees are not exposed to enough cases and, of course, the quality of care ultimately suffers”, adding that “as outbound medical tourism becomes the preference of patients, the local sector loses the confidence of the populace and the loss of morale among health personnel.’

    As I write this, Chukwu grim imagery tugs at my heart. Unfortunately, those who should be setting the right examples are busy hugging the skies, seeking treatment in far flung countries even for simple ailment like toothache. Add that to the fact that locally trained medical personnel takes a lion’s share of Nigeria’s brain drain debacle and you would understand why it was the same tale of woes that highlighted events on the World Cancer Day. With the high number of deaths recorded from cancer in recent times and the concerted efforts being put into the fight against the ravaging disease in other clime, it is shocking that not many of our so-called state-of-the-art government hospitals can boast of having modern machines that could help in early detection and treatment.  According to the founder of the Tai Aremu Cancer Awareness Campaign Organisation, Mr. Aremu Segun Kuti, the entire nation has fewer than five cancer treatment machines working in its government hospitals, thereby forcing many cancer patients to rely on the inadequate facilities at the National Hospital, Abuja. Naturally, both personnel and machines must have been stretched to the limit even as annual expenditure on chemotherapy per annum is said to be over N7m. How much is Nigeria’s minimum wage anyway? Kuti, whose wife died as a result of cancer, said the drugs are not within the reach of the patients who throng the hospital. For the patients, who longed for the day when top state and federal functionaries would be barred from travelling abroad for routine medical checkups, it has been a tale of sorrow, anguish and death as they queue to access the facilities at the national hospital. Sad, very sad.

    In a country where those who regularly colonize the national treasury fritter millions of dollars on buying choice cars and living large, you wonder why no conscious effort has been made to procure these life-saving machines in, at least, one government hospital in all the states. According to reports, the machine and relevant components can be acquired with just one million dollars. But for blind greed and vacuous embrace of extravagant lifestyles with no positive impact on humanity, I do not see why six of the machines cannot be procured for one hospital each in the six geo-political zones to ease the needless burden on the Abuja facilities if government is really about the people. But what do I know? We were in this country, under this same democratic experiment, when those who vowed to patronise Nigerian hospitals like every other poor citizen, were seen sneaking into top notch medical facilities in Wiesbaden in Germany, London in the United Kingdom, Cairo in Egypt, Dubai in the United Arab Emirates or Riyadh in Saudi Arabia for routine and non-routine medical tourism. And here, patients hardly get bed spaces; drugs are always expensive if they are ever available; surgeries are carried out sometimes in candlelit theatres or at the mercy of the officials of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria; medical personnel can, if they wish, down tools even when attending to emergency cases; the Hippocratic Oath is abused and raped at will and self-preservation is the music everyone listens to while lives get wasted daily. That, in a nutshell, is the sickening report of a healthcare system with the highest number of policy somersault in modern history!

    Will things ever get better?

  • Maternal and Child Health Care: Is Lagos Winning the Battle?

     

     It was the first pregnancy of 25-year-old Nafisat (not real name). Like any expectant mother, she was excited and hopeful. In fact, she was always willing to help new mums in the prenatal clinic she visited, seeing her own future child in those little babies. On her due date, she had gone into labour. She didn’t labour for long – after about three pushes, her baby was born. Unfortunately, the child only lived for a few minutes. The reason for its death was not known and no information was given.

    The joy of pregnancy and childbirth is the hope and desire of many families. Sadly, in many parts of Nigeria, this is not quite the case. In such places, keeping babies – and, sometimes, their mothers – alive in the first five years is a perennial battle. Newborn, under-5 and even under-10 mortalities are still a nightmare for parents and health workers.

    A Dire Situation

    In the past few years alone, money and expertise have been invested in altering Nigeria’s position as the second largest contributor to maternal mortality worldwide through initiatives such as the World Bank-supported Saving One Million Lives Initiative and the UK government-funded Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Programme (MNCH2). The reason for these interventions is clear: more than 80 percent of newborn deaths are the result of premature birth, complications during labour and delivery, and infections such as sepsis, meningitis and pneumonia. Even more devastating is the knowledge that, according to recent research, essential interventions reaching women and babies on time would have prevented most of these deaths.

    As at 2003, over 50 per cent of the births in Nigeria still occurred at home; the women would rather go to traditional birth attendants most of whom are unqualified. In addition, only slightly more than one-third of births are attended by doctors, nurses, or midwives while children keep dying from a variety of ailments from haemorrhage to malaria. The lack of personal hygiene, malnutrition and inadequate preparedness of mothers also contribute to their vulnerability and the eventual surrender of their babies to the cold hands of death.

    Underneath the statistics of child mortality lies the pain of human tragedy for thousands of families that have lost their loved ones. Is there an end in sight?

    A Glimmer of Hope?

    Today, on a daily basis, Nigeria loses about 2,300 under-five-year-olds and 145 women of childbearing age. Although analyses of recent trends show that Nigeria has made some progress in cutting down infant and under-five mortality rates, the pace remains too slow to achieve the target of ending preventable deaths of newborns and children before 2030. Yet, while the nation, as a whole, scrambles to achieve the sustainable development goals (SDGs), there appears to be a glimmer of hope in some parts.

    Among other States in the country, Lagos appears to be the one that has recorded some successes in ensuring that maternal mortality is at one of the lowest in recent times. Indeed, there have been suggestions that previously high under-5 mortality rates have been put under control. Perhaps, this is not unrelated to the recent purchase of important equipment such as delivery kits, apparatus for neonatal services and a variety of drugs for obstetric and post-natal care.

    Recently, the Lagos government outlined some of its achievements in the health sector including the acquisition of an electronic health records system to reduce patients’ waiting time “to the barest minimum”. The last few years also saw the development of health infrastructure and the procurement of various facilities from power generators to x-ray machines at some of its General Hospitals.

    While new equipment and facilities may support claims about the positive situation of health in Lagos, actual confirmation of progress can only emerge from available data on its health sector.

     

    An Uneven and Unhealthy Trend

     

     

     

    Comprehensive information on public services in Lagos is a very scarce commodity. However, errors made using inadequate data are often much less than those using no data at all because they can help unearth critical, hitherto unknown, facts.

    For example, data on child health received from the Lagos State government in 2018 reveals some curious patterns: isolated spikes in the mortality of children aged 1-10 in 2011 and 2015 after declining in the two years before. It raises key questions about why so many children die in that period. While the reason may not immediately clear, it is relevant to the analyses that both were years in which general elections took place across the country, including Lagos State. Although there are no studies establishing a correlation between election years and aggravated rates of infant mortality, the data draws attention to the possibility of a connection.

    If a theory could be put forward about the surge in 2015, it would point to the prolonged period it took the Akinwunmi Ambode administration to appoint its commissioners, as well as those of the State’s ministry of health under whose leadership the primary health sector was to operate. As is well-known, election periods in Nigeria are characterised by a frenzied and heated polity. Apparently, this takes attention away from the implementation of public projects and puts far more focus on electoral campaigns than public governance. Ambode may have been distracted by the euphoria that trailed his election victory. A case in point: just before the 2015 elections, there was no Commissioner for Health in Lagos until towards the end of 2015 when Dr Jide Idris was reappointed.

    In addition to the election year of 2015, the seeds of the nationwide economic recession in 2016, which were sown between 2014 and 2015 with the crash in oil prices, may have also had early consequences of increased infant mortality in Lagos. However, this cannot account for the high rate experienced in 2011. In any case, the real problem is likely to lie deeper. Whether in an election year or recession, the health structures in a place like Lagos should function properly and depend less on external forces. To be described as a top-class destination for health in the country, Lagos should boast of a well-oiled system that can withstand the strains of wider political or economic situations. But does Lagos actually have such a system?

     

     

    The Structure of Healthcare Services in Lagos

    Since access to private healthcare is expensive, facilities provided by the government are the most visited in Lagos. It is perhaps for this reason that the healthcare system in Lagos is one of the most sophisticated in the country. Yet, with its teeming population, what is available may actually be grossly inadequate for the more than 21 million people who reside there.

    The public health care system in Lagos comprises one tertiary health facility, about 26 General Hospitals, seven Maternal and Child Care Centres (MCCs), and 250 Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs) spread across the state’s twenty local government areas.

    PHCs, like in other parts of the country, are sited in such a way as to ensure that residents can access basic healthcare services within their immediate localities without the need to travel long distances. The expectation is that only cases that cannot be handled at the primary level would be referred to the secondary and tertiary facilities. Routine services like checking blood pressure, immunization and the treatment of boils, sprains and other minor injuries are first to be checked at a PHC. Likewise, the Maternal and Child Care Centres were not designed to be the first port of call for attending to pregnant women except in situations of high-risk pregnancies. They are emergency referral centres for cases of complications that arise during labour.

    In 2012, the former Governor of Lagos State, Babatunde Raji Fashola launched the Lagos State Maternal Child Mortality Reduction (MCMR) program involving the upgrade of some PHCs with more equipment to make them flagship centres. Accordingly, 2013 and 2014 recorded the lowest mortality figures. But even then, the rates were still high enough to warrant concern about the healthcare delivery architecture in the state.

     

    A Sad Report

    In spite of the government’s efforts, the MCMR program did not do enough to tackle the dilapidation of PHC facilities that had begun during the run-up to the 2011 elections. The results of an independent assessment by the Lagos State Civil Society Partnership (LASCOP) and Innovation Matters on the state of the Primary Health Care (PHC) facilities in Lagos State in 2013 did not bode well for mothers and their children.

    That assessment found that seven PHCs were found to be lacking in basic emergency delivery and care equipment. Of the 29 PHCs inspected, seven did not have laboratory equipment with functional malaria and HIV test kits. Eleven out of 30 PHCs did not have ambulance services, while fifteen of them lacked power supply in the labour rooms. Only six PHCs had potable water supply, with twenty-four relying on wells and boreholes. The report also noted that ‘the water at Apapa PHC for example, was not clean for drinking because of the colour and there was no water purifying instrument’. At other centres surveyed, bad drainage systems caused flooding in raining seasons, creating difficulties in movement in addition to making them unsanitary for healthcare delivery.

    Furthermore, no PHC had a disability health specialist and none had inclusive facilities like ramps for wheelchair users. Only four out of 29 PHCs claimed they had Special Care Givers and counsellors but these staff were not specialized in disability affairs. It is a situation that has discouraged persons with disabilities from visiting PHCs in Lagos. Only four out of 24 PHCs claimed to have language interpreters, another crucial point for the lack of inclusiveness at these facilities. A woman had complained: ‘We don’t go to hospital! What for? If we go, we will see the nurse, [and] how do we tell the nurse what is paining us? Even when the nurses are talking they cannot let us know what they are saying unless I have an interpreter with me … (my daughter) … I cannot always have her with me. By the time I don’t talk, the nurses are impatient and will tell me to get out. Many of us don’t go because it is of no use.’ It is no surprise then that half of the women who made their monthly visits to PHCs for antenatal care reported being unhappy with staff attitudes.

    Admittedly, the survey was conducted five years ago. But the outcome of those decrepit conditions is still being felt today: fewer and fewer women are patronising PHCs; pregnant women are shunning health care centres for Traditional Birth Attendants (TBAs) or going directly to tertiary facilities like the MCCs for routine preliminary services. Unfortunately, most TBAs are not expertly trained to handle childbirth and some of its complications while the MCCs have quickly overrun their capacity.

    During this story, one of the writers paid regular visits to the Maternal and Child Care Centre at Amuwo-Odofin and saw things for herself. On each of those days, the spectacle was the same: delicate pregnant women, babies crying, people standing, the electrical power going on and off, making the environment not only stuffy but uncomfortably noisy with the sound of the generator. The hospital was usually under-staffed, yet many women would rather use its services than walk into less busy PHCs. “It is easier to have access to a Consultant Gynaecologist or Obstetrician”, one woman mentioned. Many women also had a lot to say about the (lack of) quality of customer service by the medical staff. The waiting time is often long because of the crowd. On some days, there are a hundred people or more. The writer had to wait for five hours to see a doctor. But this was nothing compared with the agony of the woman who had given birth through a caesarean section just a few days before and complained of pain and swelling on the surgery spot. Although she had arrived at the Centre by 8am after dropping off her other children at school, she was still left unattended to by 5pm. It took the intervention of other women appealing to the matron for her to be allowed to see the doctor. At that point, the nursing mother was already walking away frustrated and in tears. Health centres like this one are overwhelmed principally because they continue to attract people who should be visiting PHCs closest to them. The PHCs were built to attend to many of the cases for which people stream to secondary and tertiary centres but, ultimately, they are still deemed not to be in satisfactory condition to cater for even the basic services required by expecting mothers or their newborn children.

     

     

    Problems Have Their Solutions

    Despite the apparent facelift given to PHCs in 2012 (through the MCMR program) as well as recent claims of progress by the present administration, the Lagos health care system still has some way to go to significantly attenuate the plight of mothers and their children in Lagos.

    Possible reasons for the sorry situation of PHCs can be condensed into two:

    The first lies in the trend earlier identified, namely, the neglect of public health facilities in election season. From available data, one can tell that Lagos State is approaching that time when many lives could be lost. On the cusp of another election year, it is imperative that the trend noticed in 2011 and 2015 be curtailed in order to forestall a recurrence. With the anxieties of electoral campaigns and political manoeuvrings heating up, the lives of mothers and children are at stake and another upward spike in the mortality rates is definitely undesirable.

    The second reason for the poor state of PHCs today is based on the assumption that the Lagos State government is actually doing enough, within the limits of available resources, to upgrade the facilities available in the various health centres including the PHCs. In this case, the problem would point to the lack of sufficient and effective communication to the public about new developments in the Lagos health sector.

    The solution to this problem does not lie in the occasional publications released by the government on its web channel or through carefully-worded press releases sent to newspapers. (Unfortunately, the information released through those outlets often lack substance because they are filled with questionable claims that cannot be publicly verified.) Rather, the problem can and should be overcome by the proactive and systematic publication of data related to the provision of health in the State: infrastructure, healthcare and policy.

     

    Better Data Will Lead to Better Health Services

    By 2050, it is projected that there will be three times as many people in Lagos as there are today, a possibility that should lead to concerted, sustainable and data-driven measures to ensure a safe and welcoming environment for the future population.

    The lack of awareness, the lack of data from the State government impacts on other public services. The availability of public health data can make life-altering changes in patient education, treatment and more. Data also serves the government in policy and budgetary planning to improve services and for better planning. The Lagos State Health Insurance Scheme, for example, needs quality data to work effectively.

    The benefits of data cannot be overstated. When they are publicly disclosed, government processes can be constructively scrutinised and ameliorated. With data, citizens can collaborate with the government in tackling the challenges they face. Although examples of data-driven enhancements to the health sector exist in Nigeria and other countries, Lagos can take the lead in creating a culture of data disclosure or risk losing its position as an exemplar of international cooperation and public development for its benefactors.

    Families need these interventions. Nigeria needs this kind of leadership and initiative. And Lagos can show how to truly win the battle against maternal and child mortality if its government pays more attention to data and proactively shares it with the public. If it did, perhaps Nafisat would have also experienced the joy of those mothers to whom she had offered her selfless help.

     

    This story is an output of the open contracting workshop for journalists

     

    This article was written as part of the Open Contracting Programme for Journalists workshop organised by the Open Data Research Centre of the School of Media and Communication, Pan-Atlantic University, Lagos

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • JOHESU paralyses activities at Ministry of Health

    Health workers under the aegis of Joint Health Workers Union ( JOHESU ) paralysed activities at the Federal Ministry of Health Monday, demanding immediate implementation of the collective agreement reached with workers.

    The protesting JOHESU members also called for a holistic turn around the health sector to enable Nigerians have access to quality healthcare.

    They kicked against unjustified withholding of the salaries of JOHESU members for the months of April and May 2018 and also called for upward adjustment of CONHESS salary structure.

    The workers according to a staff of the ministry, arrived at the ministry complex in large number carrying placards with several inscriptions, threatened to mobilize Nigerian workers to come out with their mattresses, pillows and cooking utensils to the Federal Secretariat Abuja and also the houses of the Minister of Health, Prof Isaac Adewole in both Abuja and his village in Osun state.

    Read Also: Strike: JOHESU issues seven-day ultimatum

    Addressing the workers, President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Ayuba Waba who decried the discrimination being meted to health workers in the country said for peace to reign in the sector, there must be justice adding that has written to the President, Minister of health and the Minister of Labour and Productivity on the need to resolve the dispute in the health sector but has not received any response from them.

    Waba who criticized the Minister of Health for implementing No work No Pay rule in the health sector said, “The law of No work No Pay is a military decree. It is decree 54 of 1977. No government in the history of Nigeria either military or civilian has implemented it. Why should it then be implemented if they didn’t implement collective bargaining agreement. He who goes to equity must go with clean hands. Therefore you cannot benefit all and all that we have already also violated another law

    “We will continue to fight. Let us be ready. Anytime you hear that we are reconvening here, you should come with your mattress and pillow. We are going to get people to cook here, we will sleep here. The minister has said that he doesn’t want peace in the health sector he cannot also have peace in his family, village and wherever he is. I want to assure you that we cannot be deterred. Nobody can associate your action which is legitimate to any political association.

    Also speaking, JOHESU President, Josiah Biobelemoye, said the peaceful protest was in response to deliberate attempt by the health minister to disrespect various agreements government reached with the health workers.

    He observed that the union’s plan was to locked down the ministry and occupy it till their requests were met, but they toned down their action because of the intervention by the leadership of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).

    He said, “Most worrisome was that they have violated several parts of the order of the National Industrial Court. They have equally implemented no work no pay, which was contrary to the suggestions of the Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) team.

    “We never requested for equality. We only requested for equity. We ought to have commenced a nationwide strike on Monday or Tuesday, but swift intervention came from a highly respected clergyman over the weekend, who pleaded for more time to intervene.

    “We have agreed to soft pedal and watch the outcome of the intervention this week. We won’t hesitate to embark on a strike by the end of this week if we fail to get positive response.”

  • JOHESU gives FG Jan.31 deadline to meet demands or strike

    The Joint Health Sector Unions ( JOHESU ) on Monday gave the Federal Government a Jan. 31 deadline to resolve all disputes, and meet the unions’ outstanding demands, or face industrial action.

    JOHESU’s National Chairman, Mr Josiah Biobelemoye, told the News Agency of Nigeria in Lagos that the government had failed to adjust college skills for its members.

    Biobelemoye also said that the government had withheld April and May 2018 salaries of some union members that participated in the last strike.

    Other demands by JOHESU include the age-long struggle for recognition of consultancy cadre for eligible health workers and other outstanding allowances.

    The five affiliate unions of JOHESU are the National Association of Nigerian Nurses and Midwives (NANNM), Nigeria Union of Allied Health Professionals (NUAHP) and Medical and Health Workers’ Union (MHWUN).

    Others include the Senior Staff Association of Universities, Teaching Hospitals, Research Institutes and Associated Institutions (SSAUTHRIAI) and Association of Medical Laboratory Scientists of Nigeria.

    Josiah said that the unions would be compelled to embark on strike, if the government failed to meet its demands by Jan. 31.

    “There is a time limit which should have been 21 days, but now, it is over six months because there are still some issues that are unresolved,” the JOHESU chairman said.

    He said that the government breached its agreement with the unions after the last year’s strike, that none of its members should be sanctioned.

    “Non-payment of salary during strike was not part of the memorandum of understanding we signed with the government.

    “We also have valid order of courts on our outstanding allowances; rather, the Federal Ministry of Health, through various hospital managements, illegally paid the arrears to medical doctors.

    “Medical doctors are not our members, and not entitled to these allowances because they were legitimately appropriated for us; which really need to be addressed,” he said.

    Josiah said that appointments of leaders in the Ministry of Health were only favourable to the medical doctors.

    Read Also: JOHESU, NMA differ over Appeal court ruling

    “Meeting health workers’ demands are not essential, but when we plan to go on strike, the government would say health is an essential service to get Nigerians’ sympathy,” he said.

    Also, Mr Olumide Akintayo, an Executive Member, Assembly of Healthcare Professional Association (AHPA), said that health professionals would continue to remind themselves that healthcare should be globally-inclined service, with norms and values.

    Akintayo said that running healthcare services should not be for only one health workforce because the result would be failure in the health system.

    “The quantity of appointments we have in the Federal Ministry of Health is very poor, by appointing doctors in all top positions.

    “What is happening in the health sector is appointment of doctors, which are far less than five per cent of the workforce in the health sector, to dominate the interest of other health workers, who contributes 95 per cent of workforce.

    “The world’s number one healthcare care worker is not even a medical doctor; that is why the director-general of the World Health Organisation is a microbiologist,” he said.

    According to Akintayo, what we have in the health sector in Nigeria is driven exclusively by medical doctors, and that is why we shall continue to contend with negative health issues.

    “Health issues include infant mortality, maternal mortality, fake drug syndrome, drug abuse and misuse of drugs,” he said.