Tag: health sector

  • ‘Leadership gap bane of health sector’

    Where is an urgent need to expand the technical and leadership training in the curriculum of the PostGraduate Medical College, Lagos and related institutions nationwide.

    This, according to Minister of State for Health, Prof Osagie Enahire, will broker peace among these institutes and the government in the event of industrial crisis.

    Prof Osagie spoke at the investiture of Prof Ademola Olaitan as the 19th President of the National PostGraduate Medical College, Lagos. Osagie succeeded Prof Rasheed Arogundade, whose two-year tenure ended last December.

    Ehanire said the sector has become crisis prone, adding that a lot of the problems are due to lapses in governance.

    Ehanire cited last year’s doctors’strike  which lasted almost half of the year and the ongoing strike by doctors in Osun State.

    ”I want to urge management of medical hospitals to extend their training beyond technical training of its medical staff, to empowerment in leadership. This, I suggest, should be included in your curriculum,” Ehanire said.

    He continued: “It is so sad that in recent time, the medical sector has become crisis prone due to what we observed as departmental rivalry, poor relationship among staff as well as gaps in governance. So, if we must manage medical hospitals well, our approach to leadership must henceforth change.

    “Doctors’ nationwide strike claimed almost half of last year and grounded public healthcare system. There is another protracted strike among doctors and government in Osun State. This is lamentable,” he added.

    He also frowned at the over $1 billion that goes into medical tourism every year, saying that it is not supposed to be as the nation has some of the best hands in the medical field. This, Ehanire attributed to poor treatment or poor attention to medical staff, and thus necessitating the need for a reorientation of the public service.

    He continued: “Aside the financial loss of about I billion dollar into medical tourism every year, it is also a slap in the face because Nigeria has the resources and some of the best medical personnel. Aside, N1 billion is no child’s play considering the economic hardship

    “I have often asked those who often tell me that when they go abroad for treatment if they are better treated there unlike here where our medical staff would either ignore or give patients cold shoulder. So, there is a general loss of confidence in our healthcare system.  This calls for an urgent reorientation of the public service. Once we are able to restore that confidence through training and human capacity development, then we can begin to see a renewed mindset of those who prefer medical attention outside the country.”

    He said in line with the change mantra of the government, there is a plan by the government to concentrate on the primary healthcare to lessen the burden of  the tertiary healthcare.

    He said the government plans to establish a functional healthcare per ward nationwide.

    “We expect that when fully done, each of those primary healthcare should be able to operate 24 hours a day and therefore, reduce the pressure on the tertiary institutions, which handle large sessions of primary cases,” he said.

  • Ex-minister scores health sector high

    Ex-minister scores health sector high

    Former Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu has given the health sector a pass mark.

    Speaking at the Moses Adekoyejo Majekodunmi Foundation yearly lecture in Lagos, the ex-minister said: “We are making progress in the health sector.’’ He, however, urged the private sector to partner the government, adding: “Everything cannot be done by the government.’’

    Chukwu, who spoke on the topic “New National Health Bill”, described the Act as the best thing to have happened to the country. He listed some of its salient areas as provision of additional funding for primary health by, at least one per cent from federal revenue; right of Nigerians to universal health coverage; empowering health ministers and state commissioners to, for example, to decide which civil servants qualified for medical tourism and “every tertiary hospitals will now be regulated.’’

    He urged the government to muster the political will to execute the National Health Act, adding that if well done, Nigerians would benefit immensely from it.

    Chukwu praised the Jonathan administration for giving birth to the bill, which, he said, was initiated by the late President Umaru Yar’Adua administration. He called for a quick constitution of the National Health Council that would disburse the funds by next year. He asked President Muhammadu Buhari to increase the funding from the statutory one per cent to about five, saying he is constitutionally empowered to do so.

    Chukwu advised tertiary hospitals to also partner private hospitals, which have better personnel and equipment, if the aim is to assist the cause of the people.

    Lagos State Commissioner of Health Dr Jide Idris urged those seeking free medical health to have a rethink, as the system was “bastardised’’ in the past. He, however, said the government would continue to cater for the poor, noting that public health delivery for them is mandatory.

     

     

     

  • Health sector: Looking up to Buhari for rebirth

    Health sector: Looking up to Buhari for rebirth

    The health sector can do with a lot of help. Players in the sector believe that with President Muhammadu Buhari in the saddle, facilities will soon be enough to meet the people’s health needs. OLUKOREDE YISHAU examines the challenges facing this all-important sector, which has not received any cash for capital projects this year.

    MINISTRY of Health Permannent Secretary of theLinus Awute has a dream. He looks forward to a day when medical tourism will become a thing of the past. The country loses millions of dollars annually as patients seek help in India, United Kingdom (UK) and the United States (U.S.). Awute believes President Muhammadu Buhari has what it takes to take the country to its medical Eldorado. The signs are beginning to show, he believes.

    The statistics paint a scary picture. For a nation with a population of over 150 million, there are 38 Federal Medical Centres (FMCs) and federal teaching hospitals.  There are nine federal neuropsychiatric hospitals, three orthopedic hospitals, an Ear Nose and Throat Hospital in Kaduna and a federal Eye Hospital in Zaria, Kaduna State. The inability of the Federal Government to go it alone made private organisations to partner with it to establish other eye centres in Idi-Araba, Lagos and Onitsha, Anambra State.

     Visits to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) and other tertiary institutions around the country confirm the pictures as painted by the statistics. The facilities are just overwhelmed and those who patronise them do not get the deserved services.

    Ordinarily, the government should have nothing to do with primary healthcare. It should be the headache of local governments.

    The Director, Health Planning, Research and Services of the Federal Ministry of Health, Dr. Anthony Usoro, said the handicap of the local government areas informed the intervention of the Federal Government in primary healthcare.

    Usoro said: “We have the Primary Healthcare Development Agency, which was established because we were not having results peripherally. The states and local governments were not functioning optimally or they were hardly functioning. The leadership in those areas of jurisdictions has other priorities. So, that’s why we set up the NPHDA. We are actually going to do what we are not supposed to do because health is on the concurrent list in the constitution. “Ideally, we should cater for tertiary healthcare services by providing leadership. The states have to cater for secondary healthcare services and the local government areas take care of primary healthcare services. But now, we have to do a lot of things for them, including programmes, sensitisation, among others because of this huge gap.”

    The non-release of funds for capital projects since the begining of the year has not helped matters in the health sector.

    “In 2015, we have not received any capital allocation. What the Federal Ministry of Health has received is only running costs. We have not received any capital allocation for this year, and we are already in September,” Usoro said.

    Development partners, such as the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the International Atomic Energy Agency, have had to come in to offer assistance. Recently, the U.S. government initiated the establishment of a warehouse for drugs in Lagos. It had earlier worked on one in Abuja.

    The Director, Food and Drugs Services of the Ministry of Health, Gloria Modupe Chukwuma, said the development partners have helped a lot.

    “Most of our funding is from global funds which provide resources for the battle against HIV, TB and Malaria. Then, the other partners, like the UNFPA and the USAID are big financiers for us. We also have the  DFID and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. These are the major financial backers. They use implementing partners to work, they don’t implement. But, we don’t handle cash. When you hear that we have a $1 million funding, it is not in cash. These are services and products from all these donors. It’s the worth of the services, products, capacity building and everything that have been given to Nigeria.  Those organisations don’t give cash and even when they want to use cash, they will run it through their own mechanisms,” Chukwuma said.

     

    Labour unrest

    Significantly, the sector has also had to cope with too many labour unrests. If doctors are not on strike, nurses are. When nurses and doctors are at work, other health workers down tools. Unfortunately, it is the people who bear the brunt.

    The Director of Hospital Services,  Dr. Patience Osinubi, blamed the recurrent industrial disharmony in the sector on rivaly.

     “Many of them revolve around rivalry between the different professional cadres. However, much after the Yayale Ahmed Committee, a bit of that has been settled with the issuance of a white paper. Though signed by the President but the people await the outcome of the white paper. The major problem we now have is that the government in previous negotiations, acceded to the fact that it would pay some allowances without due regard to the economic situation of the country. Now, the cock has come to roost because they (health sector workers) latch on to  the fact and say,  you signed an agreement to pay us this amount of allowances (not salaries) at this rate and you promised us last year that you are going to pay this year, or, you promised in 2013 that you would pay the following  year. But, we are not visitors in the country and we know what the economy has been. Unfortunately, these groups are not ready to listen. Several attempts have been made – Whenever we have any form of industrial action, the ministry sends a team over and we try to speak to them, negotiate, cajole, explain, promise, reach a compromise,  all to ensure that the only reason why they are in that hospital – the patients are not affected. In some instances, we have succeeded; we have some recalcitrant health workers, who just say ‘if we don’t get the money, we don’t get back to work’. Now, that’s where the government has to come in because there are rules in Nigeria already in existence, such as the Essential Services Act which prevents anybody doing essential services from going on industrial action- they are listed- the police, the fire service and  the Army. Have you seen any of those attempting to go on strike even if they don’t pay them for one year? And fortunately for us, hospital services, health is listed among the essential services. What we need is the political will to enforce that Act.”

    Usoro agrees with her, saying: “I will blame political leadership because there are certain things one should avoid. For instance, if an employee disappears for nine months and now comes back after he finished negotiating with the employer and he said ‘you have to pay me that nine months I didn’t work’, if the employer pays, there is a problem because it disrupts every other sector forever. Everybody will wake up and do the same thing. The extant regulation don’t allow it, if you want to go on strike, go on strike, you know the consequences.  Political leadership in order to solve problems quickly gives in to blackmail from anybody. Nurses can wake up tomorrow and say that they want to be paid the same salaries as the doctors and they listen to them and say,’ okay, you can go back to work. We’ll pay you.’ After working three months, they say ‘no, you have not paid us, we are going back on strike.’ Those are our major problems. I think that the drastic measure is that the public hospitals can actually be privatised. That will solve a lot of problems. They can’t do that in private hospitals, they will be fired immediately. That is our major challenge which is even affecting the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) base of the hospitals because they are complaining to us. There should be a way out – enforce the extant regulations – you cannot pay someone for not working. It doesn’t make sense. When you have a serious cancer, you have to remove it for the person to survive.”

     

    NCDC and its challenges

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) is understaffed. The centre, headed by Dr Abdulsalami Nasidi has about 300 members of staff. This is not even up to half of what it needs to truly offer its best.

    Nasidi said: “We need more than 1000 to really become strong. For now, we are employing additional 350 – in all areas, doctors, nurses, public health specialists and so on. They’ve finished the interviews, it is done. It is just to issue letters now. We made request for 650. So, I think the remaining 300 will be employed very soon again.”

    Funding is also a challenge for this centre. Its budgetary provisions are nothing to write home about. “Funding through the budget line is not sufficient because most of our activities are impromptu. So, the budgetary allocation is just for routine activities, but we write proposals and collaborate with partners. They don’t give us cash these days, but at least, they fund some of our activities. Then, we also work with World Bank and other partners to develop what we call National Emergency Response Plan which we already have, but we want to put more life into it now. If we have counterpart funding like a World Bank grant, we should be able to operate easier,” Nasidi explained.

    Despite its challenges, the centre has been designated as the regional hub. Between September 28 and 30, representatives of West African countries are due in Nigeria to concretise the arrangement. This means it needs assistance to equip itself for the task ahead.

    “That is what we are doing now,” Nasidi said, adding: “We are equipping the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control for it to have the capacity to be able to do this job. So, we are now saying before you go to ECOWAS Centre for Disease Control, your Nigeria Centre for Disease Control should be on its feet completely. So, equipment for the laboratories, equipment for the office, fibre glass networking- everything has been done.  We have than on ground now. So, all we need to do is to activate this place in two, three weeks and then if we have any additional thing, because we don’t have all the money to put all we want now, we shall now be adding them one by one. That is what we are going to grow.”

  • The change the health sector needs

    SIR: Healthy citizens, make a healthy and wealthy nation. That is why nations of the world serious about achieving great wealth, prioritizes health matters and devote enormous resources to the sector; from huge financial resources, to ensuring that the sectors’ manpower are kept happy. Over the years, this has not been the case of Nigeria. Despite the volumes of strategic health documents and commitments signed by previous governments (at federal and state levels) to improve health sector funding, the budgetary allocation to the sector still remains low; as medical personnel more than often go on stike actions; hospital wards still lack sufficient facilities and skilled manpower; the sick in many communities especially in the rural villages still travel miles to access medical care; while the supposedly rich in the urban cities spend fortunes to travel abroad in search of better health services. According to figures quoted by the Nigerian Medical Association, more than 5,000 Nigerian patients travel abroad for medical treatment every year; spending over N120bn ($800m) annually on foreign medical trips.

    From the Ebola outbreak, it has become obvious to all, that access to adequate healthcare and sanitation facilities is suppose to be a right to everyone regardless of tribe, economic status, legal position, state or location.

    Despite the enourmous resources in Nigeria, recent figures published in World Health Statistics 2014, shows Nigeria dragging positions with nations recovering and experiecing wars and genocide. Nigeria records the second highest maternal mortality rate in the world after India. The same applies in the rate of infant and child mortality rates. Medical personnel especially in government hospitals are more than often over stretched; take the furstartion out on patient, and in some cases induced to work negligence, which in many cases have led to the death of patients especially pregnant women and babies. With one midwife attending to over 20 pregnant women, contrary to WHO recommendation of one to four patients, in hospitals that lack water facilities, medical staffs are not only at the risk of loosing their minds from work overload, but are also at the risk of contacting transmitable diseases depite being owed arrears and under payed by their governments.

    There is the need for decision-makers, faith based organisations and other stakeholder and relevant audience to support and implement actions for the holistic reform of the health sector to reposition the health and developmental need of the people. This can be achieved when stakeholders, especially the government, pays critical attention to ensuring the full implementation of the relevant laws, acts and signed treaties relating to health sector improvements.

    Since 2001, allocation to the health sector has been on the downside. Barely six percent of the aggregate budget annually is allocated to the health sector, despite several re-affirmations by both past and present governments to commit 15% of the national budget to the sector. While South Africa and Ghana have their average percentages of public health expenditure as a total government spending to be 10.8% and 10.7% respectively, Nigeria lingers at 6.5% from 2007 to 2014. There is therefore need for increased budgetary allocation to the health sector as stipulated by the AU Abuja Declaration.

    While seeking for other innovative ways of funding the health sector to increase accessibility and affordability, there is also need to fast-track universal access therough health insurance.  The in-coming administration will do well to take more proactive approach to providing better working conditions for medial workers.

    Finally, while the burden of providing healthcare have been more on the neck of the federal government, citizens need to wake up from the traditional docility and demand for improved health care delivery from the state governments as well as their local government, as staying health is basic to the fundamental right to life we all deserve.

     

    • Donald Ikenna Ofoegbu

    Centre for Social Justice (CSJ), Abuja.

     

  • Experts make case for improved health sector funding

    There is an urgent need to improve social investment, especially in the area of healthcare delivery system across all levels of government.

    Giving this suggestion at the weekend was a cross-section of experts.

    The event was at a public forum in Lagos tagged: ‘Putting Health Issues on the Election front burner in Lagos state’

    Addressing journalists at the forum, Hon. Avoseh Hodewu Suru, Chairman, House Committee on Health Services, Lagos State House of Assembly, while giving a scorecard of investment in the Lagos state healthcare sector in the last four years, observed that the state government has achieved modest success thus far.

    According to him, the state government has invested a lot in terms of infrastructure such as flagship primary healthcare centres. “Today, there are 56 flagship primary healthcare centres running 24 hours service. The 24 general hospitals are also working optimally. LASUTH is there, the tertiary institution is doing well. Just last week, the Lagos state commissioned an annex of LASUTH in Gbagada, the Cardiac and Renal Centre, the first of its kind in the West African sub-region.”

    Avoseh, who was part of the Presidential Health Summit on Universal Health Coverage, while noting that the whole idea of a free healthcare was deceitful, however impressed on government and the organised private sector, the need to commit more funding, in terms of provision of such amenities as could help boost healthcare service delivery across the country.

    Speaking earlier, Ayodele Adebusoye, Director, Innovation Matters Limited/ Lagos State Civil Society Partnership (LACSOP), the convener of the forum, said the Lagos state government should step up efforts aimed at funding family planning consumables in the state, stressing that such move could help save lives as well as scarce resources.

    “As the Lagos state citizens head for the presidential and national assembly polls and gubernatorial and state assembly, the LACSOP and its technical partner, Innovation Matters Limited at a meeting with civil society actors in the health sector reiterates the need for concerted efforts at all levels of government to increase funding support for healthcare delivery in the state.”

    Going down memory lane, Adebusoye recalled that during the Nigerian family planning conference, the Federal Ministry of Health launched Nigeria’s Family Planning Blueprint, the goal of which is to increase the usage of FP from 15-36 per cent by 2018.

    “By funding FP consumables and reaching its share of Nigeria’s FP blueprint, Lagos will avert 700, 000 unintended pregnancies, prevent 79, 000 unsafe abortions, save the lives of over 2, 300 mothers and 28, 000 children, save more than N11billion in healthcare costs. Every N1 spent on more effective methods, including implants and IUDs, could save over N1, 358 in near-term health costs.”

    On his part, Ayodele Adesanmi, Media Officer, Development Communications Network/NOTAGAIN Campaign, said improving access to maternal healthcare was critical in the nation’s quest to stem the tide of needless death among women and children.

  • Stakeholders to end strikes in Health sector

    Stakeholders have agreed to work together to end the incessant strikes in the Health sector, the Supervising Minister for the Federal Ministry of Health, Dr. Khaliru Alhassan, has said.

    The supervising minister said the era of recurrent strikes by various health unions or groups to push for their demands in the attempt to undermine another group was over.

    He said this was the consensus of the stakeholders.

    Alhassan assured that the Federal Government would henceforth ensure industrial harmony in the sector.

    The sector had witnessed series of actions in the last one year; the last action lasted about two months.

    The supervising minister spoke at the weekend after a meeting with leaders of the various stakeholders in the Health sector.

  • Minister promises better health sector

    Minister promises better health sector

    The Supervising Minister of Health, Dr. Khaliru Alhassan has said Nigerians will access better and improved health care this year because the Yayale committee set up to look into all the conflicts and grievances of workers have concluded its assignment, and also the passage of the Health Bill will be fully implemented.

    Fielding questions from reporters in Abuja, Dr Alhassan said: “We are happy to announce that the committee has already submitted its white paper, a report we are confident will resolve most of the tensions in the sector and hopefully we will not experience any strike this year. The Health bill, which is now a Law will fly due to the various policies that were launched during the tenure of President Goodluck Jonathan to improve health services in the country.”

    He said, “ We know we still have a lot to do to ensure that our health sector is recognised as one of the best in the world, but we are on track and are putting in place the right mechanism to move the sector forward.

    “With team work we eradicated Ebola which is still ravaging other African countries, we worked together with all health stakeholders at all levels of government to eliminate this from our shores. This is the kind of team spirit we are working to restore in the sector, one that is patient based and centered. Presently we have sent medical personnels to other countries to assist them battle Ebola, which is a plus to Jonathan’s intervention”.

    He added that a lot of good things has happened in the sector under this dispensation, numerating them, Alhassan said, “look at the way the country has drastically reduced polio from 56 cases in 2013 to only 6 cases in 2014. We are on the way to becoming polio free and getting our certification from the WHO because we have not recorded any new polio cases for almost a year, but we are not sitting on our oars, we have introduced various new vaccines to reduce infant diseases and deaths.”

    He said with the passage of the Health bill, the sector also received a boost saying, “the passage of the health bill is quite timely, because it would help in providing additional funds to the sector.

    This is even as oil prices has taken a down ward tip.”

    The minister was optimistic that the health bill would help cushion the effects of the hard times that the country will be experiencing due to the fall in oil prices.

    He said, “we know that various financial experts have predicted that hard times are ahead for the country, we are already working with all our stakeholders to see how we can adjust our projections to aid us in planning better. “when you talk of the reduction of maternal and infant deaths, the country has made a lot of improvements, we have introduced a lot of interventions both at the federal, state and local government areas to safe guard the lives of women and children”.

    Speaking on the intervention in the fight against HIV/AIDS, the health minister said that in 2014, the federal government launched the elimination of the mother to child transmission.

    “The government has already declared a zero tolerance policy to new positive babies, and this is a big commitment but we are determined to see it through. We also intend to test more Nigerians and also put much more persons on drugs, these are all plans that are in top gear, a distortion in the plan might not augur well for the country.”

    He called on Nigerians to cast their votes towards continuity and retain the Jonathan led government so as to reap the benefits of policies and strategies already on ground.

    On Malaria, Alhassan said that because of the huge funds lost to malaria, the government is investing heavily on preventive measures to curb the spread of the diseases.

    He said, “more people will receive mosquito nets, massive distributions of the nets will be done nationwide as well as introducing other preventive measures like spraying of the environment to kill the lavas among others. We have gone quite far in our plans to reposition the health sector, and I believe having a government that already understands the policies will go a long way in helping us achieve our goals.

    “We need continuity to sustain these policies, especially now, if you recall the government also launched the universal health coverage which is targeted at reducing out of pocket spending to the minimum. This has already started in ernest and the idea is to get a big pool that can cater for the health needs of women, children, elderly and the vulnerable persons. A lot of improvement and transformative changes are happening under the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS). We are not there yet but we are getting there.”

    On the issues of rehabilitating dilapidated hospitals and equipping them, R Alhassan said that so far most tertiary hospitals and Primary health care centers have been refurbished to provide better health care.

    He said, “we are working with the peril times we find ourselves, this government recently commissioned the trauma center to handle cases of bomb blast and traumatic emergencies. Now most of our secondary and tertiary facilities are doing transplants which in the past was not possible, we are tackling the issues of medical tourism head on. Most of the surgeries sought for by patients abroad can now be done conveniently here in Nigeria, and all these are due to the commitment of President, Goodluck Jonathan. Nigerians need to exercise their votes judiciously’.

    On the issue of strikes and disharmony among health professionals, the minister lamented that it was quite unfortunate.

     

  • On the unending crisis in health sector

    SIR: Our tertiary hospitals have been paralysed again because a group of people embarked on a nationwide strike. Yesterday it was the doctors; today it is the non-doctors in the health sector. What is really wrong with our tertiary hospitals? Patients are dying in their numbers while this crisis subsists.

    How many patients are required to die before this crisis will be nipped in the bud? We are still recovering from  the effects of the last Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) nationwide strike. There is no way that this crisis will be solved if government continues its present pattern of resolving the crisis. The government can never please the two warring parties (the doctors and the non-doctors). It has come to a point that the government chooses one party and wield the big stick against the other party. Wielding the big stick can come in different ways like privatising all paramedical services in our tertiary health institutions. Employment of the services of locum paramedical workers while JOHESU national strike lasts. The governor of Lagos State, Babatunde Fashola, did it to doctors in the state. You may also ask Barrister Sullivan Chime how he brought to an end the incessant unrest in the Enugu State civil service headed by trade unionist, Osmond Ugwu.

    What is really the bone of contention in the health sector? Non-doctors in the health sector discovered that medical doctors were ubiquitous and that there was little or no area of the hospital where doctors were not found hence any industrial action embarked upon by any individual profession in the health sector, the doctors there would make it uneventful. Owing to this, a group of devious professionals sat down and planned how to form a coalition union comprising all non-doctors in the health sector such that they would be using their ‘mass effect’ to shut down the health sector anytime they went on strike.

    Simply put, JOHESU was formed to fight medical doctors in our health institutions.

    What are the demands of JOHESU members? They want to become chief medical directors of tertiary hospitals. Their hackneyed platitude is – ‘international best practices’. The law that established our tertiary hospitals made it compulsory that only fellows of either the National or West African  Postgraduate Medical College and whose certificates are registrable with Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) can occupy the posts of Chief Medical Directors but now these JOHESU members do not want to obey the rule again hence they want the goalpost to be changed at the middle of the game.

    Will it not be an act of utter folly if medical doctors start struggling to head a drug manufacturing firm/plant? Can a professor of paralegal studies head the ministry of justice or our law courts no matter the many years of practising experience? If the answer is no, how then is it morally justifiable for paramedical professionals to come and head our tertiary hospitals? How can we then allow  people that are trained to assist the doctors to now become the head of our tertiary health institutions?

    Peace, they say, is not absence of war but presence of justice. Will pharmacists ever allow pharmacy technicians to head our pharmacy units in the hospital? Also, can the Bsc nurses allow the Registered Nurse (RN) or the auxiliary nurses to head their units? I am very sure that the medical laboratory scientists will never allow either the medical laboratory technicians or  science laboratory technicians to head their units.

    • Dr Paul John

    Port Harcourt, Rivers state.

  • Doctors and health sector crisis

    Recently the media has been awash with comments and write ups by some doctors who in a bid to justify the current strike of the Nigeria Medical Association are putting forward arguments that are capable of misinforming the public about the Nigerian health sector. Part of such arguments is that doctors are all in all and that they can effectively do the work of other health professionals while others cannot do the doctor’s work. They claim that the physician of old merely delegated some of his duties to people who are now called pharmacists, physiotherapists, nurses, laboratory technologists etc. just for convenience and he can take it back any time he so wishes.

    Some doctors also claim that other health workers having been trained by them to merely assist them do their work, should not now start to demand to hold any leadership position in the health sector because it should naturally be the birthright of the doctor. So, doctors see absolutely no reason for other health workers to seek to attain the post of consultants in their own field or directors in the hospitals, as according to them, it will just create crisis in the hospitals and other health facilities. Another claim is that most of the other health professionals found themselves in their respective fields because they were either unable to meet up with the requirements for medicine or were withdrawn from medical schools because they could not cope with the rigours. Thus many of these ‘failures’ now begrudge doctors and strive to become one through the back door.

    I believe that if things are not put in proper perspective, these comments may successfully create an impression in the general public that other health workers are begrudging doctors or seeking to become doctors through the backdoor when it is indeed the doctors that are illegally encroaching into the constitutionally recognised roles of non- doctors.

    While it is true in ages past, that physicians were a Jack of all trades as far as treatment of the patient was concerned, the practice in the wisdom of practitioners was later broken down into different disciplines for better efficiency and specialisation. It was not to make any health worker a servant or slave to the other. Every discipline is important and all are expected to work together and collaborate to achieve a better patient outcome. Therefore, the claim that the doctor can do the work of every member of the health team is therefore a very big fallacy because he was never trained to do so.

    The multidisciplinary approach to treating patients which many Nigerian doctors are trying so hard to downplay today is firmly established, promoted and appreciated in developed countries like the United Kingdom, United States and Canada. There, no one feels superior to another. No one brandishes irrelevant ego. All that matter is the patient’s well-being and everyone will go to any extent to put their heads together in order to achieve the best outcome for the patient.

    Nigerian doctors when they travel abroad to practice follow these laid down principles and do their utmost to collaborate with other health professionals in the interest of the patient. However, in Nigeria, doctors have thrown global best practices to the wind and see other health professionals as servants who should receive orders rather than collaborate with them. They would rather have a less than desirable patient outcome than having to ‘descend so low’ as to seek the opinion of other health workers in the management of the patient. Even though some of them do, majority who do not, view them with derision and would want them blacklisted if they had their way.

    Rather than putting their heads together to discuss ways of tackling the problems bedeviling the Nigerian health sector, the Nigerian doctors have preoccupied themselves with means of continuing the culture of suppression and intimidation of other health care professionals in the health sector.

    For instance, why will the doctors go on strike because another health professional will be appointed a consultant in his own field having acquired the required knowledge and qualification?

    Why will the doctor negotiate for and accept to be paid 160% of his basic salary as call duty allowance but would insist that the radiologist must settle for less than 80% rather than the 100% he is clamouring for?

    Why will Nigerian doctors threaten to go on strike if anyone but them is made the health minister knowing full well that the post is purely administrative and is not an exclusive preserve of health experts in most nations of the world? Why does the doctor have a phobia for a non-doctor becoming a permanent secretary in the ministry of health? Why are doctors being imposed on laboratory technologists and scientists to become Heads of Department in many hospital laboratories? Several other acts of repression are perpetrated by doctors in the health sector.

    I expect some of the commentators in the media to mention specific instances where other health care providers have encroached into the practice of doctors in the hospitals, which could have warranted such a high level of mistrust. Rather, all they did was base their arguments solely on vague assumptions.

    The law does not permit the doctor to be in charge of drug procurement as is being practiced in many Nigerian hospitals today. The law forbids a non-pharmacist to dispense ethical drugs even in private hospitals but today quacks and auxiliary nurses are recruited by doctors in private practice to dispense steroids and the most delicate of controlled drugs.

    Framers of the laws regulating pharmacy practice discourage the setting up of privately owned pharmacies in government hospitals. Today, many Chief Medical Directors have either unilaterally or in connivance with commissioners or minister of health (who are doctors) established private pharmacies in government hospitals. Most of them enjoy controlling shares in these profit maximizing outlets through their fronts and cronies. Who then is trying to become what through the backdoor?

    The law permits a first degree holder to rise up to Grade Level  17 in the civil service as long as he passes the required examinations and meets every other requirement, but doctors, through Chief Medical Directors in the federal government hospitals do everything within their means to frustrate promotion of non-doctors above Grade Level  15. In fact, doctors do not disguise their phobia for seeing non- doctors in the directorate cadre.

    When some of these illegalities are successfully contested in competent courts of law and judgments obtained, ‘the powers that be’ have devised means of circumventing such judgments, just like they are doing with the current contemptuous strike.

    That most doctors speak about the military era with nostalgia cannot surprise anyone that has been following events in the health sector in the last three decades. It was during the Babangida regime that the leadership of the Nigerian Medical Association used their closeness to the military to get Decree 10 promulgated which essentially amended the laws that prescribe fairness and harmony in the health sector to ones that make the doctor a demigod, and accords to him salaries and emoluments that were skies above his other contemporaries in the health sector. It was indeed during this era that doctors were able to corner every position that matters in the health sector. Administrative posts that were hitherto held by professional administrators and social scientists were hijacked by medical doctors. In any gathering of decision makers in the health ministry today, more than 75% of the roll call will be medical doctors.

    It is advisable that Nigerian doctors accept the team work approach to medical practice as is the norm in civilized societies. The current scenario that makes the doctor sees himself as god and other health workers as lesser beings can only portend doom for medical practice in Nigeria. The current practice that assigns the doctor to almost all administrative posts in the health sector and makes him feed fat while others settle for crumbs is no longer sustainable and will only make the health sector crisis a recurring decimal.

    • Adekunle, a pharmacist, writes from Matogun, Ogun State

     

  • BURDEN OF  A NATION – How Nigerians  spend billions on medical tourism

    BURDEN OF A NATION – How Nigerians spend billions on medical tourism

    Gboyega Alaka writes on the increasing trend of Nigerians seeking medical care abroad, resulting in massive capital flight and a further impoverishment of the vital health sector at home.

    IN time past, going abroad for medical treatment of any kind was the exclusive preserve of the elite, who had the money and would always seize every opportunity to underline the class distinction between them and the general populace. And of course government functionaries, who were largely out to revel in the abundance of government purse.  Those were the years that literally reminded one of the Orwellian theory of “some animals (being) more equal than the others” as most of the illnesses they travelled abroad for, could well have been taken care of within Nigerian shores. Also the destination then were mostly the developed western countries, such as the United States of America, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Canada et al, fuelling the term ‘medical tourism,’ as it seemed these patients also took the opportunity of such trips, to enjoy the beautiful scenery and hospitality system of those countries. Besides, those who had the opportunity of going on account of the government, also get to over-bill the government and pocket the unspent chunk. We all still remember the former NAFDAC boss, Dora Akunyili’s story  of how she returned a huge unspent amount of her medical allowance. That singular virtuous action catapulted Akunyili to the pinnacle of her career, even as it seemingly exposed to Nigerians, one of the main reasons their officials always want to jump on the next available plane, even at the prompt of an ordinary headache.

    With the re-establishment of democratic rule, which has translated to more VIPs in government, the number of people who travel abroad for medical treatment on account of the government, has also increased tremendously, such that it is now a case to celebrate, when a government official opts to get treated in Nigeria. At least, such was the case of Governor Idris Wada of Kogi State who over a year ago opted to treat his fractured femur in Nigeria against the norm of going abroad.

    The story is however different today, as even the ‘poor’ and the common masses now seek treatment abroad. Of course, theirs have been borne largely out of a genuineness to get well from mostly life-threatening afflictions and stay alive. Most often than not, theirs are also cases for which the Nigerian medical system is incapable of treating- or is believed to be incapable of treating, due to lack of standard equipments or perceived lack of qualified and experienced personnel. Medical issues for this group of people therefore range from Cancer, hole in the heart and other related cardiac failings or afflictions, to brain and other highly technical neuro-surgical treatments and some kinds of skin graft operations requiring top-class equipment and expertise.

    For this set of people, it is therefore not much of tourism, even though the term is becoming more generalised. This may also be the reason, Funmi Adewale who some years ago escorted her sister to treatment in one of the Indian hospitals quarrels with the term: “How many people suffering from life-threatening cancer or kidney problem would find time to go sight-seeing or even appreciate the beautiful scenery, food and luxury of the these countries in the sense that tourists do?” To her therefore, labeling medical treatment abroad ‘medical tourism’ is like trivialising what to some people is a matter of life and death. Adewale goes a bit further by likening it to stigmatization. As far as she is concerned, many of those who embark on this trip would rather save their precious earnings and get on with their modest life here at home, if all was well.

    Popular music producer, Babatunde Okungbuwa aka OJB Jezreel, who only recently came back from a successful kidney transplant in India also quarrels with the expression, saying “How can a life-saving trip be compared in any way to tourism! Really, trips like this are motivated by lack of medical commitment ‎to saving lives and poor facilities in our environment.” In a clear response to top government officials who regularly go abroad for treatment, OJB also said “even the policy makers in the health sector don’t trust the system.”

    N250 billion spent annually on medical treatment broad

    Be that as it may, the trend has recently reached an unprecedented height, prompting stakeholders and experts to put the annual figure Nigerians spend on medical trips abroad at approximately N250 billion. This much was revealed by Dr. Kingsley Esegbue, secretary, organizing committee of the Nigerian Centenary Charity Ball during the countdown to the celebration that took place earlier this year. He also used that occasion to disclose his committee’s plan to rake in N8 billion for medical facilities in the country, as part of the centenary celebration. According to him, “Sealing a hole in a child’s heart needs not cripple the parents financially or take place in India; replacing a damaged kidney should and can be done within our borders.”

    He also said “Every breast, cervical or prostate cancer patient should have access to quality care within Nigeria. Our neuro-surgery units need to serve the Nigerian people: no woman should have her bladder torn giving birth and for victims of cruel acid attacks, re-constructive surgery should be done within our borders.”

    The N250 billion – if the calculations are correct – also represents about 300% increase from the N78 billion ($500m) earlier put forward by the Nigerian Medical Association in 2012. Of the N78 billion, the NMA also said that India rake in well over N40 billion, which is about 50%. (Over 5000 Nigerians travel to India, with each of them spending between $20,000 and $40,000 on the average.) India was also projected to have raked in a whopping $2billion from a global medical tourism valued at $20billion that year. Investigations also revealed that over 40,000 Nigerians obtained visas from Indian embassy that year alone.

    The big question therefore is: how did Nigeria degenerate to such a level? Even the president, Goodluck Jonathan more or less agreed that the trend has reached an alarming level, when he declared at the official Commissioning of the Nigeria – Turkish Nizamiye Hospital Life Camp, Abuja in February this year that “private sector initiatives such as this hospital will help government’s effort to halt the enormous capital flight arising from increased medical tourism and avoidable stress experienced by Nigerians on such missions.

    Earlier, at a meeting to forestall an impending medical doctors’ strike in January this year, the president had also promised officials of the Nigeria Medical Association, that his administration will reduce medical tourism to the barest minimum, except in special cases. He also directed that before any government official will be allowed to travel abroad for medical treatment, it must first be confirmed that medical competence for such ailment or disease is non-existent in the country.

    Unfortunately, Nigeria has continued to wallow in unacceptable healthcare poverty, sitting pretty in position 187 of 191 countries in a recent United Nations health report. Needless to say, that also underline why 23% of the world’s malaria cases are endemic in Nigeria and four other African countries. Even the president’s half brother, Meni Innocent Jonathan reportedly died of acute malaria and typhoid late 2012, just before arrangements were concluded to take him abroad for better treatment.

    According to Femi Ajayi, a Professor at Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State, this horrible statistics is enough to get the government kicking and vote overwhelmingly for a turn-around in the medical sector, instead of toying with a laughable and unrealistic plan of banning public officials from going abroad for treatment.

    In an essay titled Government has no right to ban citizens from seeking better medical services abroad, he wrote: “On Friday, April 13, 2012 the Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu announced that the Federal Government of Nigeria is to ban public officials from travelling abroad for medical treatment. I read the piece with disdain. In less than a day, Saturday, April 14, 2012 of the announcement, Sen. David Mark, Senate President, travelled out to Israel for medical attention.

    Not always the case

    Back in the 1970s and 1980s, virtually every Nigerian hospital worth its salt, had at least one Indian doctor. The reason at the time was alluded to the stable economy and strong currency, which served as attractions. The hospitals were also fitted with basic amenities that helped these experts, with support from local doctors; giving Nigerians easy and affordable access to top quality treatment in their own domain. Even the Indian High Commissioner to Nigeria, Masesh Sachdev, corroborated this at a Medical Tourism and Wellness Destination Exhibition held in September last year in Abuja and Lagos, when he said “While a large number of Indian medical personnel served here during the 1970s and 1980s, most have returned.”

    Indeed they have returned, to supporting and giving vent to what the whole world has come to acknowledge as a calculated Indian national policy directed at positioning the country as destination one in global medical/health care. The high commissioner stopped short of saying this expressly, when he again said on that occasion that “India has become Nigerian patients’ destination of choice because of the competitive cost, seamless facilitation through pre-diagnostics in Nigeria itself and smoother visa issuance procedure, wide choice of good hospitals and the better patient-doctor interface leading to higher mutual comfort and trust.”

    Aside the first world countries, which India has successfully shoved aside, Nigerians also throng countries like Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Egypt and even Ghana for medical treatment.  The Egyptian Embassy in Nigeria was reported to have declared that 12,000 visas were issued to Nigerians in 2011 alone, with 3,500 of them going on medical ground.

    Medical experts speak

    Is this penchant for going abroad for treatment a fad or something borne out of genuine necessity?

    Dr Oluchi Kanma-Okafor, a consultant Public Health Physician of the College of Medicine, University of Lagos thinks it’s more of a fad. In her words, “you are right to have described it as medical tourism, because that is what it is.”

    “Health treatment out of the country” in her opinion “has become very popular amongst Nigerians. It has also become very accessible; and if you know Nigerians very well, you would agree that we like to go along with what seems popular.”  She also said the fact that it has become so popular does not necessarily translate to the fact that they get better treatment in the countries they travel to.

    According to her, people have been known to fly abroad for mere appendisectomy, which every trained doctor in Nigeria can perform; or even anaemia. She argued that it is not all the time that these trips yield the desired result, but that the public hardly gets to know this.

    In her words: “Given that we have some challenges when it comes to health care. But it’s not really as if the professionals here are not able to give the service that is required, nor is it that the facilities are not available. But people would rather go abroad and spend so much money, just because it is popular.”

    Professor E. E. Ekanem, a professor of Epidemiology, also of the College of Medicine, University of Lagos however disagrees with her slightly, especially on the last statement. Having schooled abroad, he can tell you categorically that Nigerians are very intelligent people, who can compete anywhere, be it with Americans and what have you. Based on that, he agrees that Nigeria indeed have the expertise. He however says that “Most of the time, the equipments are not there. Even when the equipments are there, you know that we are very short of power. Sometimes, you may want to carry out an operation, but you can never be sure of power. Sometimes you can never be sure of gas. Common gas.”

    In Prof. Ekanem’s opinion, Nigerians go for treatment abroad for various reasons, chief amongst which are the lack of equipment and infrastructure; but “definitely not for lack of expertise.”

    On the kind of treatment people may want to go for abroad, Prof. Ekanem said these would range from some special kinds of skin graft; specific kind of surgical operations, and chemotherapy and radiotherapy, in cases of neo-plastic conditions and cancers. For people battling cancers especially, Ekanem says time is of the essence and somehow aligns with them in their quest for quick treatment abroad: “You know if you come here to LUTH, you may have to be put on a long waiting list just to be on chemotherapy or radiotherapy. And sometimes, even before it gets to your turn, you may have died, because the facilities are over-stretched.”

    Dr. Kanma-Okafor and the professor however seem to share the same opinion in the area of care level and speedy attention, when she said the excuse of poor hospitality may not be unfounded. “The waiting time at government facilities is longer than in the private facilities, and this is not unusual, given that government facilities are cheaper and given the size of our population.”

    On the issue of wrong diagnoses- another major reason Nigerians cite for going abroad for treatment, the professor and the young doctor agree that it does occur, even as they both say that it is not peculiar to Nigeria. The professor also says the lack of any specific research in that regard would not enable him give a proper appraisal of the rate at which this occurs. He nevertheless concedes that “If you have the money, it is always better to go to a place where you are sure to get the right diagnosis than to go to a place where you’re not too sure.”

    Dr Kanma-Okafor on her part says “Sometimes, if you require a very sophisticated equipment to make a pin-point diagnosis and you don’t have it, then you are deficient. In the US for instance, they have far-reaching equipments and it just seems like they are better. So we just need to get to that level where we can access everything we need.”

    She also says it is not as if the doctors on ground cannot handle most of the so-called complex illnesses. “The main issue, I’ll say is that people don’t present early. We have all sorts of hindrances such as finances, religion, culture, denial; and when they finally decide to come to the hospital, they are usually at their wits’ end. They’re here when there’s little or nothing the doctors can do to help them. So in terms of training and expertise, we are top notch. But like I said, in public hospitals like this, we have the challenges of funding; we have the challenges of overstretched facilities.

    She said that most of the hospital in the US and co where Nigerians throng to are manned by Nigerian doctors, who are never found wanting.

    One other area Professor Ekanem believes people would rather go abroad for treatment is in the area of the attitude of our medical personnel. In his word, “there are some health care facilities you walk into, and the way they receive and attend to you will immediately raise your spirit and make you feel like you are getting better. But here, the attention that people get is zero.”

    He adduced this mainly to transferred aggression, which he says is a direct consequence of being overworked. “If you go abroad, doctors on the average may see about ten patients per day; but here in Nigeria, I can bet you that doctors see between 30 to 40 patients per day; especially those who work in the out-patient department.”

    On how the number of top-class hospitals N78 billion (the amount Nigerians allegedly spend abroad for health services) could help put in place, Professor Ekanem said that may be difficult to say, going by the fact that “The amount quoted for a project is sometimes, five or more times more than the actual price because it have to pass through the middle man, third man and so on. So a project that will cost like N10 million, could get to as much as N20 million or more, when Nigerians are quoting it.”

    The fact that the secretary of the organizing committee of the Nigerian Centenary Charity Ball was however shopping for just a N8 billion to put up a standard medical facility says a lot.

    Lack of commitment

    Responding to pointed questions on his experience, when he went for medical treatment abroad, OJB Jezreel said though kidney transplant could be done in Nigeria, the experience of the Indian doctors, by virtue of more frequent encounter with such operations, gives them an upper hand, and therefore made them a preferred choice for him. Second to that is their level of commitment, which he says is higher. He emphasizes commitment as one of the major selling points of the medical personnel and hospital he encountered abroad, adding that they are not necessarily better than our doctors in terms of expertise.

    “Funny enough, I believe our doctors are amongst the best in the world, it’s just that our policy makers need to encourage them and provide the incentive needed to move the nation’s medical sector forward.”

    On the cost of his treatment, the music producer said it is difficult to put a cost to it because it had “more dimensions than the average.” He however advised the government to in the meantime subsidize such treatments for Nigerian citizens, especially those who are not financially capable on their own.