Tag: hospital

  • Medical errors increases deaths in Nigerian hospitals, says expert

    The increase in medical errors has contributed to the high number of preventable death in the country, an expert have said.
    According to a Visiting Professor of Pharmacology, Nagasaki University, Japan Associate Prof. Omotuyi Olaposi cases of medical errors in the country are alarming, requiring critical intervention.
    He spoke at the end of a two-day seminar on medical services and simulation organised by Medbridge Global Company Simulation.
    Olaposi, who is also the Director, Centre for Bio-Computing and Drug Development, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba, Ondo State said medical error is a very big challenge.
    He said: “Medical errors is unfortunately a very big Heath challenge in Nigeria, medical errors have a lot of dimensions. The first dimension is what is called misdiagnosis. That is when people are diagnosed wrongly and that means the chances of treating the person is almost zero. That will be giving a wrong treatment for a wrong disease.

    “The second dimension is when doctors diagnose right but the wrong drugs and medications are administered. You got the ailment right, but the wrong thing is given. The third is when you get the diagnosis right, get the right drugs to administer but you administer the drugs improperly, probably due to insufficient training or exposure. So these three are very important in terms of how people eventually die in our hospitals in Nigeria.”

    Speaking on wrong diagnosis of persons, Olaposi explained it is only in high profile persons that the public get to know.

    “It was just because Dora Akunyili happens to be a celebrity, that as why we knew what exactly happened. A lot of people die without even knowing it. The family will just accept it as the will of God and they just move on. Nobody is questioned and nothing whatsoever.

    “I will say it is very difficult because we don’t have data. There is no data where people are taken to court or the hospitals are petitioned. But I can tell you from my own personal observation that I know more than ten people in this year alone that have either been diagnosed or treated with wrong medication or probably the wrong way of administering drugs,” he stated.

    According to him, “if the total number of people visiting the hospital in Nigeria annually is 100, I think 30 per cent of cases are due to wrong diagnosis, wrong treatment or wrong drugs.

    “But the caveat is that not all the errors will eventually lead to death. That is the reason why it has not come to the front burner. A lot if these errors can be corrected and then life moves on.

    “I will not say yes for now and I have my reasons. You need people to be trained and retrained, certified and be re-certified. It is only when you have put these measures in place that you can now begin to talk about punitive measures. Some people have been out of medical schools for up to 20 years and they have not gotten any other experience apart from attending to patients.

    “So training should be continuos and that is the reason why Medbridge Global Company is embarking on this event. What they are bringing to the table.

    “If we have done the right things in terms of providing trainings and facilities, yes, we should. But we have not. Somebody have to be diagnosed and there no appropriate equipment for the right diagnosis.

    “And most of the diagnosis they are going to be doing will be without appropriate equipment will be trial by error. So how won’t they make mistake that will make them be taking the patients back to the hospitals about four times. It is almost not possible.

    “The government does not have the money to put up these facilities. We need t look at the Private Public Partnership arrangement. There are private investors who have this money. But the reason they will not put this money on the table is because they feel the patents will not come and when they come, nobody pays for them.

    “So if we work out our NHIS funding system, it means that no matter who you are, if you are consuming something in the nations, you also need to lay some VAT. And that money is set aside forces,the are system. When people get sick, they get to the hospital and that is it.,”

    Chief Executive Officer of Medbridge Global Company Simulation, Modupe Olowodahunsi said the essence of the conference is draw attention to critical need of simulation in health care service delivery.

    Olowodahunsi maintained that for Nigeria to meet global standards in health care service, simulation and provision of standardised healthcare infrastructure must be attained in order to scale up the nation’s health care system.

  • Masari to establish teaching hospital

    Katsina State Governor, Alhaji Aminu Bello Masari, has expressed disgust over the refusal of the Federal Ministry of Health to allow the state government acquire and convert the Federal Medical Centre to serve as a Teaching Hospital for Umar Musa Yar’Adua University. The development, Masari fears, might slow down his administration’s plan to develop the health sector.

    Masari, who spoke to reporters over his two-week business trip to China and India, revealed that his administration has commenced a programme that will at the end of the day, ensure that the state gets a deserving teaching hospital that will serve the state-owned university to offer courses in Medicine.

    According to him, over 600 medical staff will soon be recruited to serve in the health facilities that are already being put in place in the state.

    Masari further explained that his dream was to ensure that before the end of his first tenure, the state-owned university would have commenced a School of Medicine, with a befitting Teaching Hospital.

    He said: “You know we are very much concerned about our Eye Centre. We want to develop this Eye Centre to a department so that it can click into our plan of developing the supposed specialist hospital into a full-fledged teaching hospital.

    “Right now, we have commissioned our consultants to come out with clear reasons why we are developing a teaching hospital. We are doing this because we have a university called the Katsina State University. This is a university which has started preparations to do Medicine and you cannot do Medicine without a teaching hospital.

    “When we contacted the Federal Ministry of Health to see the possibilities of allowing the university to upgrade the Federal Medical Centre as a teaching hospital, they (government) told us that since we have a university in Katsina State, and probably in the future that university may start offering Medicine and will want the services of a Federal Medical Centre.

    “So, in effect, they were saying that they will not give us! And so, the best option for us is to see how we are going to upgrade our own health facilities. Luckily enough, we have started working on Katsina General Hospital; and we have also contacted sons of Katsina State who are experts in the medical field.”

    “We have also placed an advert for the recruitment of over 600 medical staff.  Right now, we have employed the services of consultants. They are professionals in the medical field and they are going to offer professional services. Now, we are doing that, even in other sectors.

    “For instance, our own university-the Umar Musa Yar’Adua University wants to start offering medical courses; and you cannot operate any department of Medicine without a standard Teaching Hospital. For this reason, we wrote to the Federal Ministry of Health, because Gombe was given a Federal Medical Hospital and it was updated to Teaching Hospital; Ebonyi was also given.

    “So, on the basis of these two experiences, we wrote, and the Federal Ministry of Health replied us that they cannot, because they also have a federal institution right in the future in need of services of a Federal Medical Centre.

    “I came back home, and asked myself-‘Why can’t we start looking at what we have and see how we can upgrade them.

    “So, we invited our own professionals, and again, we have also invited international consultants, that will come and see how we can work with their own professionals. Like I told you, once you have somebody who was a managing director of a teaching hospital and a vice chancellor of a university for eight years, he is sufficiently equipped,” he said.

     

  • Fatunwase collapses, revived at hospital

    Fatunwase collapses, revived at hospital

    • Sustains eye injury

    Crisis was averted on Sunday during a matchday 34 Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) between Heartland FC and Ikorodu United when visitor’s goalkeeper, Segun Fatunwase collapsed and he was rushed to the hospital before he regained consciousness.

    Ikorodu United recorded its first away win of the season when they beat the home side  0-1 at the Dan Anyam Stadium in Owerri but the victory was overshadow by Fatunwase’s life-threatened injury.

    According to the club’s media officer, Babatunde Ayoola, the goalkeeper had a head on collusion with one of the Heartland FC players and immediately lost  consciousness, sustaining a deep cut in the face in the process.

    He was stretched out of the pitch and replaced by Adamu Azeez. SportingLife reported that he regained consciousness after he was transported to the Federal Government Hospital in Owerri where he received immediate treatment.

    “I can confirm to you that Segun is back on his feet now and he is with us at the hotel. He was rushed to the hospital where he regained consciousness. He had a cut in his eye but he is better now. And a special thanks to the Imo State FA for swift response,” Ayoola told SportingLife.

    Speaking on the team’s first away win, he added: “The most important thing is that we get a first away win. Whether it is early or late is not necessary. We thank our fans who supported us till this day.”

  • Ekiti federal hospital doctors begin strike

    Doctors at the Federal Teaching Hospital, Ido Ekiti (FETHI) will today commence a three-day warning strike.

    This follows the expiration of the 14-day ultimatum issued to management.

    The doctors under the auspices of the Medical and Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria (MDCAN) accused the hospital management of paying half salaries

    Chairman, FETHI Branch of MDCAN, Dr. Timothy Olajide, said the warning strike became the available option.

    Olajide said the decision to commence on a warning strike after which another ultimatum will be issued to redeem the demands or face indefinite strike, was taken at their meeting of August 4.

    The MDCAN boss said part of the resolutions reached was that his members would no longer tolerate the offering of salary due for resident doctors to them, as senior officials of the hospital.

    “The doctors also demanded immediate payment of the shortfall in the salary of members for the month of July, 2016.

    “That we regret  any inconvenience this inevitable action may cause our patients”, he said.

  • Guinness revamps Eye Hospital in Onitsha, donates N5m equipment

    Guinness Nigeria Plc has revamped the Guinness Eye Hospital, Onitsha, and boosted its operation with N5 million worth of equipment.

    Commending the company, Anambra State Governor, Chief Willie Obiano, praised Guinness management for its long-standing involvement in the provision and management of quality eye care centres in the country.

    Chief Obiano said he was extremely happy with the gesture and the re-inauguration of the Eye Hospital.

    He said: “This auspicious project is an important subject, which ties into one of the key enablers of my government. I would like to heartily commend Guinness Nigeria for their huge investment and commitment to providing world class eye care solutions across the country. As a testament, this facility and the equipment, which Guinness Nigeria Plc has bequeathed to the Eye Hospital, ranks among the very best in the world. Therefore, Anambra indigenes do not need to go abroad again to get treated for eye problems.”

    Guinness Nigeria Plc, Managing Director, Peter Ndegwa, said the re-inauguration of the eye hospital was in keeping with the company’s commitment to support Guinness Eye Centres across the country.

    “As a company, our focus on eye care reflects our recognition of the far-reaching impact that good eyesight can have on the overall health and wellbeing of everyone. We are here to celebrate the notable accomplishments, which the Guinness Eye Hospital, Onitsha, has delivered to many Nigerians. Our investment in the various eye hospitals is keeping in line with our commitment to make a positive impact on the communities in where we operate. By helping Nigerians to preserve their sights, we play a strong role in enhancing their ability to learn, earn and get the best out of life,” he said.

    The Guinness helmsman, who announced a donation of eye equipment worth N5 million to the hospital, thanked past and present staff of the hospital for their unwavering sense of duty and ensuring the sustenance of the institution for over three decades. He urged them to make their services  reach more Nigerians.

    Governor Obiano also used the occasion to announce the launch of a PPP-driven health insurance policy, funded by the government and citizens in the Diaspora to ensure that doctors get paid for treating patients. He also revealed the state government’s plan to provide free eye screenings for 1000 citizens at the hospital.

    The Governor urged the people  to take advantage of the best-in-class services provided at the Guinness Eye Hospital through regular eye screenings and prevent visual impairment and blindness.

    On the rationale behind the revamp, Corporate Relations Director, Guinness Nigeria, Sesan Sobowale said: “Over the years, we have supported the hospital with funding to purchase equipment so that specialist eye care can be obtained here.

    “In 2015, the management of the hospital drew our attention to the need to upgrade the facilities, create more space for doctors and patients while making the atmosphere more conducive for treatments. We then decided that the request was an investment with merit and therefore, approved the funding for the project and mobilised contractors to site for the reconstruction work. We are really very pleased with the output and the fact that the hospital can now cater for more patients in need of eye care.”

    The Chief Medical Director, Nnamdi Azikwe University Teaching Hospital, Prof. Anthony Igwegbe, who went down memory lane, chronicled the history and achievements of the Guinness Eye Hospital, which had only two consultants to attend to over 850 people yearly at its inception, but has progressively increased its capacity and  caters for over 15,000 patients with a manpower of 144 staff.

    He noted that the hospital has enjoyed continuous support from Guinness Nigeria through subventions such as financial contributions, state-of-the-art optical equipment and various infrastructural upgrades.

  • UNILORIN vet hospital ready

    The University of Ilorin Veterinary Teaching Hospital (UIVTH) at Sabo Oke, Ilorin, is ready for inauguration. Already, surgery is being carried out on animals and staffing has started.

    UIVTH Director, Prof Emmanuel Olugbenga Oyedipe, noted that 85 per cent of the work is already completed.

    The UIVTH complex comprises clinics for avian, fish, small animal, wild life, large animal, horses, and ruminants for large animals like cattle and small ones.

    It also has specialised clinics for surgery, medical group, laboratory investigations, X-ray and imagery, Necropsy or post mortem and Pharmacy.

    The Professor of Theriogenology (the science of reproduction in animals) disclosed that the facility only needs to be equipped.

    “What is left is instrumentation, that is, equipment supplies, equipment for laboratories and the clinics.  The more modern the equipment, the more precise and accurate the diagnosis,” he said.

    The Director, who had worked at the University of Agriculture, Makurdi, and was instrumental to the establishment of a Veterinary Teaching Hospital in that institution, said the UNILORIN facility is better.

    “When I came here, I had the opportunity to deliver my dream of what a Veterinary Hospital should look like and I had a willing partner in the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Ambali.

    “The vision for this place is to have the best crop of trained Veterinarians, capable of meeting challenges of controlling diseases of animals including those that have implications for human and environmental welfare. We hope to create a link with practitioners on the field who are the ones in direct contact with users of our services for the efficient delivery of veterinary services in the catchment areas of the University of Ilorin, which are basically contiguous states to Kwara State,” he said.

    He thanked the university management for supporting the project.

     

  • Catholic priest opens hospital in Niger

    The Parish Priest of St. Martin’s Catholic Church in Paiko-Minna, Niger State, Rev Christian Levi Achinivu has established a Specialist Hospital in the state.

    Achinivu, who spoke in Minna, the Niger State capital, bemoaned the loss of lives due to inadequate fund to travel abroad for treatment.

    He said the hospital was part of his contribution to humanity, adding that Indian specialists were employed to attend to patients.

    “My journey of helping the sick has led to the establishment of a specialist hospital, ‘Fada Paiko Specialist Hospital’. I have employed Indian doctors to treat people because I have special passion for the sick to be healed,” he said.

    Departments in the hospital include cardiology/cardiothoracic, nephrology/urology, gastroenterology, medical and surgical, spinal cord issues and oncology (cancer).

  • Alleged N42b fraud: Ex-Customs chief Dikko in hospital

    Alleged N42b fraud: Ex-Customs chief Dikko in hospital

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is watching over a former Comptroller-General of Nigerian Customs Service(NCS), Abdullahi Inde  Dikko in a hospital in Abuja.

    Dikko, who is being investigated over alleged N42billion fraud, has been in hospital since he surrendered to the EFCC for interrogation  last  Thursday.

    A top source in the anti- graft commission, who spoke in confidence, said: “When Dikko reported at the EFCC, he was looking pale. It was obvious that his health was in bad shape.

    “We interacted with him and relocated him to a hospital for treatment. From the first day, we allowed him to stay in hospital. Our operatives are only watching over him at the hospital.

    “We need to set the records straight. He was never at any time detained in EFCC’s custody because of his frail health. But we are monitoring him in a hospital.”

    Out of the total fraud sum Dikko is being grilled on the sources of funds with which he acquired a N2billion mansion at 1, Audu Ogbe Street, Jabi Abuja.

    The anti-graft agency had been on the trail of Dikko since January 8 when its operatives stormed the posh residence of the ex-Customs boss.

    Following search pressure, Dikko gave himself up on Thursday by responding to the outstanding invitation of the EFCC.

    Looking pale, Dikko arrived at the EFCC’s headquarters at about 10am for interrogation which lasted about eight hours.

     

     

     

  • Nigerian-Turkish Hospital to begin open heart surgeries in Abuja

    Nigerian-Turkish Hospital to begin open heart surgeries in Abuja

    The Nigerian Turkish Nizamiye Hospital is set to begin heart valve replacement and open heart surgery in Abuja.

    A statement by the hospital at the weekend said: “The Nigerian Turkish Nizamiye Hospital decided to commence this service after a careful analysis of the spate of heart diseases prevalent in the Federal Capital Territory Abuja,” it added that “the focus would be coronary artery bypass grafting as well as heart valve replacement

    “The hospital has put in place all the required equipment and a team of experts from Turkey with a track record of excellence.

    “The five-man team is led by Dr Mustafa Kirman, a reputable cardiovascular surgeon from Turkey who is credited to have performed over 15, 000 heart surgeries with 99 per cent success rate”

    The statement, signed by hospital spokesman Mohammed Abubakar said the hospital in its tradition of delivering quality services spared no cost in the composition of the team.

    Deputy Medical Director, Dr Atilla Emiroglu, said the open heart surgery procedure being introduced is the first of its kind in Abuja. “Our surgeons are resident in Abuja and work here fulltime at the hospital.

    “With what we have in place, there is absolutely no need for patients to travel abroad for treatment of whatever illness”

    Dr Kirman, the leader of the five-man delegation, said since coming to Nigeria, he had noticed that many people are suffering from high blood pressure and diabetes and “these are some of the causes of cardiology problems”.

  • Gambo admitted at hospital, bleeding from ear

    Kano Pillars striker, Gambo Mohammed was taken to hospital after he suffered a severe ear injury following a head-on collision with Rivers United player, Wilson Andoh during a Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) match day 12 yesterday at the Yakubu Gowon stadium, Port-Harcourt.

    Gambo, who his making a return after a short injury spell, was admitted at the BMH hospital at the Government Reserve Area (GRA) in Port-Harcourt.

    The team’s captain was replaced by Jeol Djondang when it was discovered that he could no longer continue the game.

    In a chat with SportingLife, the club’s media officer, Idris Malikawa said the club is waiting for the doctor’s report to know how long the striker will spend in hospital.