Tag: increase

  • Expert raises the alarm on increase in male infertility

    Male infertility is on the increase,   an obstetrician/gynaecologist, Dr. Abayomi Ajayi, has said.

    Ajayi, who is also the Managing Director Nordica Fertility Centre, Lagos, pioneer of the Intracytoplasmic Morphologically Selected Injection (IMSI) in Nigeria, otherwise known as Test Tube baby, said the male factor is responsible for the increase in In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF).

    IVF is a process of fertilisation where an egg is combined with sperm outside the body.

    Ajayi, who raised the alarm during an interactive session with reporters in Abuja, however, allayed any fear, saying that it is easy to handle when compared with the female fertility.

    He emphasised that the campaign was to let the men know  that there was a way out. He however urged on heathy lifestyle.

    Ajayi said: “Some studies that were done in my clinic, we saw that 12 per cent of the men who come to the clinic do not have sperm at all. We have seen also that this has been the commonest reason for IVF.”

    While regretting the lack of statistics on the issue, the Nordica boss, however, noted that efforts were ongoing to get a national figure on male fertility in the country.

    “We are still working to get national statistics. What we have seen in other part of the world, for some countries where they have statistics like in Denmark, about 40 percent of the men that the sperm count is bad. And, therefore, this tells us that either we like it or not, there is something happening to men in the world as relates to fertility and we cannot continue to ignore it. And if we are not careful, I hope we will not go into extinction. You can see in some countries like Japan now, the population is getting older and they are not having many young ones,” he said.

    He also said there is an advanced technology, which helps in identifies normal and abnormal sperm as well as choosing the sperm (Morphologically Selected Sperm).

    On the percentage of the successes recorded so far, he said it was difficult to state as the egg of the women most times determine the final result.

    “It depends on the wife because the egg is very important. When a woman is 40 years old, the quality of the egg is not very good; it is like putting two things that are not very good together. But if the wife was about 25 years and everything was good, the case could have been different. That is why it is difficult to put a percentage to that problem,” he explained.

     

  • Why cancer is on the increase, by Experts

    Importation of fairly used electronics and technological devices has been linked to increase in cases of cancer, diabetes and other immuno-cardiovascular diseases in Nigeria.

    This is just as a recent research showed that the country generates 1.1million tonnes of electronic waste annually, with 40 percent produced in Lagos.

    Electronic wastes, mostly generated from dead electronics, fridges, mobile phones and computers are said to contain highly toxic substances, which contaminate the air, water and the ecosystem.

    Urging Nigerians to stop hoarding unused electronic devices as well as avoid buying imported fairly used electronics, a firm, E-Terra Technologies Limited said it has taken its campaign on proper disposal of e-waste to universities and communities across the country.

    It said it has also partnered the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA) to ensure e-waste generated do not constitute health hazards to residents.

    Giving the seriousness of the e-waste crisis, the firm said a monthly community engagement campaign has been introduced, adding that training on proper management for informal handlers of electronic gadgets would be introduced.

    According to E-Terra’s Managing Director, Ifeanyi Ochonogor, plans have been concluded for the country’s maiden waste recycling exposition, slated for May 24 in Lagos.

    At the exposition, Ochonogor said  efforts of some government agencies, partners and clients, who have shared in its vision to address the worsening environmental, health and financial problems caused by improper e-waste management would be recognised.

    According to him, Nigeria has the best machinery on proper data destruction, assuring that there would be no information leakages.

    “Giving the progress that the world is making in technology advancement, same progress and innovation should be done to ensure sustainable e-waste management and protection users.

    “From statistics, Nigeria generates at least 1.1m tons of e-waste annually and 40 percent is generated in Lagos. So, the issue now is turning these e-waste from the toxins they are to avenues for wealth creation. That is why we are calling on people to bring out all unused electronics.”

     

  • Residents protest 300 per cent electricity bill increase

    Scores of residents of Alimosho, a Lagos suburb, yesterday stormed the Egbeda Undertaking Office of the Ikeja Electric to condemn about 300 per cent increase in their March electric bills.

    They frowned at the ‘crazy’ bills.

    Their spokesman, Mr Dayo Ali, said there was no justification for the ‘crazy bill’ given to the residents.

    He said: “The billings have been increased beyond imagination. We don’t expect what Ikeja Electric is giving to us. It is so high that a single shop was given N18,000. Some houses got up to N30,000 and above. This is too much. We want reduction or else we will march to the headquarters in Alausa to protest this.”

    Ifeanyi Ugor, who lives on Bada Street in Akowonjo, said: “This is unacceptable; it should be taken back to what it was before. We are even complaining that what they give us monthly is out of the reality of our consumption. The power supply is terribly bad and now they are increasing our bill, we won’t take it from the IE.

    The Marketing Manager of the Akowonjo office, simply identified as Akinwale, told the aggrieved residents that the company billed them based on their power consumptions.

    He complained that they could not meter every customer because they did not have the funds.

    Each transformer, he said, has metre from which the company reads the power consumption in each area.

  • ‘Malnutrition on increase among children under five’

    ‘Malnutrition on increase among children under five’

    A survey has shown that malnutrition among children under five years has worsen generally in the country.

    This is in spite the huge amount pledged by government and individuals to reduce the prevalence of under nutrition by 60percent in the worst affected parts of Nigeria.

    In 2016, the Federal Government approved N4billion to tackle malnutrition in part of North East Nigeria, while Aliko Dangote Foundation in the following year pledged to expend $100 million (about 36billion).

    Children living in rural areas are the most hit, the fifth round Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, (MICS5), revealed.

    The survey was carried out in 2016/2017 by the National Bureau of Statistics, (NBS) is in collaboration with the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHCDA) and National Agency for the Control of Aids (NACA), as part of the global MICS programme.

    Presenting the survey at a training on data driven reporting, United Nations Children Fund Monitoring and Evaluation specialist, Maureen Zubie-Okolo, said the data for MICS5 was collated between September 2016 and January 2017 from 33,901 households in 2,239 enumeration areas across the 36 States and Federal Capital Territory.

    According to the report, underweight prevalence; children who are too thin for their age increased from 24.2percent to 31.5percent, stunting prevalence; children who are short for their age increased from 34.8percent to 43.6percent while wasting prevalence; children who are too thin for their height increase marginally from 10.2 percent to 10.8percent.

    Malnutrition is a condition that occurs when people consistently do not consume or absorb the right amounts and types of food and essential nutrients. Globally, it contributes to nearly half of all child deaths — that is more than 3 million children each year.

    Nigeria still ranks third highest in childhood mortality in the world, after India and Pakistan, despite a nationwide drop in infant mortality rate from 97 per 1000 live births recorded in 2011 , to 70 per 1000 live births in 2016 to 2017.

    The MICS5 report also revealed that the probability of a child dying between birth and the fifth birthday, dropped from 158 per 1000 live births in 2011 to 120 per 1000 live births in 2016 to 2017

    Earlier, the head of nutrition division, federal ministry of health, Chris Isokpunwu, said that the country needs N279.54 billion ($912 million) to address malnutrition in all states for five years.

    The amount, according to him represents what is needed to be invested by all, including private, government and donor partners for the next five years and it will help save 123,000 lives each year, while it will also prevent 890,000 children from stunting, which is one of the manifestation of malnutrition in children.

    In the middle of 2017, Aliko Dangote Foundation pledged to expend $100 million (about 36billion) to reduce the prevalence of under nutrition by 60 per cent in the worst affected parts of Nigeria.

    In 2016, the Federal Government also approved N4billion to tackle malnutrition in part of Northeast.

     

     

  • AGF decries increase in detainees without trial

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami (SAN) has expressed concerns that awaiting trial inmates constitute 70 per cent of the nation’s prison population.

    Malami said the development was a violation of the rights of inmates, which must be reversed through deliberate efforts of the state to decongest the prisons.

    Deputy Director (Information) in the Federal Minister of Justice, Ogundoro Modupe, quoted the AGF as speaking when he led the Federal Government Stakeholders Committee on Prison Decongestion to Rivers and Imo states on February 5 and 6.

    Malami decried the unchecked violation of fundamental rights of prison inmates across the country, explaining that the purpose of the visit was to oversee the implementation of the Federal Executive Council’s directive in fast-tracking the decongestion of prisons.

    He added that the Committee would also review cases of inmates who have been convicted of minor offences with option of fines and are unable to pay.

    According to Malami, “The committee wishes to secure the release of as many of such inmates as possible through the payment of their fines.

    “I am therefore pleased to announce that the committee will, in addition to ensuring the payment of fines, also conduct a review of cases of inmates awaiting trial for more than five years, in the select priority prisons.

    “These able bodied men represent our potential workforce, they represent tomorrow’s fathers to raise the next generations of Nigerians.

    “We must, therefore, begin to find improved ways of addressing the issue of crime and the treatment of minor offenders in our criminal justice system.”

    The committee’s Chairman and Chief Judge of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Justice Ishaq Bello, during the tour of prisons in Imo State, facilitated the release of 13 inmates, whose fines were settled by the Governor Rochas Okorocha.

    In Rivers, the committee released 26 inmates, among who governor, Nyesom Wike assisted in paying their fines

    Justice Bello also released those whose offences were minor but were either remanded for years without trial or sentenced beyond  the provisions of the law.

    He stated that the problem with  the prisons is not only about the crowded space inmates were subjected to, but also the attendant psychological and emotional impacts.

    Wike flayed the police for delay in charging arrested persons to court, alleging that the this was partly responsible for the swelling figure of inmates.

    Speaking during the meeting with the Committee in Owerri, Okorocha admitted that prison atmosphere in Nigeria cannot guarantee transformation of inmates upon their release.

    He also identified the country’s justice system as part of the factors responsible for prison congestion.

    Okorcha suggested prison concession or a private, public partnership, which he said, would enable the private sector participate in the construction of prisons and the welfare of inmates.

    Among those freed was a young woman, Joy Goodluck, an indigene of Imo State, sentenced to three years jail term in Port Harcourt prison for stealing a half bag of cassava.

    The lady, who was a month pregnant at the time of the offence, was set free with her baby after she narrated the circumstance that took her to the prison.

  • No wage increase, no recovery, says Aremu 

    No wage increase, no recovery, says Aremu 

    There can be no meaningful economic recovery until the Federal Government addresses productivity and wages matters, the General Secretary, National Union of Textile, Garment and Tailoring Workers (NUTGTW), Comrade Issa Aremu, has said.

    In a reaction to a report by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) that Nigeria, with a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth of 0.55 per cent, is out of recession, he noted that the economy has the potential for faster recovery and not just exiting recession.

    According to Aremu, this could have been possible if the government had put an end to the persistent crisis of compensation of the working class, manifesting in what he termed as “criminal” non-payment and delayed payments of salary by many states, despite several Federal Government bailouts of trillions of naira.

    On the  the NBS positive growth numbers of 0.55 per cent, compared to the negative contraction of  1.6 per cent in 2016, Aremu said Nigeria could only recover from economic recession with enhanced purchasing power, which is only possible through prompt and adequate payment of over 10 million employed workforce.

    The labour leader, who likened Nigeria’s economy to a big, blind economy, which gets excited with a dimmed ray of eye sight, said it was time Nigeria got right its growth and development numbers.

    He noted that the Federal Government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) (2016-2020), launched last year, envisaged 4.6 per cent real GDP growth in the year, adding that this makes the recent token positive growth of 0.55 per cent a far cry from the planned target.

    Aremu, a labour representative on the National Wages and Salaries Commission, said the key to sustainable development has improved labour productivity in both public and private sectors, which could only happen with motivated pay and quality pensions.

    He advised the Federal Government to address the crises of compensation in all sectors, notably education, and setlle with unions, such as the Academic Staff Union of Universities, which is on strike, by paying all outstanding allowances and ensure service delivery on the part of the workforce.

    “Nigeria’s economic recovery is elusive, with constant avoidable work stoppages and loss of man hours in an economy trying to exit recession,” Aremu added.

  • Venezuela’s chaos can spark oil price increase

    Deepening turmoil in Venezuela could fuel a rise in oil prices, a feat the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has been striving to achieve through oil production cuts.

    According to MarketWatch report, the South American nation, home to the world’s largest oil reserves, voted to give President Nicolás Maduro’s government powers to redraft the constitution, sparking clashes between protesters and state security forces. The opposition charges the vote could mark the end of democracy in Venezuela.

    What the chaos portends for the oil industry, the report said: “The “possibility of chaos” in the country is the “only true element that would change the dynamic for crude,” Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at Oil Price Information Service, said.

    “If “Vendemonium,” as he dubbed it, comes to pass, it could lift West Texas Intermediate crude-oil prices up from their current trading range of roughly $42 to $53 a barrel, said Kloza.

    WTI crude, the U.S. benchmark, traded just below $50 a barrel last week, contributing to a 8.7 per cent weekly gain fueled in part by data showing a fourth-straight weekly decline in U.S. crude inventories, as well as pledges by some OPEC members to curb exports.

    But WTI crude and Brent, the global benchmark, still trade about eight per centlower year to date, even as a production-cut agreement by OPEC members and other major non-cartel nations such as Russia, that began at the start of the year, has seen historically high compliance and has been extended through March of next year.

    “For oil, there is “ongoing concern about stability as the opposition gains strength and the chance that the U.S. will ratchet up pressure by halting imports,” James Williams, energy economist at WTRG Economics told MarketWatch. Venezuela is among the top suppliers of crude to the U.S., though its production has declined since last year on the heels of civil unrest.

    “Venezuela’s oil output has dropped over the last year. A long strike by Venezuelan national oil firm’s workers was to blame for the huge drop in 2003. The chaos intensified last week with the U.S. State Department ordering family members of U.S. embassy employees in Caracas to leave the country.

    “If we are removing diplomats, it is certainly an indicator of the intent to embargo oil from Venezuela,” said Williams. The U.S. had placed sanctions last week on 13 high-ranking Venezuelan officials for alleged corruption, among other offences, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    “If Maduro installs puppeteers who more or less make up new constitutional rules, it really puts an already beleaguered (U.S. President Donald Trump) administration in a tough spot,” said Kloza.

    Still, if the Trump administration “tries to put financial handcuffs” on Venezuela’s state-owned Petróleos de Venezuela, SA, (PdVSA), “it might provide the catalyst for the oil market and for consumer gasoline prices to rise appreciably,” Kloza said.

    And the impact could be far reaching, with “financial handcuffs or penalties” potentially signaling “incredible turbulence for Citgo,” he said.

    Citgo Petroleum Corporation, the Venezuela-owned American refiner, employs thousands of U.S. citizens and is “instrumental in ensuring adequate supply of gasoline, diesel fuel and jet fuel,” said Kloza.

    In Russia, integrated oil firm Rosneft, which is majority owned by the country’s government,” might ultimately gain a large ownership stake in Citgo should its parent company and country default,” he said.

    Rosneft received 49.9 per cent of the equity in PdVSA unit Citgo late last year as collateral for a $1.5 billion loan to PdVSA. Reuters recently reported that Rosneft is in talks with PdVSA for a fuel-supply deal and stakes in Venezuela-based oil and natural-gas fields.

    For now, traders can just “hope that Trump only target individuals, not oil” when it comes to sanctions, said Williams.He also warned that the market could see a reaction from the U.S. that is “more complex than a simple halt in imports.

    Meanwhile, Kloza said that if Venezuelan crude continues to flow, there is “limited upside” for the oil market “despite the large inventory draws that have happened and will continue to happen for some time.”

    “Without ‘Vendemonium,’ we’re destined to remain in a low-price oil environment into 2018 or later,” said Kloza.

     

  • No plan to increase fuel price, says Senate panel chair

    •CNPP backs labour, students

    The National Assembly has denied any plans to increase the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) by N5, saying such an action has not been discussed on the floor of the Senate.

    Senate Committee on Works Chairman Kabiru Gaya (APC-Kano) made the clarification in an interview with reporters in Abuja at the weekend.

    But despite the clarification, the Conference of Nigeria Political Parties (CNPP) threw its weight behind Nigeria’s organised labour over the “planned increment”.

    CNPP accused the National Assembly of taking more anti-people decisions than resolutions that could better the lives of the already impoverished masses.

    Gaya, however, said information about the “Road Fund Bill” proposed by his committee was misinterpreted, saying that those speculating it are creating negative perception in the hearts of the people against the Senate.

    The senator, who accused some persons of trying to make mountains out of mole hills, said the misinformation on the proposed bill was an attempt aimed at denting his image and that of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration by mischief-makers, who should rather educate the public on the true position of the bill.

    He said: “They said the Senate is increasing fuel price? That was wrong! They don’t even understand what we are talking about. In the last seven years, I have been in the Senate. There was a N5 levy for which the Petroleum Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPRA) was supposed to be deducted, not to increase, even when pump price was sold at N87 per litre from the amount sold and remit to FERMA to maintain roads.

    “From our calculation, PPRA has not paid N167 billion to FERMA. I raised this issue then and wanted to continue this time again that the same N5, which was supposed to be paid before and they didn’t pay and now should also be deducted and removed from the N145 not to increase.

    “People are complaining because they don’t know the challenges before we in the Committee of Works. We have a lot of work to do because there are about 34 projects that were not included in the 2016 budget. But we make sure that they are now included in the 2017 budget.

    “They were in 2016 budget but were shortchanged and the Buhari administration approved these jobs, but they were not in the contracts in the budget. So, we said there is no way the executive council will approve a project and it’s been announced and it is not included in the budget.

    “The Committee of Works said these projects should be included and we commended the Senate President and the Speaker of the House, who ensured that those projects are included in the budget.”

    But the CNPP, in a statement by its Secretary General, Chief Willy Ezugwu yesterday, said: “We assure the Senate and the Federal Government that their proposed N5 per litre of fuel tax will be resisted.”

    The Alhaji Balarabe Musa-led umbrella body of all registered political parties and associations in Nigeria also warned the Presidency of the imminent consequences of adding to the pains of the ordinary people of Nigeria by raising the pump price of fuel under any guise.

    “Our findings have shown that the bill titled: ‘National Roads Fund (Establishment, etc) Bill 2017’, proposing that N5 to be paid per litre of fuel imported into the country is a ploy by the Federal Government to impose more hardship on Nigerians at a time the burden of recession in the country is becoming unbearable.

    “We thought that the Federal Government should be thinking of reducing the already biting hardship in the country after failing to fulfil the promised increment in minimum wage and non-payment of arrears of workers’ salaries and allowances in the past two years.

    “It seems that the current government at the federal level and their National Assembly collaborators enjoy inflicting more and more pains on Nigerian masses.

    “We wonder why the Senate Committee on Works in its final report on the bill would make such proposal.

    “Are they saying that the only way this government can raise funds is by increasing pump price of petroleum prices and punishing the masses?” the CNPP queried.

    The Nigerian organised labour, students and others have vowed to resist any attempt by government to indirectly or otherwise introduce a hike in the pump price of fuel, given the country’s economic hardship.

  • ‘Ignorance cause of increase in Rhesus factor’

    No fewer than 34 million women are Rhesus Negative, a Rhesus solution campaigner, Mrs Funmilayo Banire, has said.

    This, she said, accounted for the high rate of still births and loss of babies due to Rhesus incompatibility. Rhesus negative is the absence of the factor of the surface of the red blood cells of some people. About 16% of the human population is said to be Rhesus negative.

    Rhesus incompatibility, Mrs Banire, founder of Rhesus Solution Initiative (RSI), said had no link with witchcraft or abiku

    Speaking at a seminar to mark RSI’s10th anniversary in Lagos.

    Mrs Banire said Rhesus incompatibility, which might lead to haemolytic disease of the foetus/newborn, was one of the most-silent but preventable contributors to the high rate of infant  and maternal mortality in the country.

    At the seminar with the theme: Every Life Counts, Mrs Banire said  that RSI’s estimates showed that there are about 216,000 Rhesus Negative women in Lagos.

    She said: “Research conducted by RSI puts prevalence of Rhesus negative women who may be at risk of complications from rhesus incomparability at about 6.01 percent of the sample population. Previous research has also put the prevalence to be between five and 9.5 percent, this may seem small but not negligible compared to the size of the population. We believe that every life counts and in this regard we have been able to donate over 1500 Anti D Immunoglobulin (Rhogam) across General and private hospitals. We have been able to reach over 3000 rhesus negative women.”

    She decried the high cost of the AntiDImmunoglobulin, Rhogam, which can save babies, from N19,000 to N25,000, saying that it is getting out of the reach of women who need it. She said RSI was informed by the level of ignorance about Rhesus incompatibility among young women who had miscarriages and stillbirths.

    Mrs. Banire said part of the NGO’s objectives was to promote awareness about Rhesus, and the organisation had, therefore, organised and participated in more than 100 awareness campaigns in conjunction with various religious groups, government agencies, corporate organisations and other NGOs. “In partnership with the Lagos State Ministry of Education,we organised school awareness outreach for students of secondary schools across Lagos. I call on corporate bodies, representatives of government, individuals to assist the course by supporting the humanitarian efforts,” she said.

    She shared her experience: “I have been lucky to have been spared the emotional roller coaster that comes with child loss, partially due to early knowledge but there are millions of people, especially women who are still suffering due to ignorance, who cannot afford regular meals not to speak of affording treatment injection of N25, 000 sometimes during pregnancy and definitely within 72hours after childbirth. This, therefore, becomes our conscious duty to play our part in assisting humanity.We need to recognise that the government has numerous pressing needs to meet in our society and it is up to us to take up responsibility for the things that we can do within our limited resources.”

    Consultant Haemotology/Executive Secretary, Lagos State Blood Transfusion Service, Dr. Modupe Adebimpe Olaiya. said Rhesus factor is a protein found on the surface of the red blood cells and can be inherited from parents.  “Rhesus incompatibility comes in when the mother is Rhesus Negative and the baby is Rhesus Positive. First child of a Rhesus Positive mother is likely to escape but what happens with the second and subsequent children?

    “If a rhesus negative woman carries a rhesus positive foetus, the incompatibility (dissimilarity) in their rhesus status can make the mother to form antibodies against the foetal RBCs and that in turn can lead to miscarriage, stillbirth or Haemolytic disease of the newborn. Rhesus isoimmunisation can be prevented if sensitisation is avoided.”

    Wife of the Lagos State Governor, Mrs Bolanle Ambode, who was represented by Engr (Mrs) Mosumola Olulade, urged every pregnant woman to visit any recognised hospital or the Lagos State blood transfusion services available at all public hospitals and ensure that their children are tested for Rhesus factor, genotype.

    “Everyone needs to get involved because the government cannot do it alone. Therefore, I urge corporate organisations and public spirited individuals to donate generously to this course and also join the campaign to enlighten and educate the public that Rhesus factor and compatibility to our women.”

  • My wife refused to cook for me until I discovered this secret that made me last 25mins during sex and increase my manhood size

    My wife refused to cook for me until I discovered this secret that made me last 25mins during sex and increase my manhood size

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    I noticed that my sexual performance was diminishing. I could no longer get stronger erections.

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