Tag: labs

  • Experts seek clinical labs’ regulation

    Experts seek clinical labs’ regulation

    • Ex-Kano gov advocates blueprint for research

    Experts in the health sector have called for the enactment of a legislation that would peg the minimum standards before clinical laboratories can be established and operated.

    They made the call at the Eighth Biennial Scientific Conference organised by the Association of Clinical Chemists of Nigeria (ACCN) in Abuja with the theme: “Challenges of contemporary clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine practice in Nigeria.”

    A former Chief Medical Director of the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital, Prof. Aaron Ojule, suggested the establishment of a regulatory body for registration, licensing and oversight of clinical laboratories.

    Ojule, who was the keynote speaker, said clinical laboratories produce results which are used by doctors to treat patients so the results are supposed to be accurate, reliable and timely to influence clinical results.

    He said: “What we are doing currently in Nigeria I’m not sure of the accuracy of our results and we have done a study to prove this, different laboratories saying different things on the same clinical specimen so need to work on it.

    “That’s why we need these regulatory bodies to make sure that our labs are of good quality and standard and there are prescribed international standards to run clinical laboratories but they are not implementing these standards in Nigeria.”

     President of ACCN and Congress Chair, Prof. Joseph Ahaneku emphasised the need for synergy among the professionals and certification of practitioners.

    “In the practice of Clinical Chemistry and clinical pathology we have interplay of very high level manpower personnel in the laboratory and the medical professionals

    Read Also: More well-equipped diagnostic laboratories can improve cancer care, says expert

    “But because of the way we do things, especially in the country where people work in silence.

     “We are having this conference to close the gap so that there will be synergy, cooperation and interaction between various professional bodies that have been legislated and for us to also commence a new conversation,” he said.

     Also, former deputy governor of Kano, Prof. Hafiz Abubakar urged professional bodies to collaborate and operate together so as to minimise the professional rivalry.

    He said there was a need for the country to draw up a blueprint on its national research agenda.

     He bemoaned a situation where individuals and organisations were working at cross purposes, concerning a national research agenda, stressing that it was one of the factors bedeviling the health sector.

     According to him, it is only that the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) was trying to establish a national research foundation going by our current realities as a nation.

    Chairman, Scientific Committee, Prof. John Anetor also stressed the need for collaboration and bringing together expertise and skills from diverse fields.

    “Very importantly, this conference gives us an elegant opportunity to renew our call to the government, to provide good governance that guarantees an enabling environment which allows us to discharge our scientific and professional obligation to the patient and society.

    “Good governance goes with appropriate funding that makes the service provided and research conducted at par with the best anywhere. This in turn contributes to a robust economy by stemming medical tourism,” he added.

  • Shell Nigeria Gas donates labs, ICT centre to Ogun school

    Shell Nigeria Gas donates labs, ICT centre to Ogun school

    Shell Nigeria Gas (SNG) has donated an ICT centre and well-equipped science laboratories to African Church Community Secondary School in Ewupe, a community hosting the company’s facilities in Ota, Ogun State.

    The gesture was the second phase of SNG’s intervention in the school to bring it to a competitive standard.

    Last year, the company also donated a block of five classrooms, a 12-room stand-alone toilet facility, school water system, upgraded football field, and rehabilitated five blocks of 19 classrooms for shared use by the school and the co-located Ebenezer African Church Primary School in the first phase of the intervention.

    “Our goal is to support government and other relevant agencies to close the gap of educational inequality between pupils of public schools and their counterparts in private schools,” Managing Director of SNG, Ed Ubong, said at a ceremony marking the completion and handover of the projects to Ogun State government.

    “We recognise education as the topmost need of the people of our neighboring communities and what we have done is a progression of our longstanding support to the school and to the communities,” Ubong added.

    Ogun State Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology Mrs. Modupe Mujota, who received the facilities, commended SNG’s gesture. She charged the students to take advantage of the facilities to “upscale their academic performance and competitive exploits”.

    “This singular act of Shell Nigeria Gas depicts the company’s fulfillment of its social responsibility for the development of its host communities and is worthy of emulation by others,” she said.

    The Principal, Mr. Gbolahan Adekunjo, acknowledged the improved academic standard and the growing number of enrolment in the school following the series of upgrade by SNG.

    “The interventions have resulted in an enabling environment for teaching and learning and the impact is felt by the students, staff, parents and catchment communities.”

    Community Development Association, Ewupe, Chairman Alhaji Monsuru Akande thanked SNG. He appealed to the government to create the enabling environment for SNG and other companies to support education in the state.

    SNG is owned by Shell  for the downstream distribution of gas.

    It operates a gas transmission and distribution network of approximately 115km and serves industrial customers in Ota, Ogun State and Aba in Abia State.

  • Commissioner: no room for quacks in Sokoto labs

    Sokoto State Commissioner for Health, Dr Balarabe Shehu Kakale has said there is no room for quackery in the medical laboratories in the state.

    He urged the management of the Medical Laboratory Science Council of Nigeria (MLSCN) to join hands with his Ministry to eradicate the menace in the state.

    Kakale spoke when he received  the MLSCN Acting Registrar, Mr Tosan Erhabor.

    He said Governor Hon. Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, quackery would no longer be tolerated in medical laboratory facilities because of its harmful effect on the people.

    According to him, B.Sc and HND holders or others with similar qualifications should not be working in the medical labs as they had not been trained to do so.

    “We cannot condone quackery. If you are not a professional, trained specifically to work in the medical laboratory, but you decide to go and work there, that could also be suicidal considering that you might not know how to handle certain specimens that you may be exposed to. Therefore, you could easily be infected.”

    The Commissioner recalled that a directive had been issued to the Ministry of Higher Education to stop posting polytechnic students to medical laboratories for Industrial Attachment.

    While pledging support for the Council’s efforts to stamp out quackery and ensure that medical laboratories performed up to expectation, Kakale also enjoined the MLSCN to help his Ministry advocate more funding for the health sector, particularly at the Federal Government level as the budgetary allocation to the sector had not achieved much.

    “We have to work together, as no single person or group can do it alone.

    ‘’The Federal allocation to the health sector is a problem. Also, there are existing laws that have not been effectively implemented, including the National Health Act which, if fully implemented, could positively impact medical laboratory services,” he said.

    The MLSCN boss explained that the courtesy visit was in furtherance of the cordial relationship between the Council and the Sokoto State Government, especially the Ministry of Health. He urged the state to work with the Council towards eradicating quackery which he described as the most virulent cankerworm militating against progress in the medical laboratory services sector in the country.

    “Suffice it to say that the activities of quacks have continued to put the lives of our citizens at risk, in addition to creating crisis of confidence for which citizens with the wherewithal prefer to travel to other climes in search of perceived quality diagnosis.

    ‘’Quackery is not only when a trader or carpenter pretends to be a doctor or a medical lab scientist. Anyone that is working in a field, pretending to have the requisite training and experience, which they don’t actually possess, is, indeed, a quack! Thus, there should be no room for BSc. HND and ND holders; including Corps members in any medical laboratory in this state, even for the purpose of internship, when there are qualified Medical Lab Scientists, Technicians and Assistants available for such duties,” he said.

    While expressing the Council’s readiness to collaborate with the state to sanitise medical laboratories there, Erhabor advised the Ministry to ensure that tertiary health facilities in the state commenced the process of getting their laboratories accredited as soon as possible in addition to keying into the Council’s External Quality Assurance (EQA) scheme.

    “These schemes,” he noted, “were established to ensure that medical laboratory tests results based on the same reagents, specimens, and parameters etc., are incontrovertibly accurate and similar irrespective of the location of the facility.”

  • Fed Govt mulls focused labs for ERGP

    The Federal Government is working on modalities for setting up focused labs as part of strategies to maximise inputs from all stakeholders towards enhancing the successful implementation of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).

    According to the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma who briefed members of the Senate Committee on National Planning on the state of the economy in Abuja yesterday, the focused labs would be used as brainstorming facilities to utilise the insights of stakeholders from the public and private sector towards speedy resolution of any challenge in critical areas of the ERGP.

    He said the focused labs would help to further consolidate the gains of government’s economic diversification programme adding that the central objective of the labs include how to bring in private capital to finance a number of development projects across the country.

    He pointed out that the labs are intended to bring all the relevant stakeholders in the public and private sectors into weeks of intensive working sessions to brainstorm on practical steps to overcoming any identified challenges in the selected areas.

    He also said the Federal Government has already engaged some economic and development experts from the private sector and the academia on ERGP implementation to facilitate the process.

    He told the senators that an implementation unit has been set up in the National Planning Ministry to closely monitor the implementation of the critical initiatives of the plan and periodically evaluate implementation progress against set targets and milestones.

    The unit is also to provide early warning signals of potential risks and work closely with the MDAs to articulate actionable measures to be taken against any identified constraints.

    Referring to the recent National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) report which announced the country’s exit from recession, Senator Udoma said even though a GDP growth rate of 0.55per cent is not a substantial growth rate, it is nevertheless significant because the downward drift has been arrested.

    “The fact that the downward drift has been arrested and the economic indicators are pointing upwards is a significant step forward in the effort to reposition the economy which took a downward trajectory beginning from 2014 and slipped into a recession in the second quarter of 2016,” he said.

  • Wanted: Accredited labs for export  products  

    Wanted: Accredited labs for export products  

    Product rejection is a pain in the neck for manufacturers. Local products and services are denied access to international markets because they lack quality certification, which experts blame on inadequate accredited metrology and test laboratories. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA writes on how the establishment of more internationally accredited laboratories can spur industrialisation.

    It’s a paradox. Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy, with Gross Domestic Product (GDP) estimated at $509.9 billion (about N80.3 trillion), has only 84 accredited laboratories to test locally manufactured products or services for international standards.

    South Africa with a GDP of $370.3 billion has 340 accredited labs. China the world’s second largest economy, boasts of 337, 033 labs, according to the ‘2013 International Standards Organisation (ISO) report on the distribution of management system certification’. The United States has 13,000 accredited labs. South Korea has over 7,000 labs.

    Germany, India, Brazil, Egypt have thousands of accredited laboratories each, while Tunisia, Morocco, Kenya and Algeria have hundreds of laboratories each. Other prosperous countries have vibrant, fully accredited and certified laboratories to give their locally manufactured products and services the required competitive edge in international trade. But this is not so in Nigeria where manufacturers, especially as those in the export business continue to agonise over recurring issues of product rejection due to lack of global quality certification caused by inadequate test and metrology labs.

    While certification from internationally accredited labs builds integrity in manufactured products by ensuring that they are tested just once and accepted sequentially anywhere in the world, metrology, which is the science of measurement, determines the right calibration, which is accepted all around the world.

    According to a Quality Management Practitioner and National President of Association of Systems Management Consultants, Mazi Colman Obasi, the need for a metrology lab cannot be over-emphasised. He said such a lab would obtain, conserve, develop, and disseminate the basic requirements and the highest level of calibration standards.

    Obasi told The Nation that it would also provide traceability to the national system and ensure that international technical guidelines are followed for the metrological performance and testing procedures of measuring instruments subject to legal controls. He added that from the point of view of manufacturers, it ensures that their products meet international specifications. He said once a functional metrological lab is established, it is easier for companies, research institutes, testing labs, and institutions of higher learning to interact and collaborate, and find more efficient production processes and new products for the markets. The quality of goods produced will also be more consistent with international standards, hence facilitating commercial transactions, he added.

    Although Nigeria, through the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) recently recorded a feat when she got the approval of the International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation (ILAC) for her Food Laboratory, stakeholders consider it a drop in the oceanconsidering that the approval covered only Nigeria’s food export commodities, which can be tested at the SON’s laboratory in Lekki, Lagos. For instance, stakeholders in the minerals and mining sector whose activities also form part of the new strategic emphasis on growing the non-oil sector are agonising over the rejection of their mined products.

    They blamed poor quality control, poor regulations and the high rate of illegal/informal mining in the sector as reasons for the rejection of mined products in the international market. To them, the absence of internationally accredited test laboratories and metrology labs constitutes a major technical hurdle for their participation in international trade, so the establishment of more labs to cover the mining sector, for instance, is urgently required.

    Indeed, experts have identified the existence of few laboratories, which have been accredited in line with the requirements of ILAC as one of the major challenges to Nigeria’s quest to participate in international trade. For instance, the President, Champions of Development Nigeria (CDN), Mr. Jonas Yomi, in a recent statement, lamented the non-existence or insignificant number of accredited labs in Nigeria. He noted that accredited labs are the backbone of valid testing results without which products or services cannot be said to be certified or conforming to requirements.

     According to an expert, the benefits of having such internationally accredited labs are numerous and cannot be ignored if Nigeria must take its pride of place in the global market. For one, local products will  be standardised and certified, thereby reducing substantially the preponderance of fake and substandard goods. Besides, access to certification will also drive down costs based on the fact that Nigerian officials will no longer need to travel abroad to get samples of products tested. The reduction in the cost and, indeed, the time taken for certification will be reflected in the economy through a reduction in the prices of goods and services. Cost of output will drastically reduce for the manufacturers through the SON’s intervention.

     That is not all. If Nigeria has her own accredited lab, it will save the nation from the situation whereby multiple testing of product samples are carried out in various countries where they are taken to for marketing and sales. With her accredited lab, products from Nigeria will not be tested more than once, and this will be done here instead of at the convenience of other countries, when they choose to.

    More importantly, with local produce being tested locally and sent all over the world without any hindrance, exports will receive significant boost. This will, in turn, develop the nation’s agricultural sector, as Nigeria has comparative advantage in agricultural products.

     Estimates by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the U.S Department of Commerce show that standards and related conformity assessment (checking that products and services measure up to standards) have an impact on 80 per cent of the world’s trade in commodities.The World Trade Organisation (WTO) requires its members to use international standards of the type developed by ISO to avoid the technical barriers to trade owing to differing national or regional standards. What this implies is that the more accredited labs a nation acquires, the more products or services it is able to export with ISO’s authorisation.

    Indeed, various studies undertaken by development experts have proven that countries with higher number of accredited labs have higher economic performance and productivity than those with lower accredited laboratories. Because of inadequate accredited test labs and metrology labs in Nigeria, goods produced or originating from the country cannot gain acceptance in any country to which they are sent. The only condition for acceptance will be that such goods are subjected to further scrutiny, inspection and testing before being certified in the countries to which they are being exported to, strictly on the terms and conditions set by those countries.

    At moment, Nigeria depends on American standard bodies to get international referencing for its own products, while samples of products to be tested in Nigeria are flown to other foreign countries, such as Ghana and South Africa for testing to occur.

    Expectedly, this has not gone down well with operators and stakeholders in the real sector, including the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), and Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA).

    To them, the situation is responsible for why Nigeria remains uncompetitive in global trade, which is why they are calling for the adoption of an integrated quality management approach.

    Incidentally, such call is coming at a time the Federal Government is shifting focus to the non-oil sector in the hope of warding off the impending economic crisis arising from the continued plunge in oil prices.The Federal Government through the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, recently gave vent to its push for economic diversification when it listed 13 National Strategic Export Products (NSEP) to replace oil.

    The Minister, during an unscheduled inspection and a meeting he held with the Executive Director of Nigerian Exports Promotion Council (NEPC), Mr. Olusegun Awolowo, and members of the management team in Abuja, listed the 13 NSEP in three categories, including agro-industrial- palm oil, cocoa, cashew, sugar and rice); mining related- cement, iron ore/metals, auto parts/cars, aluminium and oil and gas industrial products – petroleum products, fertiliser/urea, petrochemical and methanol.

    Aganga noted that originally 12 products were identified, but that the number was increased because the Executive Director of NEPC made a strong case for the inclusion of cashew on the list. He, however, charged NEPC to deploy its capacity for kick-starting the diversification of the country’s economy in line with the government’s agenda. He said Nigeria could no longer continue to be an import-dependent country. According to him, the nation is, at moment, wasting its foreign reserves on imported products most of which can be produced locally.

    Awolowo agrees with him, noting that NEPC had long recognised the need to develop the non-oil export sub-sector and had in the process held strategic meetings with stakeholders for the development of ideas aimed at improving the foreign exchange earnings by Nigeria through different avenues. These, he said, include the development of a four-year Strategic Plan, One State One Product (OSOP), Nigerian Diaspora Export Programme (NDEX) and the development of new markets for new products.

    As highly commendable as moves by the Minister and the NEPC to diversify the economy by riding on the back of non-oil export is, the challenge again remains the insignificant number of accredited labs and metrology labs in Nigeria. While real sector operators, including the President, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Alhaji Remi Bello, have thrown their weight behind the emphasis on non-oil economy, insisting that it is more inclusive, growth-oriented and characterised by high economic linkages and more sustainable, lack of internationally accredited labs to test and ascertain that locally manufactured export products meet international standards, might throw spanner in the works in nothing is done.

    SON is aware of this danger, which was why the agency inaugurated a committee to establish the National Accreditation Body in May 2013 to draw the roadmap for the nation’s accreditation and certification schemes. The agency also went a notch higher, inaugurating the National Quality Policy Committee on September 26, 2013. The inter-ministerial committee was given the mandate to streamline the regulatory frameworks, and to institute infrastructure development models and modalities for national total quality concept practices that will form the basis for standards in both the public and private sector.

    Although, two of SON’s food technology laboratories were accredited by AALA – ISO/IEC 17025 for chemical and biological testing, while others are said to be at various stages of accreditation, the standard regulatory body is also encouraging private investors to set up laboratory facilities in the country.

  • Lost adjusters to Govt: Build more forensic labs

    The President, Institute of Loss Adjusters of Nigeria (ILAN), Mr Lebi Omoboyowa, has called on the Federal Government to build more forensic laboratories in the country.

    According to him, a situation where only one science laboratory exists in Nigeria affects the quality of work of forensic experts in arriving at accurate judgments following investigations.

    Omoboyowa, who spoke in Lagos, said there is only one forensic laboratory in the country and it is the Science Laboratory at Oshodi, Lagos.

    He noted that in advanced countries, there are other forensic laboratories, such as accounting, engineering and others.

    He said apart from their own professional knowhow, they also consult the forensic experts.

    On the promotion of professionalism among loss adjusters, Omoboyowa said ILAN members have begun to improve themselves by going for local and international trainings while they also network with their professional colleague.

    He noted that the idea of holding meetings in the underwriters’ office has gone.

    “Adjusters must have their own office and necessary equipment so that at the end, an accurate result is produced without time being wasted.

    “I believe that we will surmount all the challenges before us and boost the image of this industry,” he said.

    He added: “The objectives of the institute is to establish and sustain a professional body of practising loss adjusters in Nigeria and engage in activities that will ensure the general welfare and well-being of insurance loss adjusters and to take necessary actions for the advancement of education in the field of loss adjusting in Nigeria.

    “It is being pursued by establishing and maintaining institutions, libraries, schools, and recreation centres for the succour, assistance or education of its members, and the public in Nigeria in loss adjusting.

    “It also includes applying the funds of the institute in the purchase of proprietary or other interests and the establishment of projects the proceeds of which shall be appropriated wholly and entirely for charitable purposes and public wellbeing of Loss Adjusters in Nigeria.”

    He said as part of their code of conduct, a loss adjuster must not accept nor give secret commission in connection with his profession, must not accept any part of the profits or the professional work of a solicitor or any commission or bonus thereon, nor shall he be actively engaged in any firm of insurance broking, insurance agency or underwriting; shall not directly or indirectly accept from an auctioneer, broker or agent, any part or proportion of any remuneration commission or bonus on the charges payable to such auctioneer, broker or agent.

    “A loss adjuster must not participate in any benefit from the sale of salvage, the loss on which he will adjust or has adjusted and a loss adjuster who has been instructed by one insurer and ascertains that any other insurers also cover other interests in the same loss, must not make contact with the other Insurers with a view to seeking their instructions to act in connection with the loss.”