Tag: Occupational

  • ‘Occupational therapy lucrative profession’

    Potential students seeking admission have been urged to embrace the Federal School of Occupational Therapy, Oshodi.

    According to the Medical Director of Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital, Yaba, Lagos, owners of the school, Dr Oluyemi Ogun, the field of occupational therapy is lucrative.

    She stated this at the institution’s matriculation of 58 intakes.

    On the relevance of occupational therapists in healthcare, Mrs Ogun said they help to improve patients’ability to perform  tasks at work, home, and leisure, among others and facilitate their successful adaptations to disruptions in lifestyle, prevent losses of function and improve or maintain psychological status.

    The institution’s Registrar, Olori Lydia Ajayi, said the school needs  more funding. She explained that the formation of the school is to fill the shortage of occupational therapists.

    She explained: “The idea of establishing a School of Occupational Therapy was conceived by the former Medical Director of the hospital, Dr Idowu Malomo who did not only have the foresight to recognise the apparent dearth of this noble profession in Nigeria but also went ahead to ensure that something was done about it. Before the school commenced, the Management of Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital had been desirous of meeting up with international standards in the provision of care for the mentally ill but the hospital was incapacitated in the area of having well-trained staff who could take up this need. There was scarcity of professionally qualified occupational therapists in the country.”

    She added:  “The Management Board for the hospital then set up a Technical Committee under the leadership of Dr. Obal Otu. This committee put in their best and came up with reports and several working papers all set towards the actualisation of this goal. The Management Board, based on the Technical Committee reports, sought the approval of the Federal Ministry of Health and this was given. The minister also granted the use of the abandoned property near the hospital for the take-off of the school immediately. The Federal School of Occupational Therapy was approved for establishment by the Federal Ministry of Health on   March 15, 2002. A prominent member of the Technical Committee that facilitated the approval was the late Mr. J.T. Adamu, Deputy Director (Nursing).  He, sadly, did not live to see the school take off in March 2003.”

    Olori Ajayi boasted that the institution is the first of its kind in Nigeria and the West African Sub-region.

    The Acting Principal of the institution, Mr Adeoso Akinwole, said: ‘’We have produced best of hands that are manning various hospitals in both public and private practice.”

  • Society seeks review of occupational, environmental health laws

    There  is an urgent need  to review occupational and environmental laws.

    The Society of Occupational and Environmental Health Physicians of Nigeria (SOEHPON) National President, Dr Okon Akiba, made the call at this year’s conference and general meeting of the society.

    The theme was: Occupational health for all.

    Akiba said: “The law is obsolete. Occupational health is law, and policy and guidelines-driven; other than that, we are nowhere. We must do it and put it in the cost of production. The gaps in policy are big.’’

    He added that it was for this that the society was calling for a review of the law guiding occupational health.

    He continued: ‘’It is only as a matter of passion for us having worked in multinational companies that we see these things. Occupational health is almost non-existent here. There is a difference between just providing curative and medical health.

    ‘’Occupational health is about being proactive and workers must know the hazards. You must tell them the hazards involved in their work and put in place preventive measures so that the workplace is healthy.

    “There is an urgent need to adopt a National Policy and Programme for occupational health that includes actions for providing competent occupational health services for all people at work. Occupational health is not about us, it is about the public. We are sharing knowledge about safety in the workplace and ensuring the right policies are in place and that guidelines are put in place. Employers are more interested in the work forgetting that the employees have to be healthy, the workplace has to be safe and will be more cost effective at the end of the day because a healthy workforce is a healthy organisation and the end point is enhanced productivity.”

    Akiba said his society was x-raying  the occupational health hazards and risks associated with the informal and the formal sectors, since it is apparent that not much had been documented about the issues.’’

    He said occupational health is an important factor for sustainable socio-economic development that enables workers to enjoy a healthy and productive life during their working years.

    Country Director, International Labour Organisation (ILO),  Nigeria and West Africa, Daniel Zulu, said the ILO/WHO 1950 Constitution sets forth the principle that workers should be protected from sickness, disease, and injury arising from their employment, “yet for millions of workers the reality is very different’’.

    ‘’About 100 million workers are injured and 200,000 die yearly in occupational accidents and 68 to 157 million new cases of occupational diseases are attributed to hazardous exposures or workload,” he added.

    Zulu said: “By affecting the health of the working population, occupational injuries and diseases have profound effects on work productivity and on the economic, social and well being of workers, their families and dependents. .

    SOEHPON National Secretary,  Dr. Uche Enumah, said  the conference is held yearly: “We do this annually to train ourselves. We have a two-day pre-training workshop. Medicine is all about continuing education and latest developments in the field.

    “Health and safety at work are important matters that relate to the general health and well being of working people and, therefore, should be given due consideration in policies, at all levels. Health and safety problems at work are, in principle, preventable and should be done by using all available tools, legislative, technical, research, training, education, information and economic instruments.’’

    “The government should ensure the development of necessary infrastructure for effective implementation of occupational health programmes, including health services, research programmes, training and education, information services and data banks. Networking of such infrastructure within and among the countries would substantially facilitate their efforts to implement national programmes.’’’

  • ‘Medical team incomplete without occupational therapists’

    ‘Medical team incomplete without occupational therapists’

    The Medical Director of Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital (FNPH), Yaba, Dr Richard Adebayo, has called on hospitals to include occupational therapy practitioners in their medical teams for the holistic recovery of patients.

    According to Adebayo, occupational therapy practitioners are the professionals who put the icing on the cake in medical care because the therapy (OT) is widely provided for people with chronic musculoskeletal conditions. So after the surgery and other medical interventions, occupational therapists improve the ability of patients to perform daily tasks.

    Adebayo spoke at the 11th and 12th Convocation of the Federal School of Occupational Therapy (FSOT), Oshodi, Lagos.

    There were 66 graduands: 25 from the 2015/2016 graduating class, and 41 from 2016/2017 set. The graduates have been groomed and certified to go into active practice or further studies, up to first degree. The overall best graduating student in the 2015/16 set was Yusuf T. Victoria, and Gogo O. Mayokun for 2016/17.

    He said when a patient undergoes treatment but cannot adjust to life thereafter so as to carry out everyday activity, there is a tendency for such to go into depression with other problems evolving such as suicidal thoughts, “but when occupational therapy practitioner is included in the medical team, such will attend to the patient after other team members have done their part, and the patient will be able to do activities and valued life roles at work, in the home, at leisure and socially.

    “Occupational therapy practitioners facilitate successful adaptations to disruptions in lifestyle, prevent losses of function and improve or maintain psychological status. Some interventions e.g. joint protection and hand exercises are effective for patients after medical treatment. Occupational therapy practitioners are increasingly taking over patients sooner after treatment for interventions to help prevent progression of functional, physical and psychological problems,” Dr Adebayo noted.

    The Guest lecturer, Ms Oluwaseyi B. Aladesuyi, a Generic Occupational Therapy practitioner at Federal Medical Centre, Abeokuta said it is advisable for the graduands to pursue academic excellence before practising. She reasoned that it is no easy to climb up the medical ladder in the country without adequate paper qualifications, “So from my personal experience while obtaining a Masters in Occupational therapy (OT) it is good you get the papers through further studies rather than going into practice. There is no PhD holder in OT yet in the country, you can make it happen,” she said.

    Ms Aladesuyi, whose generic practice cuts across various clinical settings including stroke rehabilitation, paediatric neurology and treatment of orthopaedic injuries, said the relevance of Occupational therapy practitioner stands in the answer to a question of “What matters to you?” not, “What’s the matter with you?”

    She said: “In its simplest terms, occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants help people across the lifespan participate in the things they want and need to do through the therapeutic use of everyday activities (occupations). Common occupational therapy interventions include helping children with disabilities to participate fully in school and social situations, helping people recovering from injury to regain skills, and providing support for older adults experiencing physical and cognitive changes. Occupational therapy services typically include customised intervention to improve the person’s ability to perform daily activities and reach the goals, of bathing, brushing, writing or signing of cheques or feeding. A major focus of occupational therapy is rehabilitation related to impairments of the upper extremity i.e., shoulder, elbow, forearm, wrist, hand. But either in a specialised hand clinic, general rehabilitation clinic, or acute care setting, the role of occupational therapy practitioner in upper extremity rehabilitation is to return the client to a meaningful participation in his or her daily activities.”

    She said the many benefits of Occupational Therapy is seen when the upper extremity disability can result in disruption of many if not all activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living. “Occupational therapy professionals receive a strong educational component in psychosocial development and pathology. This provides the basis for understanding the impact of upper extremity dysfunction on key daily activities and roles. Course work in mental health gives occupational therapists the skills to evaluate clients’ psychosocial and emotional needs, modify the treatment approach to facilitate compliance with the rehabilitation programme, and promote the best outcome possible.

    “Because of the holistic, client centered approach of occupational therapy, clients are met at their current level of function. Through activity analysis, the occupational therapist is able to address each client’s priorities, along with his or her pathologies, with activity modifications and compensatory techniques to facilitate performing at his or her greatest level of independence from the start, and at every step of the rehabilitation process. This independence encourages integration of the affected upper extremity as soon as possible, thereby making the journey to maximal function seamless,” explained Ms Aladesuyi.

    The Registrar /Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Medical Rehabilitation Therapist Registration Board of Nigeria , Mrs Olufunke T. Akanle said the regulatory body paid a re-accreditation to the school June last year checking and scrutinising all students, staff and academic records to ensure compliance with standards, “at the end of the exercise, the programme was reaccredited subject to another visit in 2019. I encourage all the graduands to register with the board. That way we monitor their practice and won’t regard them as quacks.”

    The Acting Principal, A. Adeoso, said the major challenge confronting the school was funding, “if the school can get more funding there will be greater facilities to train the students, and also be upgraded to a degree awarding institution of learning. Pending that, First Degree can be obtained at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife and overseas.”

  • ‘Occupational illness, accidents at work claim $2.8tr’

    ‘Occupational illness, accidents at work claim $2.8tr’

    The International Labour Organisation (ILO) has stated that latest report from its research has showed that the direct or indirect cost of occupational illness and accidents at work is estimated at $2.8 trillion worldwide.

    ILO’s Director-General, Guy Ryder, who stated this while lending his support to the recently organized World Congress on Safety and Health at Work held in Frankfurt, Germany said a world without fatal or serious occupational accidents is possible.

    He said the direct or indirect cost of occupational illness and accidents at work is estimated at $2.8 trillion worldwide, noting that the triennial Congress was co-organized by the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the International Social Security Association (ISSA), and was hosted by the German Social Accident Insurance (DGUV).

    According to Ryder, about 2.3 million people worldwide die annually as a result of occupational illnesses and accidents at work, adding that there are also 860,000 occupational accidents every day, with consequences in terms of injuries.

    “These figures are unacceptable and yet these daily tragedies often fail to show up on the global radar. Clearly, there is still much to be done. Serious occupational accidents are, firstly, human tragedies but economies and society also pay a high price.

    “The right to a safe and healthy workplace is a basic human right – a right to be respected at every level of development and in different economic conditions.