Tag: PHC

  • Healthcare: Kaduna emerges best state in PHC

    Healthcare: Kaduna emerges best state in PHC

    Kaduna State has emerged as the best-performing state in Primary Health Care (PHC) in the northwest, underscoring Governor Uba Sani’s strong commitment to transforming the health sector.

    The deputy governor, Dr Hadiza Balarabe who received international recognition and a cash prize of $500,000 on behalf of the government, stated that the award is a testimony of the Governor’s exceptional healthcare investments and leadership.

    ‘’For Kaduna State, the award represents more than just financial recognition. It stands as a testament to the state’s dedicated health team and their tireless efforts to enhance healthcare services for residents,’’ she added.

    The $500,000 cash prize is expected to further support Kaduna State’s ongoing healthcare initiatives and continued improvements in primary healthcare delivery, she said.

    The deputy governor was accompanied by the Commissioner of Health and the Executive Secretary of the Primary Health Care Board, to the gala night hosted by the Nigerian Governors’ Forum at the Banquet Hall in Aso Villa, Abuja, where the award was given.

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    The PHC Leadership Challenge which gave the award, recognizes Kaduna State’s significant investments and strategic approach to improving public health infrastructure and service delivery.

    It is a flagship programme that was initiated in 2019, following the Seattle Declaration which aims to strengthen the governors’ commitment to primary healthcare.

    The program is a collaborative effort involving the Nigerian Governors Forum, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, UNICEF, Aliko Dangote Foundation, and the National Primary Health Care Development Agency.

  • FG disburses N130b to PHCs

    FG disburses N130b to PHCs

    The Federal Government has invested N130.8 billion over the past five years in equipping primary healthcare centers (PHCs) nationwide, The Nation has learnt.

    For 2024, the government has disbursed N25.8b with another 12.9 waiting to be disbursed.

    The investment is part of the Basic Health Care Provision Fund (BHCPF), a strategic initiative aimed at reducing maternal and infant mortality while ensuring that quality healthcare services are accessible to all Nigerians, particularly the most vulnerable.

    The funds have been disbursed to 8,809 PHCs across the country, with at least one center in every political ward within each Local Government Area (LGA), the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), the National Emergency Medical Treatment Committee (NEMTC), and the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC).

    During the same period, 1.96 million Nigerians were enrolled under the NHIA, broadening the scope of accessible health coverage.

    According to Mukhtar Muhammad, Secretary of the Ministerial Oversight Committee (MOC), the BHCPF aims to expand its coverage, doubling the number of PHCs in every ward by 2027.

    However, Muhammad emphasised that PHCs can only access these funds if they meet strict fund-tracking criteria and if the state governments contribute the required 25% counterpart funding.

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    During a recent BHCPF media engagement in Abuja, Muhammad highlighted the significant challenges hindering the implementation of mandates despite the significant milestones it has been able to achieve since its inception.

    The BHCPF is designed to remove barriers to accessing primary healthcare, especially for those in remote areas.

    These centers, being the closest healthcare facilities to the people, are intended to provide quality care with trained health workers and necessary equipment.

    The fund is disbursed through four main gateways: the NHIA (48.75%), NPHCDA (45%), NEMTC (5%), and NCDC (1.25%).

    According to Muhammad, the necessity of the BHCPF becomes clear when considering Nigeria’s alarming health statistics. Despite representing only 2.4% of the world’s population, Nigeria accounts for 10% of global maternal deaths.

  • ‘Govt will investigate alleged carting away of PHC equipment’

    ‘Govt will investigate alleged carting away of PHC equipment’

    Cross River Commissioner for Health, Dr. Henry Ayuk, says the government will investigate alleged carting away of equipment from a Primary Health Care (PHC) facility at Bebuabie community.

    He made this known in an interview yesterday in Calabar while reacting to a viral video showing an official of Obudu Local Government PHC trying to cart away equipment.

    Ayuk said government would slam sanctions on anyone found culpable.

    The suspected personnel, who is the coordinator of the PHC, had arrived Bebuabie Health Centre in a bus tagged Cross River State Government, Primary Health Care Development Agency 014C.

    However, she met stiff resistance from youths of the community on the grounds of lack of information to the community leaders and PHC officials.

    “We will investigate the matter, and if anyone is found guilty, he or she will be sanctioned in line with the extant rules of the civil service.

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    “I have directed my permanent secretary to liaise with her counterpart in the State Primary Health Care Development Agency to unravel the truth or otherwise of the allegation and report to government for further action.

    “In a matter of days, I will visit Obudu and Obanliku to ascertain the ugly incidents that have made the rounds recently,” he said.

    Ayuk said the Governor Bassey Otu administration would not condone acts inimical to the development and well-being of the people.

    He hailed the people of Bebuabie community for resisting the heinous act.

    He called on other communities in the state to imitate Bebuabie and take ownership of government infrastructures in their localities, as government alone could not guarantee security of its investments in their localities.

    Ayuk warned anyone with similar sinister motives to back off, as government will wield the arm of the law on whoever tries to thwart its drive towards strengthening the health sector in the state.

  • Council boss commends Army for renovating PHC

    Council boss commends Army for renovating PHC

    The council boss said this shortly after the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. – Gen. Tukur Burutai, inaugurated the renovated clinic.

    Mr Emma Yaro, the Overseer of Akun Development Area, Nasarawa State, on Thursday commended the Nigerian Army for renovating a Primary Healthcare Centre (PHC) at Akpata.

    Yaro made the commendation while speaking with the Newsmen on Thursday in Akpata, headquarters of the development area.

    He said the commendation became imperative considering the importance of healthcare to the socio-economic development of the people.

    “We are grateful to the Nigerian Army as the project would go a long way in meeting the health needs of the people of this area and the state at large.

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    “I told my people that the military that you see around are not for war, but for war against diseases,’’ he said.

    Yaro assured that the facility would be put to good use for the benefit of the people.

    He also commended Gov. Tanko Al-Makura for his developmental strides in all fields of human endeavours.

    He urged the people to continue to support President Muhammadu Buhari and Al-Makura in their efforts at improving the lives of Nigerians.

    Yaro also appealed to the people to live in peace and tolerate one another irrespective of their ethnic, religious and political affiliations.

    Buratai had earlier said the gesture was executed under the civil-military relations project to complement government efforts in providing medical services to the needy.

    NAN

  • PDP supporters tackle Lagos council over stalled PHC renovation

    PDP supporters tackle Lagos council over stalled PHC renovation

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) supporters  in Oshodi-Isolo Local Government area of Lagos on Friday flayed the decision of the council authorities to stop the ongoing rehabilitation of Ewu-Tuntun Primary Health Centre l (PHC) in the area.

    The rehabilitation of the PHC, according to the supporters, was facilitated by Mr Mutiu Shadimu, a PDP member representing Oshodi-Isolo 1 Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives.

    The party supporters, at a rally held close to the health centre, urged the council authorities led by its Sole Administrator, Mr Adebayo Taiwo, not to use party differences to hinder the people from getting the benefits of democracy.

    Taiwo, the sole administrator, is one of the 57 appointees of the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led Lagos State Government overseeing affairs in local governments and local council development areas in the state.

    Alhaji Adesina Toriola, who led the rally, appealed to residents of Oshodi-Isolo to prevail on the leadership of the council to change its stance and allow completion of the rehabilitation.

    He also kicked against an alleged attempt to turn the health centre into an event centre.

    “We are having a peaceful rally to let the entire world and this constituency in particular know the order from APC to stop the rehabilitation of this health centre by a PDP house of reps member.

    “During our campaign in 2015, we promised to deliver dividends of democracy and the House of Representatives, through Hon. Mutiu Shadimu, included this project; it is a federal government project.

    “Shadimu visited this area during his campaign and it was in a bad shape without maternity beds, which made the lawmaker to include its rehabilitation in the 2016 budget.

    “The APC in the local government saw the rehabilitation going on in this place and when the work reached about 90 per cent completion, they came to inform us that it is the council property.

    “Democracy is government of all; the PDP House of Representatives member is responsible to all residents, not only its members,’’ he said.

    According to him, Shadimu took up the challenge to make the health centre a better place.

    Toriola said the PDP enjoyed the support of the masses in the constituency, urging the council to stop playing politics with the project.

    When contacted, the sole administrator, who confirmed the order to stop work on the rehabilitation, said the federal lawmaker did not consult with council leadership before carrying out the work.

    Taiwo, who affirmed that some health centres had been abandoned for a while and appreciated the intention of Shadimu, said the PHC had been marked for relocation to a better, spacious and more conducive location.

    “PHC is the property of the local government, and as the head of the council, we are supposed to be aware and give approval. The lawmaker didn’t channel his intention through proper authority.

    “We just got a call that some people are working there and we saw it as a way to score a political point, so we had to stop it because there is a constituted authority and protocol.

    “Meanwhile, this PHC has been marked for relocation to a better, bigger and more conducive place on Ogundele Street, just a stone throw from there, by next month.

    “This one is not conducive again. It is dilapidated. We have set up a mega one. The lawmaker ought to have written to the local government, even at that, approval has to come from the ministry of local government and community affairs.

    “If we were informed, we would have told the lawmaker that the PHC had been moved to a mega one. It doesn’t make economic sense to do anything in the old PHC long abandoned,” Taiwo said.

    The sole administrator said if the council had been properly informed, such funds would have been channelled to other laudable projects for the common good of residents.

    He said that the council had completed renovation and equipping of the new PHC and the one in the council Secretariat which would be inaugurated in May.

    On whether the lawmaker’s rehabilitation work on the PHC would be a waste, Taiwo, said that there were lots of things the government could use the place for.

    Taiwo said it was untrue that the PHC building had been sold to people who wanted to use it as an event centre.

  • NDDC, PHC Global Shapers rebrand partnership

    Dozens of young Niger Delta IT entrepreneurs (netpreneurs), geeks, start-ups, NGO operators and others converged at the Heleconia Park, Intel Estate in Port Harcourt, Rivers state.  They are the masters of their chosen fields in the Garden City and were led by young, frisky podcaster of Stroll Live, Ebenezer Wikina, who is Curator, Port Harcourt Global Shapers, an offshoot of the World Economic Forum. The assembly was held as part of the ‘Meet The Leader’ dialogue series.

    About 50 youths from region engaged the Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC?, Mr Nsima Ekere on sustainable development in the Niger Delta and how youths can get involved. The discourse was facilitated by a partnership of the PHC Global and the Chevron Nigeria Limited-funded NGO PIND Foundation’s Niger Delta Link, an information and communications platform of the NGO, which works towards “leveraging the power of the internet to unite stakeholders in the region.”

    The gathering was refreshingly different from those usually held to ‘find solution to the Niger Delta problem’. These youths were not the usual ‘youth leaders’ – some of whom usually are passed the half century age mark but still remained ‘youths’. These were graduates, start-ups and entrepreneurs in various fields aged from 20 – 30 years, brimming with ideas and running with them. They are graduates, who rather than seeking employments, are empowering, mentoring  and even employing others.

    Dayo Ibitoye, a development communication consultant, who studied Chemical Engineering at the Ahmadu Bello University, led the NDLink team. A very bright and intelligent young man, Ibitoye was already productive and making good use of his time and energy as a ‘Campus Reporter’ for The Nation newspapers’ before he graduated from ABU, Zaria.

    Other young leaders were ThankGod Okorisha, a journalist and former intern at 99.1fm; Bryte Chinule, a conflict resolution consultant; Randolph Fiberisima, a lawyer, and Onimim Fifi Karibo, a University of Port Harcourt Biochemistry graduate, who found her passion in the kitchen and runs a very successful catering service – Fifi House of Food – in Port Harcourt.

    The gathering presented the NDDC MD a very pleasant surprise. He was taken aback by the quality of the gathering, so much so that he described the crop of youths as refreshingly different from what Niger Delta youths are known for both within and outside the country. “We are not known for this”, Ekere said.

    Continuing, he noted that the air of optimism and positive vibe in the room gave him hope about the future of the region. “When I come in here and meet a very different environment it gives me a lot of hope. What people know us for is aggression, street harassments, kidnappings, violence, blowing up pipelines. That’s what being a youth in the Niger Delta is looked at and that’s how people see us.”

    Ekere was not the only person who shared that view. One of the participants was concerned that the negative image was a source of problem, stressing that a study she conducted in the region showed that impressionable young children see militants and warlords as their role model. “80percent said they want to be militant because those who own the big houses and driver fast cars are militants.”

    The NDDC top shot and the participants agreed that that should not be the case. He challenged the youths to expand and educate their counterparts across the region so that children don’t see warlords and criminals as role models. He said those who see violence and thuggery as a means of earning a living must rethink their ways, noting that the culture of giving out handouts as a means of ‘empowerment’ was not only unsustainable, but also wasteful.

    He decried the tag of militancy that currently hung over the region, stressing that strategic investments and projects that can affect the social and economic landscape of the region are taking flights as a result. He noted that the Dangote refinery, which is currently being built in Lagos, could have been located in the region, but for that stigma and fear of insecurity.

    Ekere, who made his mark early in the real estate business, told his audience how an early life car accident changed his life for good. He disclosed that the desperation arising from the need to repair a friend’s car that he damaged, opened his eyes to opportunities around him and showed him that “if you do not just sit in your office and wait for the salary at the end of the month, if you take initiative and decide to run around, things can actually happen!

    “There is the saying that your attitude determines your altitude in life. For you to have the right attitude, you must have the right mindset, education – formal and informal. If we do this, we will see that all these things that we are complaining about will begin to fall into place.”

    He tasked members of the group to be change agents, promising to work with them to change the narrative about the region. He said it was important for the PH Global Shapers members to become the image that people see when they think of Niger Delta youths

    Wikina and other members of the group urged the NDDC MD to help establish an information technology hub in Port Harcourt. They noted that the city is missing out on opportunities that such facility could generate, which their counterparts from Lagos and Abuja and other parts of the country are enjoying.

    Wikina, who won the International Journalist Network,  IJNet, “Journalist of the Month” in September 2016, revealed that the Port Harcourt Global Shapers was committed to improving the state of the world by starting from the Garden City of Port Harcourt. He said the

    In response to the appeal, Mr. Ekere revealed plans to use cable to convey excess internet capacity from Nigeria’s neighbouring Sao Tome to the states of the region. “One of the things we want to do is to have the IT connectivity in the Niger Delta. We have had several meetings and there will be more meetings,” he promised.

    Besides IT, he said the NDDC was aggressively pursuing agriculture as a way of securing the region’s future. “The emphasis on scholarship has been science and engineering, but things are changing, petroleum is not the way of the future. There is also agriculture and the value chain, something to add value. You send somebody to go and study engineering and when he comes out can he be on his own? He has to look for a job and if you cannot get that job, what happens?”

    Speaking on the outcome of the event, Ibitoye said, “I am happy at the quality of engagements, the energy and enthusiasm from everyone. There is hope for the region and I am happy to be part of those changing the narrative.”

  • Nigerian Breweries renovates PHC

    It was excitement all the way as residents of Akerele, Surulere on Lagos Mainland, trooped out for the inauguration of the renovated Akerele Primary Health Care Centre (PHC) by the Nigerian Breweries.

    Majority Leader at the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabia-mila, was there.

    The sections renovated were the general outpatient, child welfare and cold chain office. The maternity was renovated two years ago.

    According to the Corporate Affairs Adviser, Nigeria Brewries Plc, Mr Kufre Ekanem, the rationale for the project was the fact that “effective primary health care is important for the country. Effective delivery of vaccinations, maternal care and treatment of common diseases, such as malaria is essential for the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).”

    He added: “This year marks the 70th anniversary of our operations in the country. Through these decades, we have partnered with and supported the development aspirations of the people of Lagos. This project is a fulfillment of out bewing a better world initiative. In particular it fits into one of the six focuses of the sustainability agenda: Grwoing with com-munities.”

    Gbajabiamila thanked the company for the gesture, saying after 70 years of utilising resources and partnering with the area, there was nothing too big to give back.

    “Surulere is a peaceful area of the state. The residents deserve the very best. Your effort is recognised. You can do more for a community that has hosted you for 70 years,” he said.

  • Rivers’ PHC board urges exclusive breast feeding

    The Rivers State Primary Health Care Management Board (RSPHCB) has organised an awareness week to educate nursing and expectant mothers in  urban and rural communities on the importance of exclusive breast feeding.

    The awareness was aimed at sensitising nursing/expectant mothers and  community leaders, especially men, to ensure that babies are breastfed exclusively for six months from birth.

    The board’s Director, Community Health Service, Dr Isaac Opurum, who spoke on the global awareness campaign on breastfeeding, said the state is collaborating with United Nation Children Fund (UNICEF) to ensure the success of the programme. The theme is: Breastfeeding and work, Let make it work.

    Opurum said experts from various organisations and ministries would be on hand to teach mothers on how to breast feed.

    He charged the government and private sectors to assist working mothers with the facilities that would make breastfeeding in their offices possible.

    He said if the facilities were provided by employers, it would encourage working mothers to breastfeed their babies.

    Opurum said leaving  the babies at home would deny them access to exclusive breast feeding.

    Oparum said the board would organise a baby show to reward  mothers who breastfeed their babies exclusively.

    He continued: “The programme is a global event and a one week event that is expected to draw the attention of the mothers, rural community leaders, the government and the private sector to the importance of breastfeeding, particularly exclusive breastfeeding.

    “Exclusive breastfeeding helps the child to develop immunity and it also protects it from unnecessary illness. They hardly come to the hospital with diseases and other infections when exclusively breastfed. The breast milk assists in the development of the child’s brain. This is why we are inviting the mothers to be part of the event.”

  • NGO seeks training of PHC workers on sickle cell

    Dr. Obiageli Nnodu, Deputy Chairperson, Sickle Cell Support Society of Nigeria, an NGO, has advocated for the training of primary healthcare (PHC) workers on common complications of sickle cell disease.

    Nnodu, who made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja, opined that the training should revolve around etiology, presentations and common complications of the disease.

    According to her, the PHC personnel should be able to provide basic genetic counseling to dispel myths and stigma that surrounds the disease.

    “Given the enormous burden of sickle cell disease in Nigeria, focusing on tertiary care would probably not make an appreciable impact on improving the overall outcome in terms of control and survival

    “The more practical strategy would be to tackle the problem at Primary Healthcare Centres level following a well articulated national policy,” she said.

    Nnodu said public health issue cannot be handled at hospital by only attending to people that come, “we need to go to communities and sensitise people about it,” she stressed.

    She further maintained that Nigerians need to be sensitised about the disease so that they make wise choice of partners, stressing that learning about sickle cell disease should also be incorporated into the primary school curriculum.

    The NGO deputy chairperson also said that early diagnosis, through universal newborn screening has to be introduced with the enrolment of identified patients in a follow-up clinic to reduce the burden of the disease in Nigeria.

    In addition, it was reported that the disease is an inherited blood disorder, which affects children early in life; often with repeated occurrence of illness and bone pains with vary periods of relative good in between.

    According to the National Demographic Survey, the prevalence of the disease in Nigeria is two per cent at birth and 0.05 per cent in adults.

    The difference in prevalence rate of two per cent at birth and 0.05 per cent in adult is attributable to deaths in early childhood.

    The disease contributes to maternal, neo-natal, and infant and child mortality in Nigeria, adding that it undermines the attainment of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

  • ‘LASUTH overburdened by attendance’

    ‘LASUTH overburdened by attendance’

    The Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), has said it is overburdened by the number of patients it receives daily.

    Its Chief Medical Director (CMD), Prof Wale Oke said the hospital has 600 beds, which are not enough for patients.

    Oke, who spoke to reporters in the hospital on his stewardship, said patients attend the facility for minor ailments rather than visiting the primary health care (PHC) centres which cater for such.

    “It is after a PHC fails in treating a minor ailment that secondary health facilities, such as General Hospitals, can take over the treatment. If the latter fails to address the issue, then patients can be referred to a tertiary facility, such as ours, “he said.

    He said LASUTH was a General Hospital before it was upgraded to a tertiary hospital, adding that this may be why patients still visit the facility for minor ailments.

    Oke said when doctors attend to minor ailments it stops them from dealing with complex cases.

    “The number of patients a doctor attends to during clinic is mind-boggling. They deserve some rest, too. But, the only way to ease the pressure on doctors is for patients to take minor ailments, such as fever, diarrhoea and dysentery, among others, to primary or secondary care centres. PHCs and General Hospitals are equal to the task,“ he said.

    He said the hospital had inaugurated its service charter, adding that this was established to ensure best services are available to internal and external customers first time.

    Oke said Nigerians should have faith in the expertise of the health professionals, adding that testimonies have shown that it is not rosy with health tourism.

    “Patients need to trust the services provided in the country because we have built capacity in most areas of medical services. So, what they are looking for in the United States, Canada and India, among others, is available here. If any case is beyond what we can handle, we always refer. We are not established to endanger anybody’s life,“ he said.

    Oke said the hospital has been performing specialised surgeries, such as hip and knee replacement and cleft lip as well as cochlear implantation, among others.

    Chairman, LASUTH Board, Dr Olatunde Williams, said the hospital has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with some Indian hospitals to train some members of staff.

    The hospital, he said, has recruited interns to some sub-specialties, adding that members of staff who had left would be replaced quarterly to attend to the growing demands of LASUTH.

    Williams said the renovation of the centre’s laboratory was nearing  completion as 90 per cent of the job has been done.

    He said the renovation of Ayinke House was ongoing, adding that it would soon be equipped for inauguration in the first quarter of next year.