Tag: Prof. Akin Abayomi

  • Trauma: Prioritise saving lives first before taking videos – Commissioner tells Lagosians

    Trauma: Prioritise saving lives first before taking videos – Commissioner tells Lagosians

    The Commissioner for Health, Lagos State, Prof. Akin Abayomi, has decried the many lives lost on Lagos roads due to delays caused by onlookers taking videos instead of assisting first responders.

    Represented by the Director of Medical Services, Lagos Health Service Commission, Dr Olawale Adegbite, Abayomi spoke in Lagos at a Symposium for stakeholders to mark the 2025 World Trauma Day with the theme: “Reducing Needless Deaths on Our Roads: Everybody’s Responsibility.”

    He urged Lagosians to respect ambulances and prioritise saving lives first before taking videos at the scene of accidents, saying that saving lives on the road was not just the government’s responsibility, but a collective moral and civic duty of every Lagosian.

    “Every time we block an ambulance or ignore an emergency call, someone’s parent, spouse, or child could be dying. Trauma care begins with public responsibility,” he said.

    He reiterated resolution of the state government to strengthen emergency preparedness and trauma response mechanisms to reduce preventable deaths on Lagos roads.

    He said that most trauma cases on Lagos roads were not accidents but preventable incidents caused by human errors.

    He stressed that the state’s emergency systems, especially pre-hospital care and ambulance services, have been instrumental in saving lives but require continuous improvement and public cooperation.

    Highlighting Lagos’ ongoing investments in emergency medicine, Abayomi noted that most trauma cases brought in by the Lagos State Ambulance Service (LASAMBUS) recorded higher survival rates compared to those transported by bystanders.

    “Proper pre-hospital intervention makes the difference between life and death.

    “Continuous staff training and retention were critical to sustaining success in trauma management,” he said.

    Earlier, in her opening remarks, the Special Adviser to the Governor on Health, Dr Kemi Ogunyemi, described trauma as one of the leading causes of preventable deaths and disabilities globally, particularly from road traffic crashes.

    Represented by the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Health, Dr Oluwatoni Adeyemi, Ogunyemi noted that Lagos State has made significant progress under the leadership of Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, citing improvements in ambulance coverage, response time, and coordination among first responders.

    She said: “We recently launched ten emergency ambulance bikes to ensure faster access to victims in congested areas and also commissioned modular high-dependency units in Ifako and Mushin General Hospitals.

    “These interventions are part of our drive to bring critical care closer to communities and reduce delays in life-saving interventions.”

    She further emphasised that the theme of this year’s commemoration underscored the fact that reducing trauma-related deaths goes beyond government efforts.

    “It requires everyone—drivers, pedestrians, health professionals, civil society, and the media—to play their roles in building a culture of prevention and prompt response,” she said.

    In his remarks, the Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Ministry of Health, Dr Olusegun Ogboye, said the story of “Mr Andrew,” a trauma survivor treated at the  Lagos State Accident and Emergency Centre (LASAEC), represented the essence of the symposium.

    Ogboye recounted how coordinated emergency response and government-backed trauma care saved a man who was left comatose after a crash on the morning of his daughter’s wedding.

    He stressed that pre-hospital care was a crucial but often neglected component of healthcare.

    He revealed that the Lagos State Government was expanding trauma centers across the state, with new facilities being established in Epe, Eti-Osa, and Badagry corridors in partnership with private sector allies such as Custodian Allied Insurance and Access Bank.

    He added that the state’s ambulance service had evolved into a world-class system with well-equipped vehicles serving as mobile intensive care units.

    “There’s hardly any equipment you’ll find in advanced ambulance systems that our units don’t have – ventilators, defibrillators, and fully trained emergency technicians. Lagos has come a long way,” he said.

    The Permanent Secretary also called for attitudinal change among motorists and the general public, especially in giving ambulances the right of way.

    “You move aside for convoys and security vehicles, yet block ambulances carrying lives. That behavior must change. It could be your loved one in that ambulance,” he warned.

    In his presentation titled “The Traumatic Story Being Rewritten,” the Medical Director, LASAEC, Dr Adeolu Arogundade, told the true story of Mr Andrew, who was hit by a car and left unconscious for months but survived through state-funded care.

    Arogundade said the case epitomised the 41,000 trauma cases successfully treated at LASAEC in the last 15 years, with a commendable mortality rate of just 1.4 per cent .

    He lauded the Lagos State Government for sustaining a policy that guarantees free emergency care for all trauma victims within the first 24 hours, emphasising that the policy’s funding—though sometimes delayed—remains vital to saving lives.

    “Behind every statistic is a human story. Each percentage represents someone’s father, mother, or friend who lived because a system worked.

    “Our success is proof that trauma care is everyone’s business; from road users to rescuers and administrators,” he said.

    The Lagos State Sector Commander of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Mr Kehinde Hamzat, underscored the grim reality that most crash-related deaths were avoidable.

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    Citing WHO data, Hamzat, also a Guest Speaker, said that Africa bore a disproportionate share of the 1.3 million global deaths from road traffic crashes yearly, with Lagos inclusive due to high vehicle density and weak road discipline.

    Hamzat warned that unsafe behaviours such as speeding, drunk driving, and disregard for traffic laws remain major culprits, stressing that effective trauma management begins with prevention.

    “No matter how advanced our hospitals become, if we don’t change road behaviour, we’ll keep losing lives needlessly.

    “Our collective vigilance, compliance, and compassion are what will make our roads safer and our emergency systems more responsive,” he said.

    As the symposium ended, participants resolved to deepen inter-agency collaboration, intensify public sensitization, and push for behavioural change campaigns across the state.

    (NAN)

  • Lagos moves to eliminate malaria with digital innovation

    Lagos moves to eliminate malaria with digital innovation

    Lagos State Government has launched an initiative, the Pathway to Malaria Pre-Elimination & Digitization Program, aimed at reducing malaria prevalence to below 1% through digital technology, strengthened case management, and expanded public-private partnerships.

    The state Commissioner for Health, Prof. Akin Abayomi, emphasized that Lagos, with a malaria prevalence already below the national average at under 3%, is leading the charge in eliminating the disease.

    A key highlight of the program is the mandatory rapid diagnostic testing (RDTs) before malaria treatment to prevent misdiagnosis and inappropriate use of anti-malarial drugs. 

    Prof. Abayomi warned that many Lagos residents self-diagnose malaria and buy drugs without testing, leading to drug resistance and ineffective treatments.

    “Not every fever is malaria. Many fevers are caused by bacterial or viral infections requiring different treatments. Moving forward, every fever must be properly diagnosed before treatment,” Abayomi said.

    A major innovation under this program is the integration of digital health solutions in partnership with Maisha Meds. Lagos will deploy real-time electronic malaria reporting systems across public and private health facilities, ensuring accurate tracking of cases.

    To standardize treatment, the Lagos State Government is partnering with the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria (PCN) and the National Malaria Elimination Program (NMEP) to integrate community pharmacies, patent medicine vendors, and private hospitals into its malaria control network.

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    Despite its low prevalence, Lagos still records about 900,000 malaria cases annually, with malaria-like febrile illnesses accounting for over 50% of outpatient visits. 

    Malaria contributes significantly to lost productivity, school absenteeism, and high household healthcare costs, amounting to billions of naira in economic losses annually.

    To enhance affordability, malaria care will be integrated into Ilera Eko, the Lagos State Health Insurance Scheme, ensuring residents can access free or subsidized malaria tests and treatments.

    The official launch of the program is scheduled for March 4, 2025, at Eko Hotel, Lagos, with Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Health Minister Prof. Muhammad Ali Pate, and representatives from WHO, World Bank, and NMEP in attendance.

    Prof. Abayomi called on all Lagos residents, healthcare providers, and stakeholders to support the initiative:

    “A malaria-free Lagos is a collective responsibility. We need people to adopt a ‘test-before-treatment’ mindset and for healthcare providers to follow best practices.”

    With this initiative, Lagos is setting the stage for a malaria-free future, leveraging technology, policy reforms, and community participation to achieve malaria pre-elimination status.

  • Why academics, scientists must equip govts with data-driven researches, by commissioner

    Why academics, scientists must equip govts with data-driven researches, by commissioner

    The Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Prof. Akin Abayomi, has urged academicians and science researchers to provide and equip decision-makers with data-driven researches on health and environment sectors.

    Abayomi made this appeal as the keynote speaker at the fourth annual international workshop organised by the U.S. – West Africa Atlantic Coastal Resilience Research Consortium (CRCC) on Tuesday in Lagos.

    The CRCC partnered with the Lagos State University Centre for Environmental Studies and Sustainable Development (CESSED), Centre for Sargassum Research and Centre for the Actualisation of Sustainable Development.

    The theme of the workshop was: “Harnessing the Blue and Marine Economy in Support of the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development”.

    The commissioner said that detailed data from researchers and academicians was very important, because environmental data predicted clinical manifestation.

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     “Government is totally dependence on the intelligence of academicians because you spend most of your time within the four walls of the university.

     “There are a lot of researches we need to in order to know what is happening which will influence the way we think in adaptation and resilience, when making critical decisions.

    “Data has now become the new currency in the knowledge economy,” Abayomi said.

    He added that humans impact the physical environment in many ways, such as over-population, pollution, burning fossil fuels and deforestation.

    “Changes like these have triggered climate change, soil erosion, poor air quality and undrinkable water.

    “One health recognises the inter-connectivity between man, animals, plant and their shared environment.

    “Lagos, for example, is a complex narrative of water bodies and changing demographic dynamics that requires strategic planning,” the commissioner said.

    He noted that the contribution of coastal ecosystem and ocean to the economy included livelihood, climate change mitigation such as carbon sequestration, biodiversity support and coastal protection.

    “The state of our ocean and coastal ecosystem in Nigeria and Africa involves sea level rise is colliding with population explosion,” Abayomi said.

    Prof. Jimmy Adegoke, Chairman and Co-Convener of CRCC, said that there were ecosystem linkages between the West African Coastal Region and the U.S., especially the eastern part.

    Adegoke, a Nigerian-American climate scientist, said the blue economy was a driving force which was receiving new cognition in Africa and the world.

    “We need to discuss and provide support for the efforts of the blue economy in Nigeria which will help students, lecturers, researchers and policy makers,” he said.

    In her opening remarks, Vice-Chancellor, LASU, Prof. Ibiyemi Olatunji-Bello, said that the workshop was a power collaboration underscoring the urgency of its collective mission to address the challenges of coastal resilience in the face of climate change.

    Olatunji-Bello, represented by Prof. Sunday Alawode, Dean, School of Communication Studies, LASU, said that the Blue and Marine Economy had humongous benefits to the global economy.

    She   that, however, despite the humongous benefits of the sector to the global economy, it also portended serious challenges in the areas of environmental conversation.