Tag: UCH

  • Baba Sala responding to treatment, says UCH

    • ’To be discharged soon’ 

    The management of University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan said yesterday that ace comedian Moses Olaiya (aka  Baba Sala) “is responding to treatment and getting better” after he was rushed to its emergency unit on Monday night.

    UCH spokesman Mr. Deji Bobade said Baba Sala has passed the critical stage and “ate lunch this afternoon in a healthy manner”.

    He said the ace comedian was brought into the hospital’s emergency unit with a serious condition, “but he has since being responding to treatment”.

    “Our doctors, nurses and other healthcare delivery people promptly attended to him and others who were at the emergency ward as usual.

    “Now, he is in a private section, where he is not to be disturbed. He is doing fine. He is stable. I was with him this afternoon,” Bobade said.

    He added that the comedian “is suffering from ailment relating to old age” and would be discharge soonest.

    Baba Sala recently celebrated his 80th birthday quietly in Ilesha, Osun State.

    His family members, friends and fans yesterday trooped to the hospital to see him.

  • Baba Sala is getting better – UCH

    Baba Sala is getting better – UCH

    The management of the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan has disclosed that ace comedian, Moses Olaiya aka Baba Sala, rushed to the hospital on Monday is responding to treatment.
    Confirming his health status, the Head, Public Relations Unit of UCH, Mr Deji Bobade said that Baba Sala has passed the critical stage and ate lunch this Wednesday afternoon in a healthy manner.‎
    According to Bobade, Baba Sala was brought into the hospital’s emergency unit with a serious condition but has since responded to treatment.
    “Our doctors, nurses and other health care delivery people promptly attended to him and others who were at the emergency ward as usual. Now, he is in a private section where he is not to be disturbed. He is doing fine. He is stable. I was with him this afternoon.”
    He said that the comedian is suffering from ailment relating to old age and would be discharged soonest.‎‎
    The comedian recently celebrated his 80th birthday quietly in Ilesha, Osun State.‎

  • UCH resident doctors suspend strike

    •Obasanjo, Olubadan, others intervene

    RESIDENT doctors at the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan yesterday suspended their 105-day-old strike.

    This came following the intervention of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, the Olubadan-in-Council and other eminent personalities and associations.

    The UCH Medical Director (CMD), Prof. Temitope Alonge, last week, urged the resident doctors to call off the strike.

    He assured them that the hospital’s management was already looking into their grievances.

    President of UCH branch of the Association of Resident Doctors (ARD) Dr. Luqman Ogujimi and its secretary, Dr. Anthonu Ude, made the suspension broke the news to reporters.

    They said the association agreed that the strike be suspended last Friday at a congress held by members.

    The association said:”Our members are hereby directed by the emergency general meeting of the ARD, UCH, to resume back to their duty posts 8a.m. on Monday, August 17, 2015, while negotiation continues.

    “The congress took this decision on the August 14,2015, following the intervention  of Chief  Olusegun Obasanjo, medical  elders, Medical and Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria (UCH), the good people of Ibadan and more importantly  for the sake of our patients.  It is our hope that the UCH management will keep its side of the bargain.”

  • Pains, frustration at UCH, state hospitals

    Pains, frustration at UCH, state hospitals

    Three months into the  health workers’ strike, BISI OLADELE and TAYO JOHNSON visited two public hospitals in Ibadan, the  Oyo State capital. They were confronted by the pains of people seeking health care services in government hospitals.

    Mrs Aina Basiru  sat on a bench, looking helpless as she endured a long wait to see a physician at the State Hospital, Yemetu, Ibadan, the Oyo State Capital. Her countenance expressed disappointment at a system that is failing in some ways, including healthcare delivery.

    “Hello ma,” this reporter greeted. “Hello, my brother,” she replied in faint voice.

    Mrs. Basiru reluctanctly granted a two-minute-chat with the reporter, expressing disappointment with the system. For her, it is incomprehensible that public hospitals in an entire nation can be paralyzed by mere labour disputes. To her, it is unkind and a sign of leadership failure.

    The weak patient appealed to the health workers to resume work in order to save lives of hundreds of thousands of ailing citizens.

    Basiru is not happy with the development as she needs to be admitted in a public hospital. She does not have money for a private hospital.

    “I am appealing to the government to meet the demands of the workers and prevent further delay of medical treatment of patients,’’ she said.

    Alhaji Ganiyu Orelope went to the hospital to obtain a medical report but the strike made it impossible for him.

    He said: “I need my medical report for another important event, only to come to the hospital and be turned back. I wonder when all these strikes will be resolved once and for all. We need stability in our health institutions and the government should ensure that.”

    The encounters with these patients explained the frustration of many Nigerians with ill health seeking medical attention in public hospitals.

    Once a beehive of activities with patients troopping in and out, the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan and state hospitals across Oyo State are now deserted by patients and others seeking medical services, leaving them as ghost centres of a sort.

    The hospitals have been practically paralyzed by a strike action embarked upon by health workers over remuneration and job condition disputes.

    The workers across all government hospitals nationwide, under the aegis of the Nigerian Unions of Allied Health Professionals embarked on the strike on October 15, 2014 to press home their demands. Their colleagues under the platform of the Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU) joined them on November 9, 2014 totally paralyzing the hospital system across the country.

    The unions under JOHESU include the Medical and Health Workers Union; Nigeria Union of Allied Health Professionals; National Association of Nigeria Nurses and Midwives and the Senior  Staff  Association  of  Universities  Teaching  Hospitals  and Research Institutes.

    The health workers said their evaluation showed that the composition of the boards of federal health institutions was skewed in favour of medical practitioners. They explained that there are eight to nine medical practitioners on the 13-member board whereas only one health worker represents other health professionals who constitute over 90 per cent of the workforce in the hospital system.

    They are demanding that boards of federal health institutions be reconstituted in line with the enabling statute and the agreements.

    The striking workers also want government to increase the retirement age of health workers from 60 to 65 years in line with the May 10, 2012 agreement it reached with JOHESU.

    They are also soliciting an urgent implementation  of the ‘2008 Job Evaluation Report’ to sustain the tenets of relativity within the ranks of healthcare professionals in Nigeria.

    Other demands include application of sanctions on chief executive officers (CEOs) of federal health institutions who failed to promote deserving healthcare professionals before the end of the first quarter of 2014 in line with existing circulars duly approved by government and issuing of the enabling circular placing intern medical laboratory scientists on CONHESS 8 Step 2 and CONHESS 9 after completing their National Youth service scheme by the Head of Civil Service of the federation.

    The workers also want government to check impunity of chief medical directors (CMDs) and medical directors who have continually refused to implement circulars with respect to skipping of CONHESS 10 and payment of the accrued arrears.

    As the strike entered the third month last week, patients and others seeking medical services were left groaning while facilities in the hospitals also languish away.

    Members of Management of the hospitals are helpless because they cannot do anything to force workers back to work. So are patients who are burdened with heavy bills at private hospitals.

    When The Nation visited the UCH last week, wards and offices were locked while beds and other furniture in the wards have gathered dust due to lack of use.

    Doctors were, however, offering skeletal services where possible but they were largely hindered by the supporting services rendered by the striking workers who usually prepare patients for consultation right from card administration to admission into the ward.

    At the General Out-Patient Department, which is the first port of call for most patients, the offices, consulting rooms and waiting rooms were all empty. Patients were no longer coming to try their luck because of the longevity of the strike.

    The Morgue section, which usually hosts a lot of people coming to pick corpses, was deserted and the facility locked. So were the Pharmacy sections and administrative offices. The entire hospital was practically on a forced holiday.

    Speaking with The Nation on the development, the Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the hospital, Prof. Temitope Alonge lamented the effect of the strike on the hospital. He was particularly pained that the management of the hospital could not do anything to bring the striking workers back to their duty posts because the strike is nationwide.

    He said: “As with every national strike, we have no control over the workers. As an institution, we have not been able to work as we love to. Only our Public Private Partnership (PPP) services are running for now. One of such services is the digital Xray machine. These few services are still on because they are not fully owned by the hospital. Besides, we are able to offer emergency services and counseling. The General Out-Patient is running and the Eye Clinic is also running.

    “I still reviewed patient myself in the Surgical Out-Patient this morning.”

    Alonge opined that the PPP arrangement would rescue the Nigerian healthcare system from the funding challenges confronting it. He anchored his suggestion on the belief that government alone cannot fully fund healthcare in the country.

    But he explained that involvement of the private sector would be so defined that they would be unable to exploit patients.

    His words: “I have seen PPP as an answer to the many challenges in the health sector. It has been understood all over the world that government alone is not able to handle all sections of the economy except the Arabian governments. But the bottom line is that economies that survive embark on the PPP. I don’t see government funding the 55 tertiary health institutions in Nigeria optimally.”

    Expanding on the involvement of the private sector, Alonge said government can leverage on the tariff system – charging fixed amounts for classified medical treatments. Calculations, he said, would be done based on all equipment and services involved. “So it becomes very easy to calculate the tariff, especially routine treatments.” He said.

    The CMD also canvassed that the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) should be made compulsory for all citizens including those in the informal sector.

    “If we have 90 per cent of Nigerians on the scheme, healthcare delivery will be better for Nigerians,” he posited.

    The situation was the same at the State Hospital, Yemetu, Ibadan where the strike was total. Only few doctors were around to render skeletal services which were made difficult due to inaccessibility of support services from nurses, pharmacists, physiotherapists and laboratory scientists, among others.

    Although the doctors went the extra mile to care for patients, they could not book patients for admission. Patients were advised to seek care in private hospitals pending the end of the strike.

    A doctor, who spoke to our reporter in confidence, said doctors were attending to some patients with critical health conditions.

    “Patients are coming, and doctors are on duty. But we cannot admit patients or conduct any surgical operations. We come here 8:00 am daily and close by 4:00 pm. The turnout of patients has drastically reduced but we attend to emergencies. On a normal day I do attend to over 200 patients but since the health workers’ strike commenced, it’s even hard to attend to 50,” he said

    All the departments such as Pharmacy, Physiotherapy, Nursing, Laboratory were locked, leaving only the Account and Administration departments open.

    Speaking on the development, the Chairman of Medical and Health Workers Union of Nigeria in Oyo State, Comrade Ayobami Ajayi, said there had been full compliance by members of the union in the state.

    But he raised the hope for a resolution soon.

    “We have been directed by our national body to embark on strike but we believe that the solution will come in earnest because the minister and our leaders have started having meetings. They have earlier met with the Minister of Health but the outcome of the meeting is yet to reach the president. That is what we are waiting for.” Ajayi said

    Highlighting the effect of the strike, the unionist said the situation is getting worse daily with patients dying day-by-day.

    “At least, I have heard of three emergency cases whereby two of them died when they couldn’t be attended to. Some private hospitals have also increased their charges, which makes it difficult for the less-privileged and downtrodden to patronizethem. We are not happy with the situation. But it seems strike is the only language that the Federal Government understands. We have been on this our demands since January last year and till date they have not yielded to our demands.

    “We have been going around the hospitals to make sure our members are comply with the directives. It is the government that forced us and allowed the situation to get to this point. Since we have started we are not going back and there is no way patients will be attended to in this situation,’’ Ajayi said.

    According to him, the strike would be called off immediately the Federal Government accedes to their demands.

    The Chairman of Nigeria Union of Allied Health Professionals, University College Hospital (UCH) branch, Comrade Segun Sotiloye who led some members of the union in an awareness protest at the hospital last week, said the protest served as a reminder to the Federal Government and to sensitize the public on the on-going strike.

    The peaceful protest started in front of hospital around 10: 00 am and ended 12:00 noon.

    The workers carried placards with different inscriptions including: “ President, accede to our demands: “People are dying on daily basis. “Please answer health workers; medical practitioners are not the only ones in the health sector.”  “Save Nigeria’s health sector from collapsing,” among others.

    Also addressing reporters at the end of a meeting with leaders of the striking workers last Friday, the CMD disclosed that the strike had cost the hospital N600 million in internally generated revenue.

  • UCH CMD appeals to  striking workers

    UCH CMD appeals to striking workers

    The Chief Medical Director (CMD), University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, Prof. Temitope Alonge, has appealed to striking workers to embrace dialogue in pressing for their demands.

    Health workers, including nurses and administrative staff, have been on strike since November to press home their six-point demand, ranging from increased salaries to better condition of work.

    Alonge appealed to the workers to resume talks with the government and see areas of the demands where government can meet as well as their own obligations towards maintaining a healthy sector.

    The CMD observed that though the struggle has taken a long time, only a return to a roundtable can end the “dispute”.

    “Though this has taken a long time, there is no end in talking, until the solution comes,” he said.

    The health workers are seeking the release of the circular on adjustment of salary, immediate payment of two months arrears on newly adjusted salary structure and the immediate release of circular on the payment of arrears on skipping of CONHESS 10 salary.

    Other demands include: immediate issuing of circular on retirement age of healthcare workers from 60 to 65 years, payment of arrears of specialist allowance to all hospital-based healthcare professionals who possess a relevant post-graduate qualification, and release of circular amending the extant circular for medical laboratory scientists interns to include post-NYSC placement on Grade Level 09 Step 2 and stale officers across board.

  • Cancer: Survivors relive ordeal at UCH’s anniversary

    Cancer: Survivors relive ordeal at UCH’s anniversary

    But for the timely intervention of medical experts from the University College Hospital (UCH), cancer would have claimed the lives of victims of the ailment.

    In recent years, the UCH has risen to the challenge of saving the lives of more than 200 cancer patients as it boasts medical experts that treat cancer-related diseases. In the circumstances, during the institution’s 57th anniversary, it brought together over 20 of its cancer survivors to celebrate them and for them to relive their ordeal.

    Addressing the happy survivors, the Chief Medical Director (CMD) of UCH, Prof. Temitope Alonge said: “As they share their stories, it will give hope to many Nigerians and encourage many more to seek medical attention on account of any suspicious growth or tumours or general feeling of unwell which might be the onset of some cancers.

    “Cancer is the general terminology ýfor a group of over 100 diseases characterised by abnormal uncontrolled multiplication of abnormal cells leading to a growth in most instances, except in cancers involving blood cells.

    “Global data revealed about 12.7 million cancer cases in 2008 with 1.7 million newly diagnosed breast cancer cases in the same year. Cancer rates have increased sharply in 2012 and the World Health Organisation (WHO) has predicted an increase in the years to come with new cases predicted to rise to 19.1 million by 2025 in line with the growth in world’s population and an increase in life expectancy.

    “Cancer is no respecter of persons, race, age, religion, tribe, class, marital status or economic powers and the diagnosis of cancer are often perceived as death sentence in Nigeria and among Nigerians. This is not the perception in developed countries. These cancer survivors are people who have had cancer ailment which have either been controlled or treated fully.”

    According to him, breast cancer remains the leading cause of deaths in women in less developed countries closely followed by cervical cancer occurring in 34.8 per 100,000 women.

    Prof. Alonge further stated that in the male folk, prostate cancer is the most devastating and commonest cause of deaths, even as it has been reported that about 14 Nigerian men are most likely to succumb to the disease.

    He said: “As with communicable diseases which are now targets of intense treatment after decades of research activities, cancer treatment now receives a multi-modal approach ýin most developing countries and this has resulted in a lot of clients surviving the ailments in those countries.”

    Prof. Alonge attributed the increase in cancer survivors to the establishment of cancer institutions in most countries, which provide comprehensive cancer treatment.

    “While India has over 120 comprehensive cancer institutions, Nigeria does not have a single one and this is probably the main impediment in providing comprehensive care for people who are down with cancers.

    “The story of survivors would have been different if the country has at least one comprehensive institute for canýcer. UCH has the largest number of manpower to accommodate a comprehensive cancer institute apart from the vast land space in the second acquisition of the hospital,” he said.

    Prof. Alonge stated that with a comprehensive cancer centre at UCH, Ibadan, cancer survivors will not only enjoy better quality of health care, but will also enjoy improved standard of living.

    To the survivors he said: “As the hospital celebrates its 57th anniversary, ýwe celebrate your courage and that of your relations who have stood by you as you underwent various treatment modalities in this hospital. You are very precious to this great institution and there is no better time to celebrate with you than the anniversary of the hospital.

    “This is a day of sharing, celebrating and rejoicing with our cancer survivors. We had an opportunity to celebrate our successes and recognise the tremendous courage and perseverance that cancer patients and survivors exhibit every day. It was truly an inspirational experience for us all.”ý

    Mrs Oluwatayo Omotoye, a middle-aged cancer survivor, thanked God and the management of the UCH for curing her of the deadly diseases.

    According to her, all hopes were lost when she was diagnosed of breast cancer, adding that hope returned when she started the treatment at the hospital.

    “Although some people who have had this same ailment did not make it, Nigerians do not need to travel abroad for cancer treatment, because UCH has the right medical expertise and equipment to treat cancer disease. Nigerians should go for regular medical check-ups for early detection of any form of diseases,” she said.

    Omotoye said government needs to establish cancer treatment centres in order to reduce the loads on hospitals.

    She noted that Nigerians should change their perception about cancer which they regard as deadly disease, stressing that ýshe is a living witness to cancer cure.

    Another survivor, who spoke in confidence, said when she was diagnosed of breast cancer in 2003, she taught the end had come.

    She said: “My baby was five years old then and I was crying because there is nobody to take good care of her.

    “I was wondering how I will survive it. Some people even advised me not to go to hospital because, they said, they will complicate my case. But I decided to come to UCH from Delta State where I live. Since 2003 when I began the treatment till date, I have been coming for follow-up treatment and check-up every year and I have been doing fine.”

    She urged government to provide more equipment and cancer treatment centres for proper treatment of the ailment, adding that it will go a long way to saving many lives.

    She urged cancer survivors in the country to ensure adequate follow-ups and medical check-ups.

    Mrs Aganwonyi Evelyn, another survivor, said she did not experience any pain when the ailment began in 2012, adding that she only noticed a lump inside her breast. It was when she went for a test that it was revealed that she had breast cancer.

    Mrs Evelyn, who said she lost two of her aunts to breast cancer, said her cancer was cured when she began receiving treatment at the UCH.

    She commended the hospital for their care, urging Nigerians with the same ailment not to lose hope but should seek urgent medical attention.

    The Head of Physiotherapy, UCH Dr Adefemi Afolabi stated that death cases arising from cancer are due to late access to medical care, even as he urged Nigerians to report immediately any strange symptom in the body.

     

  • Damning reports

    Damning reports

    FG should address the problems of hunger, diseases and deprivation that continue to roil a rich country

    There does not seem to be any hope for the poor and downtrodden in Nigeria as every aspect of its human development indices shows negative signs. Whether in education, health, governance or physical infrastructure development, Nigeria does not only lag behind consistently, it records an unrelenting downward trend.

    It was the World Mental Health Day on October 10 and experts reported that psychiatric cases are on the rise in Nigeria. The University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, recently cried out at what it considers an overwhelming number of indigent patients in its facility. These are people who cannot afford to buy drugs or pay their hospital bills. UCH’s Head of Department of Hospital Services, Mrs Grace Logun, noted at a function to receive donations, the alarming “rate at which people die as a result of poverty and inability of the hospital to cope with the demand of many indigent patients who come to the hospital with nothing in their pocket”.

    Children seem to be more exposed and vulnerable in this scourging poverty. According to the report from the premier hospital, parents are said to bring their children in for treatment without money in their pocket. “Many children had died needlessly just because their parents lacked money to pay for basic drugs”, it was noted.

    As if to corroborate the fact many Nigerians are afflicted by extreme indigence leading to unwarranted deaths, the Global Hunger Index (GHI) report which was released last Monday reports that Nigeria falls under the “extreme” or “serious” hunger category. The GHI conducted by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) is in its ninth year and this year’s focus is on “hidden hunger” otherwise known as micronutrients deficiency.

    Nigeria is placed at “serious” with 14.7 index score while Ghana has “moderate” hunger with 7.8 score. This report tallies with another survey conducted last January by Africa Health, Human and Social Development Information Service (Afr-Dev.Info) which reported that with 12.1 million people hungry, Nigeria topped a list of 11 ECOWAS countries with over one million people affected by hunger and undernourishment.

    And with 33 points out of hundred, Nigeria is placed 86th globally and 14th in Africa, on the global food security index. Ghana on the other hand is the most food-secure country in West Africa, with 45.4 points out of 100 ranking 67th globally and number six in the world.

    We really do not need surveys and human development indices to see that the standard of living in Nigeria has continued to depreciate across board in Nigeria due to numerous structural and developmental reasons. One, the local government system of governance has been in near recession over the last decade as revenue allocations to that tier of government hardly reached down. Increasingly, economic activities in that tier that ought to cater for the rural population have dwindled because little or no resources are applied at that level.

    Since they are starved of funding, hardly any planned economic process like budgeting, planning and project execution go on in most local government areas (LGAs) across the country. This is a recipe for poverty and alienation for a tier designed to galvanise rural development and growth. Sustainable agriculture, cottage industries and rural infrastructural development are almost non-existent in hinterlands across the country.

    The level of corruption in the country since the beginning of the current democratic dispensation has also been a source of negative global reports. This has of course imposed extreme poverty on the majority of the populace. Budgets are rarely implemented while most institutional checks have broken down. It is therefore so easy for public officials and civil servants to breach the treasury with so much impunity. The judiciary has also become weak and compromised to the point that it has become very difficult to prosecute offenders and raiders of the treasury.

    The result is that the rate of development has been slow and unsustainable in all facets of the polity. Power infrastructure, transportation and even oil and gas, which are strategic to development, have witnessed little improvement. Nigeria suffers acute under-capacity in these crucial sectors and the result is stark underdevelopment and little growth.

    The resultant socio-economic effect is a vicious cycle of misery. The scenario is that of the survival of the fittest as the state hardly caters for anyone. There seems a constant stampede for sustenance and survival. Violent crimes, strange social vices, cultism, insurgency and terrorism are the social offshoot of this extreme deprivation of the populace.

    A scenario like this will only lead to a complete implosion if governments at all levels and the ruling class do not retrace their steps and redeem the situation. The rate of pillaging of the common wealth at the top end of the spectrum is almost directly proportional to the level of suffering and deprivation at the lowest end of the rung.

    This is sure to continue to breed increased social discontent and a possible anomy. It is not for fun that these surveys have consistently come off negative; they are warning signals that government must act more urgently and radically. We urge the Federal Government particularly to lead the radical change that the country

  • UCH launches nurses’ magazine

    The National Association of Nigerian Nurses and Midwives (NANNM), University College Hospital (UCH) Ibadan chapter, has launched the maiden edition of its magazine, Nurse Connect.

    The magazine, which is a first, was launched yesterday at Prof. Ogunlesi Multipurpose Hall, UCH, Ibadan.

    The theme of the launch is:” Crises Free Society, the Role of Nurses in the Millennium”.

    The Chairman, UCH NANNM, Mr. Adeyemi Oladele, said the aim of establishing and publishing Nurse Connect was to provide a platform for interactive and educative medium for modern training, research and services to members.

  • ‘Mercy Home’  for cancer  patients,  relations at LUTH

    ‘Mercy Home’ for cancer patients, relations at LUTH

    The Lions Clubs International Foundation (LCIF) District 404B Nigeria has built a complex for cancer patients and their relations at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH).

    “Mercy Home” is a temporary accommodation for cancer patients who are on radiotherapy and have nowhere to stay. It has 20 beds, 20 wardrobes and 24 conveniences. It will house men and women.

    The project’s initiator,  Mrs Stella Agbogun, District Governor 2012/13, said the building was constructed to fulfill a dream to serve and put smiles on the faces of the needy, especially cancer patients from outside Lagos.

    She said: “The dream came up when one morning, as I was conducting the round to the radiotherapy unit of LUTH, I met a woman and her son discussing. The woman was weeping profusely, while her 17- year- old son tried to pacify her, even in their joint helplessness and utter desperation.

    “I found out that it was their first visit to Lagos. The woman had been slated for admission. They had no relations in Lagos. They did not have enough money and they came all the way from Cross River State. I settled the boy in an open space, under the labour ward, where relations of patients hang out. That experience did not leave my memory.”

    ‘’After that incident, I met and discussed with Prof Remi Ajekigbe, and he requested that I should get the Lions Club to build Alanu House as done at the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan. I told him it would be difficult in view of the cost implications. I however resolved to be an instrument in the realisation of that goal,” said Lion Agbogun.

    She said: “Today marked the  actualisation of a dream. The project is a pay back to the medical institution that put bread on my table for 27 years. LCIF sent the funding to the construction of the project, along with the generous donations of corporate and private donors. Also funds came from living heroes, fellow Lions, friends and well wishers.”

    Mrs Agbogun praised LUTH for  giving the club the space where the ‘Mercy Home’ stands. She urged the hospital’s management to ensure that the facility is well used and also kept in good condition.

    Multiple Council Chairperson (MCC), MD 404, Samuel Ekpuk thanked LUTH for partnering with the club to make the dream come true.

    Chief Medical Director (CMD), LUTH Prof. Akin Osibogun praised the  club  for the building, promising and assured that it would be used for the purpose to which it was built.

  • UCH graduates 172 nurses

    UCH graduates 172 nurses

    THE Nursing Education Department, University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan has graduated 172 nurses in general, midwives, preoperative and occupational health specialties.

    Deputy Director of Nursing Education, UCH, Mrs. Fehintola Ogunde, said this at the 2014 graduation ceremony of the college yesterday in Ibadan.

    She said the graduating nurses were presented for six professional examinations organised by the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria (NMCN).

    Mrs. Ogunde added that 100 per cent success rate was recorded in all the examination.

    She praised the efforts of all the heads of schools, the tutorial staff and the administrative staff of the schools for their hard work, dedication and steadfastness during the training.

    She said:”It is pertinent to remind you that this is the beginning of your professional journey. The UCH has performed its role of providing you with the necessary knowledge, skill and attitude, thereby laying a solid foundation for your professional growth.”

    She enjoined the nurses not to rest on their oars, but continue to improve themselves academically, especially along the nursing world.