Tag: world-class

  • Nigeria loses another world class curator

    Barely one month after the death of Nigeria’s renowned independent curator and Founder Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, Ms Bisi Silva, Nigeria has lost another frontline  curator Okwui Enwezor, 55.

    He  died of cancer  which he had been battling for years.

    According to Artnews, Enwezor, whose incisive, free-thinking, and ambitious exhibitions were essential in pushing the art world to embrace a global view of contemporary art and art history. Among the first to share news of his passing was the Venice Biennale, whose 56th edition he curated in 2015.

    Enwezor was the first African-born curator to organize the Biennale, a show that began in 1895, and the first non-European to oversee Documenta, the every-five-years exhibition in Kassel, Germany, which he staged in 2002. That latter show, Documenta XI, defined his curatorial sensibility: venturesome, unabashedly intellectual, and intent on rethinking how institutions operate.

    In the run-up to the opening of Documenta in June of 2002, Enwezor presented what he termed platforms—conferences, seminars, and other projects—in Berlin, Vienna, New Delhi, St. Lucia, and Lagos, Nigeria, and for the main exhibition he showcased artists from beyond Europe and the United States, which had historically dominated the affair.

    Discussing his career with Melissa Chiu at the Asia Society in New York in 2014, he said: “When I started, I always had what I thought was a change agenda.”

    He worked tirelessly over the course of more than 30 years to fulfill that mission, shaping, indelibly, the way art is presented and taught.

    “He was one of the leaders of, let’s call it, the free curatorial world, one of the people who believed in intelligence and scholarly research and passion and the power of the curatorial,” Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, the director of the Castello di Rivoli in Turin, Italy, and curator of Documenta 13 in 2012, said by phone.

    Curator Cuauhtémoc Medina said on Twitter that Enwezor “was a major force of contemporary culture. His achievement as curator of some of the most important global exhibitions of the last decade punctuated the emergence of the South as a global cultural movement.”

    Enwezor was born in Calabar, Cross River State, in 1963, and grew up in Enugu. He moved to New York in 1982 and earned his first degree  degree in political science from what is now New Jersey City University. He wrote and performed poetry, and like so many in that field, soon found his way into art criticism. In the early 1990s, he began curating shows regularly, and in 1994, while based in Brooklyn, he co-founded Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art.

    Asked about that name in an interview with the Vitra Design Museum, Enwezor said he was “searching for a term that projected an aesthetic horizon, but would also constitute a forum of ideological resistance.” He explained that Nka, “in Igbo, the language I grew up with in Eastern Nigeria, means to create, to make, to invent. It also means art. Then in Basaa, a language in Cameroon, Nka means discourse. People oftentimes ask me, ‘When was the first time you went to a museum?’ As if a museum is the only space where one encounters art! Calling the magazine Nka was a way of disarming this particular notion.”

    In 1996, Enwezor organized “In/Sight: African Photographers, 1940 to the Present” at the Guggenheim Museum’s location in the SoHo section of Manhattan, featuring 30 artists, including canonical figures like Seydou Keïta, of Mali, and Samuel Fosso, of Nigeria. Max Kozloff, writing in Artforum, said that the show “broke ground here, offering practically all its subjects a U.S. debut” and Holland Cotter, in the New York Times, termed it a “mandatory stop.”

    Soon after, he curated the 2nd Johannesburg Biennale, which ran from 1996 to 1997, one in a string of the closely watched international exhibitions he would be picked to curate in the coming decades, a lineup that also includes the 2008 Gwangju Biennale and the 2012 Triennale at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris.

    In 2011, Enwezor became director of the Haus der Kunst, the sprawling kunsthalle in Munich, Germany, which hosted solo exhibitions for Stan Douglas, Georg Baselitz, Frank Bowling, and many more, as well as, in 2016, “Postwar: Art Between the Pacific and the Atlantic, 1945–1965,” an unprecedented survey of the story of postwar modernism around the world that included some 350 pieces by more than 200 artists.

    His tenure at Haus der Kunst ended abruptly. In mid-2018, the Bavarian state announced he would leave the institution three years before his contract was up because of health concerns. Claims were aired in the press about budget shortfalls, which he adamantly denied.

    “It’s an insult, yes,” Enwezor said of the statement disclosing his departure. “I am almost perplexed. The achievements and successes of seven years are swept under the rug. I have worked with passion to raise the profile of this museum, especially internationally.”

  • New tool brings world class medical services to ABUAD

    Tough health challenges? Overseas diagnosis may be just a click away – thanks to the equipment just acquired by the Afe Babalola University Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State (ABUAD).

    The Technical Partners of ABUAD Multi System Hospital, Aster DM Healthcare of Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) yesterday donated a telemedicine equipment to the 400-bed  hospital to support it and “in appreciation of the selfless achievements of its founder, Aare Afe Babalola, SAN”.

    With this equipment, ABUAD Multi System Hospital can engage in tele-consulting, tele-diagnosis and tele-management. A patient could be in front of the telemedicine equipment in Ado-Ekiti and doctors in Dubai would be able to diagnose what is wrong with him/her and advise on the appropriate treatment.

    The equipment will be used in procedures as consultants in Dubai would see what is going on in any of ABUAD’s five Modular Theatres and assist in whatever way possible.

    The donation was the high-point of the signing of the operations and management services agreement in technical services, managerial services and high and clinical services as well as training between the two partners, ABUAD Multi System Hospital and Aster DM Healthcare.

    Some of the services to be rendered by Aster DM Healthcare are the appointment of the chief operating officer (COO), operations plan, manpower planning, standard operating plans and system analysis and commissioning of the Hospital Information Management System (HIMS).

    Others are the supply of visiting super specialists to conduct medical missions. The collaboration will also result in the set-up of services for the benefit of Nigerians and patients undergoing cancer care.

    Part of the benefits accruable from the agreement is the provision of advice for smooth operations and development of ABUAD Multi System Hospital to ensure that it can offer high end clinical programmes for the benefit of Nigerian patients.

    ABUAD teachers, consultants, nurses and medical laboratory scientists as well as other allied medical professionals will be trained.

    Speaking at the signing of the agreement, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Aster DM Healthcare Dr. Harisha Pillai, who represented the Chairman of Aster Medicity Hospital, Kochi, Dr. A Moopen, hailed Babalola for doing so much in his hospital within a very short time.

    In his view, there is no reason for Nigerians to travel out for medical care because everything is now available in ABUAD Multi System Hospital.

    Pillai said the gesture was also in appreciation of the quantum of sophisticated and state-of-the-art equipment at the hospital.

    Pillai described ABUADTH as a quality hospital that boasts of one of the best medical facilities in African.

    The Dubai hospital’s CEO said his group was in Nigeria at Babalola’s request to deploy the best medical personnel in the hospital.

    Aster Group is an international brand in the health . It has presence in United Arab Emirates, Oman, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Jordan, Philippines and India.

    Pillai said the hospitals managed by the group receive large number of Nigerians, many of whom tabled the request to have the expertise in Nigeria hospitals.

    He added: “We have a plan to collaborate with Nigerian doctors here, to train them, nurses and other paramedics to make ABUADTH self-sufficient in human resources.

    “We congratulate Aare Afe Babalola for making this health facilities available. We will deploy our Chief Operating Officer here within a month.

    “You know this hospital is located on a highway and we will train the personnel in trauma care, neurosurgical services, among others.

    “We also plan to bring paediatric surgeons here so that Nigerian children will no longer be taken abroad for life-saving surgeries.

    “Our role is to assist the local personnel to grow on the job and in five years’ time, patients from other parts of Africa will be coming here.”

    An obviously elated Babalola said the signing of the agreement yesterday made the day one of the happiest moments in his life and in the life of Nigeria.

    Beaming with smiles, the renowned lawyer described himself as “a fulfilled man” because of the way he has been able to impact his generation and the society.

    Babalola said his passion about reducing medical tourism abroad necessitated the establishment of the hospital.

    He said: “Their (Aster Group’s) consultants will come here periodically and in the process minimise the amount paid as medical expenses abroad.

    “This will help us reduce our foreign medical trips. For example,  a patient who spends an average of N5 million going overseas will get treatment at a cheaper rate.

    “We are bringing quality healthcare to the doorsteps of our people and this collaboration will reduce medical expenses our people pay outside the country.”

  • I’ll turn MOCPED to world-class institution, says Provost

    I’ll turn MOCPED to world-class institution, says Provost

    The Acting Provost of Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED), Dr Nosiru Olajide Onibon has promised to turn the college to a world-class institution.

    At the matriculation 493 students of the institution at Noforija, Epe, he also promised to manage the affairs of the institution to the satisfaction of the government and good people of Lagos State.

    Onibon congratulated the students, saying they should count themselves lucky because the admission process was keen.

    He urged them to see sky as their limit.

    “Today, the college is matriculating 493 students. Let me. Sincerely appreciate the efforts of the academic board, the three unions, committees and all staff. Today is the product of your commitment and we are determined to move the college forward in spite of the challenges facing this institution. Let me assure you that I am here to collaborate with you and make this institution one of the best in the world.

    “To our matriculating students, let me inform you that your admission into this college exposes you to certain rights and privileges and also requires that you live up to expectations by obeying existing rules and regulations to enjoy you stay in the college,” he said.

    Onibon said part of the vision and mission of the college is to build a dynamic institution of higher learning for capacity building.

    Onibon said 81 full time and 89 part time students were admitted into Arts and Social Science, 41 students made the Primary Education list, 89 were admitted into the language class, science had 70 students, while those admitted for vocational class were 123 number.

    Addressing over 2,000 parents, staff and well-wishers at the well-attended ceremony, he promised to ensure improved academic excellence, research, human resources development as well as structural development, among others.

    The school, he said, has zero tolerance for laziness, campus and off campus hooliganism and advised the students to always follow the legitimate channels of communication during the period of their stay in the college.

    “Let me say that the door of the college is open at all times for discussions that will promote peace in this school,” he said.

    Onibon sought the support of the union, academic board, college committee, parents, and all stakeholders.

    Some of the parents praised Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for appointing Onibon as the Provost of the college.

    A parent, Chief Gbenga Alaka said Dr Onibon’s appointment was a “round peg in a round hole,” and urge staff and students of the school to support him in his efforts to make the college a world-class institution.

  • Provost to turn Otedola College into world-class institution

    The Acting Provost of Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED) at Noforija, Epe, in Lagoas State, Dr Nosiru Olajide Onibon, has promised to turn the college into a world-class institution.

    He pledged to manage the affairs of the institution to the satisfaction of the government and Lagos State residents.

    Onibon spoke at the matriculation of the institution at Noforija, Epe.

    The acting provost congratulated the 493 students and urged them to count themselves lucky because their admission was highly competitive.

    Onibon said 81 full-time and 89 part-time students were admitted into Arts and Social Science.

    The acting provost noted that while 41 students made the Primary Education list and 89 admitted into the Language class, Science had 70 students.

    According to him, 123 students were admitted for vocational class.

    Addressing over 2,000 parents, workers and well-wishers at the ceremony, Onibon promised to turn around the  the institution through academic excellence, research, human resources development as well as structural development.

    The school, the acting provost said, has a zero tolerance for laziness, campus and off-campus hooliganism.

    He advised the students to always follow the legitimate channels of communication during their stay.

    Onibon said: “Let me say that the door of the college is open at all times for discussions that will promote peace in this school.”

    The acting provost sought the support of the union, academic board, college committee, parents and other stakeholders for the development and progress of the college.

    He urged the students not to take law into their hands.

  • Ambode: we’ll make public schools world-class

    Ambode: we’ll make public schools world-class

    •Governor inaugurates 13-block classrooms

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has renewed his administration’s commitment to upgrade infrastructure in public schools to meet global standards.

    Ambode spoke yesterday while inaugurating a block of 13 classrooms built by his administration at Oke Ishagun community in Agbado – Oke Odo Local Council Development Area.

    The governor said his administration pays particular attention to upgrading school infrastructure, especially at public primary/secondary levels, because it recognises the importance of basic education to higher intellectual development.

    Ambode, who was represented by Deputy Governor Dr Idiat Adebule, noted that the “huge resources” committed to providing and upgrading school infrastructure “is consistent with the all-inclusive policy and conviction of his administration that children of today are future leaders who deserve the best education.”

    “The basic education level is a crucial stage because it is the foundation upon which all other levels of education are built. It is our desire therefore to ensure that this level of education is strengthened to enhance the future prospects of our children and their ability to cope with the challenges of higher levels of education” Ambode said.

    The governor assured that ongoing rehabilitation and construction projects in public schools would go round all the six educational districts in the state.

    He said the state executive council had approved that the projects be extended to all public schools irrespective of their areas and location.

    His government’s vision, Ambode added, is to “develop a robust public education system that can compare with the best in the world”

    In Alimosho alone, the governor listed some of the state government projects to include: Abesan Senior Comprehensive College, Ifesowapo/Aboru Senior Secondary School, Millennium Senior School Ijegun, Egan High School, Egan, Abesan Junior High School, Abesan, Meiran Senior and Junior Model College, Meiran, State Junior High School, Alimosho, Olorunishola Community Junior School, Ayobo, among others.

    Ambode urged pupils in the state to justify government’s huge investment in education by working harder and remaining focused.

    He said: “To our pupils, the future belongs to you if you listen to your teachers and your parents, you can achieve anything you pay your mind to but you must work hard and pay attention to your studies, read your books , be focused  on achieving your dreams and develop yourself daily.”

     

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  • NIPCO has world-class gas plant,  NLNG chief

    NIPCO has world-class gas plant, NLNG chief

    Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas limited (NLNG) Managing Director,  Mr. Tony Attah, has described NIPCO Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) terminal as a world class facility.

    He described the plant as a game changer in the industry,  adding that it could assist the nation effectively.

    Attah spoke during a facility tour of NIPCO terminal in Lagos. He said the operations and the human capital of the company were worthy of emulation in the quest to deepen LPG access nationwide.

    “I never in my wildest imagination believed that this kind of facility exists in Apapa. The mental picture I have of Apapa is just a congested area, but coming to NIPCO, I can see that beyond the congestion, there is quite a lot of value for Nigeria through the operations of NIPCO Plc,” he said.

    The  NLNG chief noted that NIPCO does not only have an advantage of operating in front of three or four  jetties receiving both white products and gas but also investing heavily to upscale the amount of LPG that it can be received into its facility.

    Attah said: “For me NIPCO is a real game changer and we are committed to continue to support the company and indeed Nigeria to bring about the positive change in terms of energy availability for Nigeria.”

    He noted that there is a big scope for the company to strengthen the handshake, deepen the partnership between NLNG and NIPCO, adding “we stay committed to the partnership and most importantly, we stay committed to Nigeria.”

    Attah restated NLNG’s commitment to Nigeria, stressing that the company’s vision is to be a global player in the LNG market and to help build a better Nigeria, adding that part of it is its direct involvement in the LPG space.

    He said as at 2007, Nigeria was doing only about 50,000 tonnes of LPG before NLNG gom glad to say that as at 2016, NLNG’s LPG contribution to Nigeria was well over 25,000 tonnes with a plan to increase it to 300,000 tonnes this year.

    NIPCO Group Managing Director, Mr. Venkataraman Venkatapathy, confirmed NLNG as the biggest producer of LPG locally and has played commendable role in supplying LPG for domestic consumption.

    He recalled that NIPCO’s entry into the LPG business in 2009 was in apparent response to Federal Government’s call for genuine investors to improve LPG access to Nigerians through provision of infrastructure that could aid supply.

    According to him, the historic completion of the 4,800 MT facilities in 2008 and the unparalleled support of NLNG encouraged NIPCO to commence construction of the largest LPG facility in Africa (5,000MT) in continuous effort to improve access, facilitate gas evacuation across the country and quick turnaround of NLNG vessels.

    He told the visiting NLNG delegation that safety remains the company’s watchword as it has never experienced any lost time injury (LTI) in its operations since 2009.

    Venkatapathy informed the team that NIPCO has excellent relationship with off-takers for obvious reasons including proximity to jetty, enduring LPG business operations, improved loading and weighing facilities to ensure accuracy of product loaded, and faster turnaround, among others. These factors  make NIPCO first choice LPG terminal.

     

  • CFAO opens ‘world-class’ medical centre

    The CFAO group has launched Euracare, a multi-specialist hospital “to provide Nigerians with world-class medical services.”
    The centre will deliver medical services which Nigerians travel abroad to obtain.
    Euracare, according to a statement by the firm, offers a full range of advanced diagnostic modalities (1.5 Tesla MRI, 64-slice CT, digital X-Ray, mammography, echography, and laboratory) with tele-interpretation in less than three hours by United States and United Kingdom-certified radiologists.
    It has also created a cutting-edge technological platform enabling Nigerian Diaspora surgeons to conduct minimally-invasive procedures in the fields of neurological, gastrointestinal, orthopaedic, vascular and urological surgeries.
    The centre, the statement said, is equipped with a cardiac catheterisation laboratory in which Canada-trained interventional cardiologist Dr Tosin Majekodunmi, Euracare’s resident medical director, performs procedures ranging from angioplasty to pacemaker insertion.
    “Over 300 patients have already been safely and successfully diagnosed and treated in the facility located in Victoria Island,” it said.

  • World class monuments changing Lagos skyline

    Quietly, with the new look Tafawa Balewa Square (TBS) BRT terminus and the multi-layered pedestrian bridge along with a flyover and road modernization at Ojodu-Berger, Lagos is becoming noticed for its world class monuments dropping from the ideas-box of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, the same way the great Eiffel Tower (Paris), Statue of Liberty (New York) and Statue of Christ the Redeemer (Rio de Janeiro) have become the attraction of those cities.

    These three structures, for ages the cynosure and first port of call of all who visit, remain treasured artistic possessions of their countries. This is so for a couple of reasons. First, they have aesthetic values. As we all know the human sense of assessment cherishes works of art. It is not only the ancient gods of Mount Olympus who loved beautiful phenomena. The mortals they reigned over also bestowed honour on what they considered to be admirable.

    Secondly, such monuments speak of the creativity and ingenuity of man in the face of his mortality.

    They announce that although he would die, his works would outlive him, just as the great works of William Shakespeare have survived centuries after the death of the playwright. Thirdly they have a strong economic pull. Consider the tens of thousands of people who pay hard currency to visit the great Eiffel Tower (Paris), Statue of Liberty (New York) and Statue of Christ the Redeemer (Rio de Janeiro). The numbers of such tourists have aggregated into millions over the decades.

    Many observers easily agree that what would also emerge at TBS and Ojodu-Berger in Lagos State after final construction work, along with other structures springing up would place this old federal capital with a population of more than 21 million mark in the league of those mega cities with attractive iconic landmarks.

    At TBS there has been a huge investment by the Ambode administration to modernize the terminus and make it rhyme with the injection of over four hundred new air conditioned luxury buses into the commute system in the state.

    The upgrade is featuring spotless-white structures that boast of a meandering roof (white roof as opposed to a conventional blue roof). These sheltering tops roll into one another to suggest a transition from one stand or position to the other. The roofs admit of sunlight but yet prevent the discomfort of the scorching sun. The wavy formation of the roof also reflects the coastal attribute of Lagos State, with the powerful Atlantic waves beating its shores.

    The thinking of the Government and the designers is obvious. The citizens patronizing BRT must be shielded from the elements even as they wait for the buses. Their comfort is not only to be guaranteed in the air conditioned vehicles. After all the government’s concern for its citizens must not only be for the elites; it must be for all.

    Besides, if the government is to be taken seriously in its avowed determination to decongest the streets and lure motorists to leave their cars at home and embrace the BRT, it must create such enticements as comfortable waiting points as well as conducive transit buses. Now it is clear that the Lagos State government has overcome these challenges with what we are witnessing at TBS. The white roof stands are, so to say, an unblemished evidence of government’s success story on that score.

    The work at Ojodu-Berger on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway presents a far more ambitious spectacle which is drawing thousands and thousands more to conclude that truly Ambode is out to push Lagos State into a world class city. Numbers may count in determining the status of a city as a global index. But it is necessary also to consider its infrastructural delivery. In this case we can safely point at what is emerging at Ojodu-Berger.

    Something of a magical performance has taken place there. In one fell swoop, the government has outlawed the traffic bedlam and the chaotic human movement in the area with the provision of a labyrinth of a pedestrian bridge together with a fly-over and the construction of the road from Omole (phase II). This has completely changed the topography of the area.

    The footbridge itself is a marvel as it is the first of its type in Nigeria. I’m describing it as a labyrinth because it has a number of openings and access points that guide the pedestrian into the haven of safety above the relentless traffic below. The construction has obliterated the danger commuters face as they arrive from the long trip from the hinterland of Nigeria, since that is the major point of disembarkation of road travelers.

    In the past, the area provided perfect material for a discourse on a classical notion of commotion. Now it presents a perfect stuff for discourse on order and sanity.

    A flyover is also springing up there. Similarly a road is being constructed from Omole (phase 11). All these are expected to eliminate the traffic bottlenecks that characterize that axis and are responsible for severe man-hour losses in traffic congestion. Observers say when completed, these projects would save lives lost in accidents that occur when pedestrians cross the expressway.

    Recently at the Town Hall Meeting at Teslim Balogun Stadium Surulere, Governor Ambode said the iconic projects at TBS and Ojodu-Berger would not be a one-off show. He said his government would push for the replication of these totems of development in other areas of the state. He calls it a new model of governance.

    Ambode’s idea of an all-inclusive government is one in which in his words “No one or segment of the society, irrespective of colour, race, faith, status, ability, or disability is left behind… In my administration, everybody counts… As long as you reside in Lagos, we will make Lagos work for you”.

    Actually, these were words he used in his inaugural speech last year upon beginning his work as governor of Lagos State. With the physical infrastructural work he has undertaken as signposted at TBS, Ojodu-Berger, Oworonshoki, Ketu-Alapere and some parts of the city, there can be no doubt that the governor in under two years has demonstrated that by the time he runs the full course of his tenure would have fulfilled his promise to deliver a world class city to the citizens.

    Many believe, and rightly so, that if there is a city capable of placing Nigeria in the group of nations whose monuments attract tourists like Eiffel Tower (Paris), Statue of Liberty (New York) and Statue of Christ the Redeemer (Rio de Janeiro) do, Lagos has given an indisputable signal that it is the Nigerian metropolis to play that role.

    Already the Eko Atlantic City project in the state is also preparing grounds for that. Let me conclude that with preparations for the 50th Anniversary of Lagos State next year in feverish stage, Lagos under Akinwunmi Ambode is poised for more modern infrastructural renaissance.

     

    • Anibaba, an economist wrote from Gbagada, Lagos
  • Lagos builds world-class critical care facility

    Lagos builds world-class critical care facility

    The Lagos State Government has built a high-tech Critical Care Unit (CCU) at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital  (LASUTH), Ikeja. The new unit occupies a three-floor edifice and has state-of-the-art treatment and monitoring equipment seen only in world-class CCUs.

    Right from the Ground floor, the automatic glass door opens and leads one to the elevators, which are designed to suit the patients as they allow for the easy movement of patient’s bed and accommodate the staff handling same.

    The First Floor has in-house laboratory, and the patient has no need to go out for such services. The laboratory also enables the medics to arrive at a quicker decision on the patient.

    The theatre has infrared light and medic compliant taps to curtail the spread of contaminants. The operating lights have recording device that help record the operations to be done, or allow for live transmission to any part of the world for teaching purposes.

    The operating bed is multi functional, as it helps a doctor to place his patient in the best position for surgery. The beds can be electronically adjusted- high, low, tilted or even angled. It can also be elongated to accommodate tall patients, or turned to a chair to suit the patient’s needs.

    The Anesthesia machine has an in-built Ventilator that guarantees reduction of post surgery complication.

    At the centre of the building is the Nurses’ station, where the nurses have direct observation of the patients and those in the isolation wards. It also has a close circuit TV.

    The Recovery room in the complex has adaptive and assistive equipment for full recovery of patients. The six dialysis machines are well laid out in a clean, comfortable and conducive environment, while the staff lounge is equipped with internet facility for quick research.

    The Second Floor is the Private Ward, which has a sit-out area where a patient can enjoy some fresh air, with a clear view of the surrounding area.

    The Third Floor hosts the consulting room for private patients who do not want to be attended to at the general clinic. The floor also houses the Pharmacy, the Call room and Administrative Offices for staff on night duty.

    Director, CCU and a Fellow of American College of Surgeons, Dr Ade Tinubu, said the concept of the edifice was his, but the funding came 100 per cent from the Lagos State Government, noting that there is power supply round the clock and the ceilings of the building are fire resistant.

    Some of the equipments at the unit are cardiac or heart monitors, pulse oximeter, which allows the critical care team to monitor the saturation of oxygen in the blood, There is also a Swan-Ganz or pulmonary artery catheter, for knowing the amount of fluid filling the heart as well as determine how the heart functions.

    Tinubu said: “Central venous catheter (CVC) is a type of catheter that is soft, pliable and is inserted into a large vessel (vein) in the neck (internal jugular vein), in the upper chest (subclavian vein), or in the groin area (femoral vein).

    “There is a Ceiling Pendant that supplies medical gases and electrical supply to the patient’s bed side. So also Intravenous (IV), which is a plastic catheter (tube) that is inserted into the veins (peripheral IV) or a larger size catheter inserted into the larger veins of the neck. Fluids, medications, nutrition preparations, and blood products are administered through IV catheters. Patients in ICU often have multiple IVs. Chest tubes are inserted through the chest wall into the space around the lung to drain fluid or air that has accumulated and prevent the lung from being able to expand.

    “Good quality chest tubes are available. Chest tubes are inserted through the chest wall into the space around the lungs to drain fluid or air that has accumulated and prevent the lung from being able to expand.

    “The CCU boasts of urinary catheters, often referred to as Foley catheters, which are inserted through the urethra into the bladder. Once in the bladder the catheter is kept in place by a balloon, which is inflated, at the end of the catheter. Urinary catheters continuously drain the bladder and allow for accurate measurement of urinary output, which is extremely important in fluid management and in assessing kidney function. Endotracheal tubes are used when mechanical ventilation is necessary.”

    According to him, the complex also has multiple ventilator, or respirator, a breathing machine that helps patients breathe when they can not breathe on their own. A patient is connected to the ventilator by an endotracheal tube (a flexible plastic tube that is inserted into the mouth and then down into the trachea).

    “Nutrition is very important for the critically ill. Even though the ICU patient is immobile and does not appear to require ‘food’ for energy, the illness or injury that has required the patient to be in the ICU increases the patient’s basal metabolic rate (a measure of the rate of metabolism). Adequate nutrition is essential to the healing process.”

    “Nutritional solutions can be administered through feeding tubes inserted through either the nose or the mouth into the stomach or through central venous catheters. The stomach route is preferred, as long as the patient’s GI tract is working and able to tolerate feeding. Special nutritional preparations are available to provide the nutritional needs of the critically ill. The nutritional needs are calculated and monitored closely by the nutritionist on the critical care team and are adjusted accordingly. This started with the former Health Commissioner, Dr Leke Pitan that showed interest in Open heart surgery which I was conscripted into. We offer first class services at the CCU,” said Dr Tinubu.

    At the inuaguration of the unit, the Chief Medical Director (CMD), Prof Wale Oke assured that with the huge investment of the state government in completing the complex, it will definitely result into a major improvement in patients’ care in the hospital.

    Commissioner of Health, Dr Jide Idris enjoined all to take ownership of the CCU, saying: “This belongs to us all. Refer your patients here. Nigeria is the next hub for Medical Tourism. Do not sabotage government’s effort on this.”

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, represented by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Mr Tunji Bello said the design and operation of the CCU will be deployed in the care of those in dire health condition that hitherto, predisposed people towards foreign medical tourism.

    “It will complement the capacity of the existing Intensive Care Unit (ICU) established over 10 years. The combined capacities of these two healthcare facilities will enhance the status of Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) and the Lagos State University College of medicine (LASUCOM) as true centres for medical training and research. Ultimately, the facility will save from our nation scarce foreign exchange, of about $3 billion US dollar, which are spent annually on foreign medical tourism by Nigerians,” he said.

    He added: “We are strongly committed to the task of reversing the trend of overseas medical tourism in favour of local medical tourism through the provision of the right and conducive atmosphere for qualitative medicare in our state.”

  • ‘Centre offers world-class Cardio treatment’

    ‘Centre offers world-class Cardio treatment’

    Do you know there is a specialist hospital in the country that is solely devoted to the care of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs)? It is Tristate Heart and Vascular Centre, Ogun State.

    Tristate Heart and Vascular Centre is located at Babcock University, Ogun State.Other branches are in Oyo, Kano and the services will soon be available in Calabar, the Cross River State capital.

    The Chief Executive Officer/ Founder, Tristate Heart and Vascular Centre, Professor Kamal Adeleke said it hurts anytime he hears of people dying of CVDs or seeing  people with stroke when a place such as this exists.

    “Tristate has world standard  in terms of latest technology and qualified expertise, and it can compete with hospitals in the United States (U.S), all our machines and equipments are world class. Since its commissioning in 2014, Tristate has conducted 75 open heart surgeries and has recorded 98 percent success, 70 percent of which where children.”

    Adeleke explained that 2.4 billion naira was spent in setting up the Centre at Ogun, a bulk of the money went to infrastructure, equipment and consumables. ‘’The National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) partners with us. It pays half of the treatment fee for children below age five, meaning they pay two million off every child below the age of five. We at Tristate formed a foundation called Tristate Heart Foundation (THF) to help raise funds for people who need surgery. We organise awareness campaigns talking about the heart and all things related to the heart, how to prevent high blood pressures, how to prevent sudden death. But due to FOREX, the hospital still owes about N700million.That does not mean we compromise on services.”

    A congenital cardiologist (adult), Dr Tosin Majekodumi said it is good to know what to do when a family member collapses. “So we conduct trainings on how to do immediate resuscitation, cardio pulmonary resuscitation (C.P.R). And that have helped us to receive patients, especially referrals. When these patients are brought to us, we investigate them thoroughly, check pressure in the lungs, their blood types are checked in the laboratory, checked for infections after which a cold central fluid machine is used to separate blood parts into its different components (red and white blood cells, blood platelets),” he said.

    Chief Operating Officer (COO), Tristate, Dr Olukunle Iyanda, said Tristate has conducted cardiac surgeries, open heart surgeries, vascular surgeries, valve replacement and anything that has to do with blood vessels. But we can do more with the assistance of Federal Government, because as a private entity, we cannot do it all alone, we need government assistance.

    Speaking on high blood pressure, an adult/paediatric and cardiothoracic surgeon, Dr. Michael Sanusi said: “High Blood Pressure (HBP) is the most important risk factor for stroke, HBP adds to your heart’s workload and damages your arteries and organs over time, compared to people with normal BP. People with HBP are more likely to have  stroke. A blood pressure reading 120 over 80 is considered normal for adults, a blood pressure reading equal to or higher than 140 over 90 is high. Blood pressure between 120-139/ 80-90 is considered as “prehypertenstion and requires like style changes to reduce the risks of stroke.

    “People at higher risks for HBP are people with a family history of HBP, people of African descent, people of 35 years or older, overweight or obese people, people who eat too much salt, alcohol, people who are not physically active, women who use birth control pills and pregnant women. To control HBP one needs to lose weight if overweight, eat a healthy diet that is low in salt, saturated and trans fat, eat fruits and vegetables and low-fat diary products, enjoy regular physical activity, take all medicines prescribed by the doctor to control your blood pressure, know what your blood pressure level should be and try to keep it at that level,” said Dr Sanusi.

    A  spouse, who is a beneficiary of the facility, Mrs Philippa Onyekwelu, whose husband, Mr Chuma Onyekwelu needed valve replacement shared her joy as her husband became well after being treated at Tristate Heart and Vascular Centre,  “We have been managing this illness for almost two years. During the last attack, we were told he had one week to live, at that point we needed to rush him abroad we got to the airport only for him to be too weak to move not to talk of embarking on a long flight. A doctor referred us here and we came. The operation was conducted last night (mid week) and he is well and sound. We never knew Nigeria had a place like this, people need to come here rather than waste money abroad.”