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nma logo 2 300x225The Sokoto State Chapter of the Nigerian Medical Association(NMA) has promised to provide free medical services to people taking part in the environmental sanitation in the state. The Chairman, NMA in the state, Dr Abdulgafar Jimoh, stated this in a statement issued in Sokoto on Sunday. According to him, the gesture is aimed at complementing the efforts of the state government to rid the state of filth. ” The programme will in no small measure improve on the health of the citizenry as most of the communicable diseases are associated with poor sanitation and poor personal hygiene. “We wish to encourage the Tambuwal’s administration to maintain and sustain this public health initiative.

”It will certainly reduce communicable and water-borne diseases like diarrhoea and malaria which are among the major public health problems in our society. “We wish to assure the state government of continuous support in developing the health sector. “A clean environment is a necessary requirement to a healthy life,” he was quoted in the statement.Meanwhile, Gov. Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State has commended the people for turning out in large number to participate in the Saturday environmental sanitation across the state.

StrikeThe Nigerian Association of Hospital and Administrative Pharmacists has called on President Muhammadu Buhari to address the injustice in the health sector.The association made the call in a communique forwarded to our correspondent by its Vice-Chairman, Mr. Kingsley Amibor, on Tuesday. Members of the association in Lokoja, Kogi State, at a conference entitled, “Transforming Hospital and Administrative Pharmacy Practice for Improved Healthcare Delivery.” According to the association, the Federal Ministry of Health and other health institutions in the country have been denying its members key positions.

It stated, “We have appraised the incessant spate of industrial unrests within the Nigerian health sector and traced its origin to the hegemony of injustice perpetrated by one group of health professionals perennially. “These professionals use the instruments of offices of their privileged members in high places to seek favours. “We, therefore, call on the Federal Government under the leadership President Muhammadu Buhari, to demonstrate that it has the political will to redress the glaring cases of injustice and impunity that have become the hallmark of the health sector.”

Thursday, 27 August 2015 14:23

Nigeria Has Only 39 Orthodontists, Says NAO

OrthodontistsORTHODONTISTS under the aegis of Nigerian Association of Orthodontists (NAO) have decried a situation where there are only 39 registered members and 4,600 dentists for a population of 170 million people. Top members of the Association in a chat with journalists in Lagos recently said the situation in Nigeria where there is one orthodontist to four million people is in contrast to the United States where there are about 9,000 orthodontists serving a population of 310 million people, which is about one orthodontist to 35,000 people.
 
NAO said as part of efforts towards advancing orthodontic education and providing orthodontic care for underserved populations in Nigeria, the association is holding its 9th Annual Scientific Conference at the National Hospital Abuja from October 6 to 8, 2015. The Association said the Conference will be preceeded by the launch of the ‘Orthodontic Month’ on October 5, 2015, which will be marked by orthodontic outreach with screening and educational programmes in secondary schools in Abuja. The theme of the Conference, according to NAO is “Smile Aesthetics and Psychosocial Wellbeing” with a prominent Nigerian orthodontist in the United Kingdom, Dr. Patrick Williams as the keynote speaker.
members of the high table w 702x336Faced with a plethora of petitions from members of the public alleging poor implementation of the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has called on the Federal Government to review the Scheme to address some noticeable challenges. The Rights Commission has disclosed its intention to invite the leadership of the scheme to explain why beneficiaries were experiencing difficulties in accessing medical services. Executive Secretary of the Commission, Bem Angwe, made the call yesterday in a chat with journalists at the Commission headquarters.
 
Angwe, who was irked by what he describes as the indiscriminate policy of the scheme against civil servants, noted that contrary to the intention of the Federal Government for citizens to have access to medical facilities, the current discriminately nature of the scheme has made it difficult for beneficiaries, whose monies have already been deducted from their salaries, from getting access to drugs and treatment. “It is a worrisome development because here at the Commission, I have received several petitions from Nigerians complaining of the poor services. This is not acceptable because it is an infringement on their rights.”
world health organization2Health workers in Nigeria waste thousands of expensive malaria drugs prescribing them to patients who do not have malaria, a new research by experts at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, has revealed. About 5,000 health workers working in public health facilities, pharmacies and drug stores from 40 communities in Enugu State were involved in the research. According to the study, patients are often given malaria drugs based on their signs and symptoms, contrary to standard recommendations by the World Health Organisation that patients’ blood should be tested for the presence of malaria parasites before confirmed cases are treated with Artemisin-based Combination Therapy.
 
Some of the implications of treating without testing, according to the investigators, are disability, death, adverse drug reactions, malaria parasite becoming resistant to the drug and drug failure. The research finding which was published in PLOS ONE, an international health journal, stated that the use of simple diagnostic tools, such as the Rapid Diagnostic Test among health workers remained less than 50 per cent in spite of three training programmes given to them by experts.
Thursday, 27 August 2015 15:21

Experts Worry Over Vaccine Hesitancy

isStatistics from the World Health Organisation (WHO) have revealed that an estimated 1.5 million children around the world still die each year of diseases that could be prevented by vaccines that already exist just as 1 in 5 children still do not receive routine life-saving immunizations. According to a statement from the organization, people who delay or refuse vaccines for themselves or their children are presenting a growing challenge for countries seeking to close the immunization gap. In a special issue of the journal Vaccine, guest-edited by WHO and published last week, experts review the role of vaccine hesitancy in limiting vaccine coverage and explore strategies to address it. Vaccine hesitancy refers to delay in acceptance or refusal of safe vaccines despite availability of vaccination services.
 
The issue is complex and context specific, varying across time, place and vaccines. It is influenced by factors such as misinformation, complacency, convenience and confidence. “Vaccines can only improve health and prevent deaths if they are used, and immunization programmes must be able to achieve and sustain high vaccine uptake rates. Vaccine hesitancy is an increasingly important issue for country immunization programmes,” says Dr Philippe Duclos, Senior Health Adviser for WHO’s Immunization, Vaccines and Biological Department and guest editor of the special issue, entitled WHO recommendations regarding vaccine hesitancy.
Medical and DentalThe furor over the proposed policy of Private Public Partnership (PPP) in the health sector cannot be wished away because of its likely implications for access to healthcare by majority of poor Nigerians. The Yayale Committee Report on disharmony in the health sector gave a hint of government’s preparedness to adopt the policy. The report calls for the privatisation of federal hospitals in the country through the system of PPP. In retrospection, we recollect that the debate over the suitability of the idea started since 2006 when the National Council on Health (NCH) purportedly looked into the idea and approved it initially under former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration and last year under the President Jonathan’s administration.
 
Sadly however, the initiative has thrown the health sector into avoidable pandemonium with the medical doctors supporting the idea and other stakeholders in the sector opposing it. The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), the Medical and Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria (MDCAN), Assembly of Healthcare Professional Associations (AHPA) and Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) have been at daggers drawn over the suitability or otherwise of the policy idea. Clearly, the medical doctors are in support of the idea while those belonging to sister associations are against the idea. This altercation becomes unfortunate because the health care sector in recent times has faced damning strikes and other avoidable challenges including inadequate funding and corrupt disposition by personnel. So, any attempt, in our view, at ignoring these discordant tunes might further aggravate an already bad situation.

ndama 618x330A 42 day countdown to declare Sierra Leone Ebola free started on Tuesday, 25th August 2015 following the discharge of the last patient, Adama Sankoh from hospital. The 42 days is double the incubation period of 21 days. The incubation period is the time between contraction and manifestation of symptoms in an infected person. The discharged patient contracted the virus after her son died from the disease late last month. She was presented with a certificate by President Ernest Bai Koroma following her discharge.

“The Ebola fight is not yet over – go and tell members of your community that” the president said. “Go back to your community and continue to live life as you used to.” The Independent reported that Sankoh, whose 23-year-old son contracted Ebola in the capital, Freetown, before traveling to his home village, thanked everyone who provided her care during her illness. She also vowed to be the last person infected in Sierra Leone with the virus. “Although my child died of Ebola I am very happy that I have survived today,” she said upon leaving the Ebola treatment centre in Mateneh village on the outskirts of Makeni, the president’s hometown.

african american doctor 2 660x330The federal medical center just recently returned to work after medical services were suspended for over three months. The cause was the faceoff between members of the house unions and the chief medical director. A similar situation appears to be unfolding at the Federal Medical Center, Owo, Ondo state as members of the Association of Resident Doctors (ARD) are demanding that the Federal Ministry of Health recalls Dr. Adediran Kolajo, the administrator of the hospital who is acting on interim basis. They are making the demand on the grounds of his victimization of her members.

The association also wants the Ministry to investigate projects executed before and during the tenure of Dr. Kolajo. Dr. Isaiah Oke, the president of the association disclosed these at a press conference held inside the hospital. The association is also alleging that the hospital’s new management led by the CMD has declared to make life unbearable for her members and the hallmark of this undesirable attitude was the destruction of their lounge located inside the hospital complex.

USAID Logo 300x174The United State Agency for International Development (USAID) on Thursday began the construction of its warehouse for proper storage of essential medicines and health products in Nigeria. Speaking at the Ground Breaking Ceremony in Lagos, its Director, Mr Mike Harvey, said the project was a state-of-the-art warehouse. The “Warehouse-In-a Box’’ is sited at the Federal Medical Store Oshodi, Lagos. “This warehouse will serve as a storage facility, one of those planned to be built in Lagos with the support of the U.S. and the Federal Ministry of Health in Nigeria.

“This facility will support the country’s pharmaceutical supply chain, and once this is up and running, the warehouse will make sure that women, children and families in Nigeria get quality drugs. “It will also help to provide quality drugs in every part of the country,’’ Harvey said. He added that the warehouse would be funded by USAID and the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria. “The total fund for the construction would be five million dollars, with USAID providing four million, while Global Fund and the private sector will source the rest,’’ he said.

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