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download 23Three Nigerian medical laboratories, 445 Nigerian Air Force Hospital Laboratory, Clina Lancet Laboratories and El-lab Laboratories, have received the International Standard Organisation (ISO) accreditation certificates for complying with international standards of services. The certificates were awarded and presented by the Medical Laboratory Science Council of Nigeria (MLSCN).

All the laboratories are located in Lagos and they were recognised for satisfying the requirements for ISO 15189: 2012 quality management system standard – an internationally acceptable standards requirement.

WHO1The World Health Organisation (WHO) yesterday said malaria killed 429,000 and infected 212 million people in 2015. It noted that millions of Africans still lack tools to prevent and treat the ailment. In its World Malaria Report 2016 released yesterday, the global agency submitted that the marginal progress made in the control of menace was being threatened by the rapid resistance to insecticides and antimalarial drug as well as shortfall in funding.
 
The report observed that Sub-Saharan Africa carried a disproportionately high share of the global malaria burden last year, accounting for 90 per cent of the cases and 92 per cent of the deaths. It noted that children under five years of age were particularly vulnerable, as an estimated 70 per cent of them died of the disease.
paymen 300x157Many medical workers in Lagos are angry. The aggrieved workers, who claimed they were engaged by the state government under the auspices of the Midwives Service Scheme (MSS), Lagos State chapter, recently held a peaceful demonstration at the Governor’s Office, Alausa, Ikeja, to protest the non-payment of 11-month salary arrears by the authorities.
 
The midwives, who marched around the Governor’s Office and the House of Assembly complex, sang songs and pleaded with the authorities to quickly come to their aid. They expressed displeasure over the manner in which they were being treated after they had wholeheartedly rendered services to patients, especially in remote areas of the state. According to the protesters, the state government’s refusal to pay them in the past 11 months had brought them untold hardship. They lamented that it was now difficult for them to feed their families, even as meeting other pressing needs had become impossible.
mitHealth minister Isaac Adewole says prevalence of obstetric fistula, despite a declining trend, is “still high and unacceptable”. Up to 148,000 women get fistulas—a tear in the vaginal wall, which occurs during obstructed labour, allowing faeces or urine to leak through without control.
 
“Obstetric fistula still exists because of health care systems gaps in quality maternal health care, including family planning, skilled birth attendance, basic and emergency obstetric care, and affordable treatment of fistula,” he said.

AmbodeGov. Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State on Monday urged doctors to support the government in curbing the activities of quack medical personnel to save lives and revive the healthcare system. Ambode made the plea at the Induction Ceremony for the 11th Set of Medical Doctors and the Unveiling of the Roll of Honour, Lagos State University College of Medicine (LASUCOM) in Lagos.

The governor, who was represented by his Deputy, Dr Idiat Adebule, said the quacks had done more than enough damage to the people and the nation’s healthcare system. “Our administration places high premium on healthcare and wellness of our people and this is reflective in our decision to develop a Medical Park of global standard and fight quackery. “We cannot achieve this without the support of our medical personnel, ‘’  the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)  quotes him as saying.

images 7The Delta Commissioner for Health, Dr Nicholas Azinge, has said that the state government would commence rehabilitation and re-equipping of the 132 non functional health centres in the state in 2017.

Azinge, who stated this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Asaba, said government needed to do this for the people to access primary healthcare. Azinge said that the state government had proposed N400 million for the primary health sector in the 2017 budget in its determination to tackle the problem.

IMG 9253 702x336To mark this year’s Universal Health Coverage Day, WHO has launched a new data portal to track progress towards universal health coverage (UHC) around the world. The portal which is available here shows where countries need to improve access to services, and where they need to improve information.

According to a statement, WHO said the portal features the latest data on access to health services globally and in each of WHO’s 194 Member States, along with information about equity of access. Next year WHO will add data on the impact that paying for health services has on household finances.

kids IDP campsThe United States Agency for International Development, USAID, has disclosed that approximately 100,000 children die from diarrhoea in Nigeria annually. USAID Chief of Party, Dr. Ayodele Iroko, made this known at the Strengthening Health Outcomes through the Private Sector, SHOPS, project in Makurdi.

Iroko said to address the situation, “the project trained over 350 clinic level private providers in Lagos State; 500 officers-in-charge of public Primary Health Care facilities, and 4,500 Proprietary Patent Medicine Vendors, PPMVs, in Abia, Benue and Nasarawa states to recommend zinc and ORS for diarrhoea treatment.

PICTwo Non-governmental Organisations (NGOs), Connected Development (CODE) and ONE Campaign, have commended the Federal Government for increasing funding for the healthcare sector in 2017.

The organisations expressed their satisfaction in separate statements made available to the News Agency of Nigeria on Thursday in Abuja by their respective chief executives. Mr Hamzat Lawal, Chief Executive Officer, signed for CODE, while Mr Edwin Ikhuoria, the Country Representative, signed for ONE Campaign.

2016 8largeimg09 Aug 2016 133835076Some medical experts in Nigeria are asking the government to empower the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) to enable people at the rural areas have access to affordable medical treatment.

They believe that the decision would cushion the effect of recession in the health sector.The Provost of the College of Medicine in Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital, Professor Oluwadiya Kehinde, made the request over the weekend while delivering a lecture on the Impact of Present Economic Challenges on Health Indices in Nigeria and Medical Practice in Nigeria as a whole.

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