TheCitizen - It's all about you
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
TheCitizen - It's all about you
No Result
View All Result

Doctors’ mass resignation and relocation abroad – Punch

The Citizen by The Citizen
December 3 2017
in Public Affairs
A A
0
22
SHARES
734
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Mass resignation of doctors from the country’s public health institutions is an unwholesome development that further imperils our already fragile healthcare delivery system. Some stakeholders have been raising concerns about this. Now that the Vice-President, Yemi Osinbajo, has joined the lamentation, the Federal Government should spare no effort to halt the drift.

Both federal and state hospitals are afflicted by the scourge. About 800 physicians in the employ of Lagos State reportedly resigned in the last two years. At the University College Hospital, Ibadan, 100 doctors have left this year, just as the crises-ridden Ladoke Akintola University Teaching Hospital in Ogbomoso has lost the services of 200 doctors in 2017. From Kebbi State comes the incredible news that it has yet to employ any doctor, despite several vacancy advertisements, in two years.

These few sketches could provide an insight into the reality in other states of the federation. At issue is the dismal level of job satisfaction that naturally results from poor remuneration, lack of equipment and dilapidated infrastructure.

In Lagos, doctors under the aegis of the Medical Guild allege lack of promotion of its members and the government’s infidelity to the implementation of the readjusted “Consolidated Medical Salary Scale” as agreed on in 2014. The guild’s chairman, Saliu Oseni, said Ikorodu General Hospital, where he works, has so far lost the services of 30 doctors this year. In the wake of a protracted strike over improved remuneration, the immediate past administration sacked 788 doctors in 2012, but later re-instated them. The situation at LAUTECH is more pathetic. Its resident doctors allege that only 28 per cent of their salary is being paid since January 2016. The union’s president, Sebastine Oiwoh, and secretary, Ayobami Alabi, stressed in a statement that 12 months salaries were in arrears.

This mass exit is bad enough, but also worrisome is their exodus to the West that already has an advanced medical system. The United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Saudi Arabia, Australia and United Arab Emirates, among others, are the preferred destinations. Between 500 and 700 Nigerian doctors reportedly sit qualifying exams annually to practice either in the US or UK. The chairman, Nigerian Medical Association, Lagos State branch, Olumuyiwa Odusote, says about 40,000 out of 75,000 registered Nigerian doctors are practising abroad.

Consequently, those still in the system are overworked and fatigued, conditions that could expose them to avoidable blunders. Whereas the World Health Organisation recommends a doctor to patients’ ratio of 1:600, Nigeria has above 1:4,000. The current drain can only worsen this dire situation.

Indeed, it is a clear and present danger with the result of a recent survey by the Nigerian Polling Organisation in collaboration with the Nigeria Health Watch. Shockingly, it revealed that 88 per cent of doctors were ready to work abroad. About 30 per cent had enrolled for the UK Professional and Linguistics Assessment Board test; another 30 per cent for the US Medical Licensing Examination, while 15 per cent applied for the Canadian equivalent of the examination.

Apparently, federal and state governments have failed woefully to adequately fund health care. Even when funds are provided, or projects funded, the execution is mired in corruption. This was the case with many primary healthcare centres contracts awarded by the last administration. While some were abandoned after full payment had been collected, others could not be located at their claimed official addresses, according to a media survey. There are 10,000 primary healthcare centres billed for federal rehabilitation.

At the tertiary level, the condition is no less agonising. The Association of Resident Doctors in one of the first generation university teaching hospitals, in 2015, decried the horrible state of affairs there: “We carry out surgeries with torch and candle lights following power failure and dysfunctional generators,” they said. “Only the poorest of the poor,” they added, patronise the hospital as a last resort. Yet, the hospital purports to be one of the country’s centres of medical excellence.

The First Lady, Aisha Buhari’s revelation that the Presidential Clinic in Aso Rock, could not treat her because of lack of basic equipment, speaks volumes. Ironically, Nigeria committed itself to a reasonable level of health financing with the 2001 Abuja declaration by African Heads of State to dedicate 15 per cent of their budgets annually to the cause. It is unfortunate that the N340.4 billion for health, which represents 3.9 per cent of the N8.61 trillion 2018 budget, is nowhere close to this benchmark. This explains why no one-stop-shop cancer centre exists in Nigeria, despite the estimated 100,000 cases reported annually. India has 120 of such centres, says Femi Majekodunmi, a medical doctor. Nigeria’s lack of seriousness in addressing the inadequacies in the sector is evident again, in the 10 years it took to pass the National Health Act; and three years after, implementation is a far-cry.

But the country can do better by getting its priorities right. Health is a social policy matter, which developed countries give a great deal of attention, as it touches on the right to life. The NH Act should be made to work without further delay to achieve universal health coverage. By so doing, the life of Wilfred Ugoh, a two-year-old boy with a hole in the heart, could be saved. Doctors treating him have referred his case to an Indian hospital. This is sad because none of our teaching hospitals is well equipped to save him. WHO reminds Nigerian authorities that 2,300 under-five and 145 women of childbearing age die every day. It says, “This makes the country the second largest contributor to under-five and maternal mortality rate in the world.”

However, this burden could have been avoided if its healthcare delivery had been anchored on a robust primary healthcare foundation. This is where Cuba has excelled globally, thus becoming a global role model. Corruption and bad governance are obstacles to Nigeria’s adequate health funding. Many overlapping public agencies with bloated wages and recurrent costs need to be right-sized to cut costs, thereby saving funds that could be channelled to the health sector. Without a healthy workforce, the economy will inexorably be endangered.

Share9Tweet6
Previous Post

Boko Haram and the unfinished business – Thisday

Next Post

Voting with their feet – The Nation

Related Posts

End female genital mutilation – Punch
Public Affairs

End female genital mutilation – Punch

October 17 2025
Nnaji: Nigeria’s dodgy vetting processes – Punch
Public Affairs

Nnaji: Nigeria’s dodgy vetting processes – Punch

October 16 2025
Vacations and governance: Why President Tinubu’s trip matters -Guardian
Public Affairs

Tinubu, honour promise to ASUU – Punch

October 15 2025
The killings in the South East – Thisday
Public Affairs

The killings in the South East – Thisday

October 14 2025
IOCs: Implement host communities’ projects – Punch
Public Affairs

IOCs: Implement host communities’ projects – Punch

October 13 2025
Don’t arm FRSC – Punch
Public Affairs

Don’t arm FRSC – Punch

October 10 2025
Next Post
Voting with their feet – The Nation

Voting with their feet – The Nation

De Gea shines as Man Utd beat Arsenal 3-1

De Gea shines as Man Utd beat Arsenal 3-1

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

FROM THE GRASSROOTS

ALGON orders Edo council officials to wear Tinubu’s signature caps

ALGON orders Edo council officials to wear Tinubu’s signature caps

by The Editor
October 18 2025
0

...

Olubadan unveils legal committee to tackle land grabbing

Olubadan unveils legal committee to tackle land grabbing

by The Editor
October 15 2025
0

...

Birnin Gwari needs urgent federal intervention – Emir tells Tinubu

Birnin Gwari needs urgent federal intervention – Emir tells Tinubu

by The Editor
October 13 2025
0

...

Rivers court adjourns hearing on LG poll legitimacy

Rivers court adjourns hearing on LG poll legitimacy

by The Editor
September 16 2025
0

...

APPOINTMENTS

Tinubu seeks Omidiran, 28 others’ confirmation as FCC members

Tinubu seeks Omidiran, 28 others’ confirmation as FCC members

by The Editor
October 15 2025
0

...

Okpebholo swears in 19 commissioners, warns against corruption

Okpebholo swears in 19 commissioners, warns against corruption

by The Editor
October 15 2025
0

...

Fubara drops Danagogo, appoints Anabraba as Rivers SSG

Fubara drops Danagogo, appoints Anabraba as Rivers SSG

by The Editor
October 13 2025
0

...

Savannah Energy signs agreement with Chadian govt for new renewable energy projects

Savannah Energy announces board changes, appoints two Nigerians as Independent Non-Executive Directors

by The Editor
October 9 2025
0

...

ODDITIES

Lagos to probe school over alleged sodomy

Father impregnates 15-year-old daughter in Ondo

by The Editor
October 17 2025
0

Court orders exhumation, autopsy of Afriland Towers fire victims

Court orders exhumation, autopsy of Afriland Towers fire victims

by The Editor
October 15 2025
0

Slain husband’s dad forgives Maryam Sanda, backs Tinubu’s pardon

Slain husband’s dad forgives Maryam Sanda, backs Tinubu’s pardon

by The Editor
October 14 2025
0

GLOBAL NEWS

Madagascar’s military leader swears in as president

Madagascar’s military leader swears in as president

by The Editor
October 18 2025
0

...

Trump, Putin to meet in Budapest over Ukraine war

Trump, Putin to meet in Budapest over Ukraine war

by The Editor
October 17 2025
0

...

2026 Hajj: Saudi govt approves 66,910 slots for Nigeria

2026 Hajj: Saudi govt approves 66,910 slots for Nigeria

by The Editor
October 17 2025
0

...

Trump persuades India to stop buying Russian oil

Trump persuades India to stop buying Russian oil

by The Editor
October 16 2025
0

...

Former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga dies in India

Former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga dies in India

by The Editor
October 15 2025
0

...

State of the States

21.8% North-East residents HIV positive – NBS …as 16,000 die from HIV complications in Borno

Adamawa records 8,850 new HIV infections in four years

by The Editor
October 17 2025
0

...

Zamfara APC condemns state govt’s mass sacking of civil servants

Zamfara APC condemns state govt’s mass sacking of civil servants

by The Editor
October 14 2025
0

...

Gov. Otti set to build modern fire station in Umuahia

Gov. Otti set to build modern fire station in Umuahia

by The Editor
October 7 2025
0

...

Senator denies bill to rename Kaduna to Zazzau State

Kaduna State pays ₦72,000 minimum wage

by The Editor
September 18 2025
0

...

Plugin Install : Widget Tab Post needs JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Imo police boss to probe officers in viral video with cult insignia

Imo police boss to probe officers in viral video with cult insignia

October 18 2025
DHQ denies alleged coup attempt to topple fed govt

DHQ denies alleged coup attempt to topple fed govt

October 18 2025
FG drives grassroot mobilisation campaign for PVC collection

FG drives grassroot mobilisation campaign for PVC collection

October 18 2025
Nigeria: IMF insists on fuel subsidy removal

Nigeria missing as IMF lists Africa’s fastest-growing economies

October 18 2025

EDITORIAL REVIEW

End female genital mutilation – Punch

End female genital mutilation – Punch

by The Editor
October 17 2025
0

Nnaji: Nigeria’s dodgy vetting processes – Punch

Nnaji: Nigeria’s dodgy vetting processes – Punch

by The Editor
October 16 2025
0

Vacations and governance: Why President Tinubu’s trip matters -Guardian

Tinubu, honour promise to ASUU – Punch

by The Editor
October 15 2025
0

The killings in the South East – Thisday

The killings in the South East – Thisday

by The Editor
October 14 2025
0

IOCs: Implement host communities’ projects – Punch

IOCs: Implement host communities’ projects – Punch

by The Editor
October 13 2025
0

Opinion

Tinubu finds his own demons

Next time, Umahi should go to NTA

by The Editor
October 16 2025
0

...

Objections over presidential pardon for grave offenders

Objections over presidential pardon for grave offenders

by The Editor
October 13 2025
0

...

1975 public service purge: What have we learnt?

1975 public service purge: What have we learnt?

by The Editor
September 30 2025
0

...

Tinubu finds his own demons

Nigeria’s state of weakness

by The Editor
September 18 2025
0

...

Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials

© 2024 TheCitizen Ng. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials

© 2024 TheCitizen Ng. All Rights Reserved.