FG to Inject N28 Billion into Tertiary Health Institutions For Improved Facilities

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The Federal Government on Tuesday announced special intervention funds for tertiary and specialist hospitals in the country.

The Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, made this known at the opening ceremony of the National Executive Council Meeting of National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) in Abuja.

Mr. Adewole said each teaching hospital would get N300 million, Federal Medical Centres N120 million each, while each Fistula Centre and Specialist Hospital would receive N120 million to improve healthcare delivery.

He said beyond the intervention in the federal facilities, the federal government would also make a special intervention at hospitals in each zone of the six geo-political zones in the country.

“In our 2018 budget proposal we plan to install chemotherapy centres in all federal facilities and the government is building capacity for surgical oncology across the country.

 

Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) Gate

“Each of the centres will have a capacity for either cardiac or renal cancer treatment, but Maiduguri has opted for trauma centre in addition to the cardiac or renal.

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“As we move on things will get better for the hospitals offering more opportunities for training,’’ he said.

The minister enjoined the medical doctors and healthcare workers to join politics to improve their working condition and facilities.

“The more doctors we have at the national and state assemblies and state governors the better for Nigeria’s health system,’’ Mr. Adewole said.

“Politics is not dirty but if it was practiced in a dirty way you get soil, so let us join politics.

“It is not enough to have a voters’ card we need to push more.

“At the Senate Committee on Health there is one doctor, and there is no harm in having more than two doctors in such committee and make a change, ’’ he said.

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Earlier, Dr Ogechukwu Chinaka, National President of NARD, said the meeting was critical because it provide avenue for the key stakeholders to harmonise ideas on funding the health sector.

He said the meeting was themed: “Making Nigerian hospitals work better: A national imperative’’.

Dr. Chinaka said the meeting focuses on the important fulcrum of Nigeria’s healthcare delivery system particularly hospitals.

Prof. Mike Ogrima, the National President, Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), urged the resident doctors and other healthcare professionals to instil inter-professional relationship.

“Above all, as members of NMA, we must take care of ourselves before we take care of others; since last year we have been hammering on our working environment,’’ Mr. Ogrima said.

He said the attitude of doctors to themselves, patients and health professionals has to be improved.

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He regretted that Nigeria was faced with Lassa fever outbreak in the last few weeks.

The NMA president advised all medical doctors not to attend to victims of such ailments without protective kits.

He said Nigeria was preparing for 2019 general elections, urging that “as doctors we should not shy away from politics if we want our hospitals to be good’’.

“I implore everybody to be registered with a political party’’, adding as a civil servant there is recent Supreme Court judgment that allow civil servants to participate in politics.

He said NMA has constituted a partisan politics committee at its last NEC meeting, adding the committee has submitted its recommendations and the recommendations will be implemented.

“As medical doctors, we are out to participate fully in partisan politics, it’s a weapon to ensure that our hospitals work better,” Mr. Ogrima said.

(NAN)

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