Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,165,725 members, 7,862,326 topics. Date: Sunday, 16 June 2024 at 01:59 PM

We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners (519 Views)

Wike: We Can’t Accept Expired Rice, Hunger Won’t Kill Us - Governor Tells FG / We Won’t Allow South-west Impose President On Nigeria Like 2015; Arewa Youths / We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by Blue3k(m): 7:23pm On Jul 01, 2017
…States what govt see as landmark event

By Soni Daniel, Northern Region Editor & Edoamaowo Udeme

Nigeria’s Health Minister, Professor Isaac Adewole, speaks on health matters in the country. Excerpts:

Can you share your thoughts on what your sector has done in two years and the challenges you have?

(Cuts in) I have been part of the healthcare system for a long time and I have seen a lot of it over the years.   I have been a critic of the health system before now and now I am inside the system. I used to say then that we should have this or that but I have come to see the whole gamut of the system and we are working very hard to make it work better for all. That is what I can say about that.

So given that hindsight what are you doing differently?

What I will do differently is what I call strategic engagement.   I will be focused, I   will pick a few things and hit them right. I will not deceive myself and the people of Nigeria that   I can solve all the problems in the health sector in just one day.

It is not just possible and we must be ready to tell Nigerians nothing but the plain truth so that they can continue to know and understand what is happening. For that reason, I have told myself   that I will do policy formulation, I will do strategic rearrangements of issues and programmes involving the health care system in Nigeria and a few others.

Accordingly, and in consideration of the things that stare us in the face, I want to build cancer centres across Nigeria for early detection and treatment. I also want to tackle Malaria and HIV scourge to the barest minimum. We need to take it one after the other.

But having been in the saddle for about two years now as the minister in charge of health matters in Nigeria, what would you point at as your achievements?

I do not like to talk as if I am counting my achievements. No. I would want Nigerians to do the assessment by themselves and come to a position as to what we have done so far. But I would simply say that since I came on board, I have put in place for Nigeria a National Health Policy, I started an innovative health care programme called ‘Save-One-Million-Lives Initiative’,   I kick-started another health scheme called ‘Rapid Results Initiative’   that has so far offered free surgery to no fewer than 10, 000 Nigerians.

I also initiated a Joint Venture Agreement on Vaccines, which has led to the production of vaccines by Nigeria, something that had long been stopped before now. I also initiated the Central Posting of Health Officers. I declared 2017 as a year of accelerated Tuberculosis Case Fund and I started 909090 for HIV.
These are the modest things I have done and I will continue to take necessary steps that will propel the system to a higher height for the overall interest of the country.

Have you been able to draw a road map for the country within this period?

That’s why we are concentrating on documentation. Apart   from Policy development for the country, we are also working on strategic and development plan to give the country a robust health system.

What does that mean?

That is translating the policy into action and costing what the interventions will require.   We are in the process of developing that. We have called all the stakeholders for a meeting including all the health commissioners in the country and we have shared the strategic document with them.

I am also working on the situational report on health in Nigeria for submission to the Federal Executive Council. That document will show at a glance the current health situation in the country, what is needed to be done to change the situation, the cost implications, the sources of funding available for such interventions and many other indices.

So, what are you proposing as likely sources of health funding? Are we likely going to push it into a First Line charge given its importance?

Not in that sense. Already, the National Assembly has passed the National Health Act giving 1% of national revenue to the health sector and we are hoping that we can be able to draw that in 2018. But we must keep on engaging with relevant agencies of government to get things right in the health sector because our position is that we need to get it right in the health sector if all other sectors must be right. Health is necessary for agriculture, education, infrastructure and others to thrive. In other words, without healthy citizens, there can be no serious development and growth in the country.

Will that lead to a situation where the National Health Insurance (NHI) will be made a right and not a privilege for few Nigerians?

Of course, that is what we are aiming at. We want to make the National Health Insurance Scheme to be compulsory and useful to all Nigerians. We need enough money to fund the scheme to be able to achieve our target or expectation. That is why we need money from other sources apart from the National health insurance scheme.

In Thailand for example, the national health scheme is funded strictly with tobacco tax while in the UK, it is funded with direct taxation from the citizens. So, we are looking at many options and the committee will come up with innovative approaches. To me, that would be the landmark event for the health sector.

One worrisome issue in the health sector is that Nigeria does not have an early warning mechanism whereby the citizens are alerted before a major outbreak of epidemic strikes. You can see that in the recent outbreaks of Meningitis, Lassa fever, Ebola, Measles and others, Nigerians were taken unawares. Why does this continue to happen in a big country like ours?

I will pick each of them one by one to tell you that that solution lies in every Nigerian. In July 2015, in one particular village in Niger called Fuka, we lost 17 people one after another, and we did not get to know until six months later. The meningitis outbreak started in first week of December but we only got to know about it in February.

It shows you the disconnect in the health system in the country. The States are not communicating their health challenges with us at the federal level and we cannot do magic. What we need is a really functional system whereby the local governments will communicate with states and states will communicate with the federal government for all of us to be on top of every situation that develops or about to develop. If one person develops meningitis in Zamfara and we get to know the second day, we would dispatch our surveillance officers there, we will quickly treat and vaccinate people around there and it will be safe, but a situation where we do not get to know for months then things could become terrible and that is what has been happening.

We have called all health commissioners for a meeting and informed them that we cannot   run this country this way. One case is all you need, alert us on time. Call the CEO of Nigeria Center for Diseases Control (NCDC) and me. I have personally sent letters to all the governors and health commissioners in the country on this matter.

Many of the outbreaks are predictable and appropriate preventive measures are possible for each situation. For instance, Lassa Fever will likely occur during dry season, Meningitis will occur around November/ December, Cholera will start April/May, Measles, December/January and so on. Now, given that understanding, we are writing to all the states to say please alert us in case of any trace of any of these outbreaks.

If you also visit any of these places and notices anything that looks like a threat to health, please alert us.   If you also visit our website we have “Global Advisory Warning”, which gives warning on these issues. Even on my Twitter handle, I have warning on Meningitis, Measles and Cholera just to show you that we recognize that what we need is communication. There is a local proverb that says when you have a sunken eye, you start crying from far off.

Where we do not have the resources to treat everybody then we must start early to prevent such ailments from occurring.   We do not have money to vaccinate everybody. Don’t bother about what people say, oh! They would have done this and that but where is the money?

The meningitis vaccine is about £20 averaging for the five ravaged states we need to vaccinate about 21 million people. 21 million by £20 is £420 million. That is more than my health budget. So if I am asked as a public health person what I should do, I will quickly do a trick, I will tell you to quickly let me know your problem on time and quickly move people there to solve the problem than vaccinate everybody when we do not have the resources.

Is that what has given rise to the Rapid Response Initiative, RRI?

Partly. But let me say that the Rapid Response Initiative, RRI is distinct,   peculiar and strictly President Muhammadu Buhari’s health initiative, something I would like to call ‘Buhari Care’.

What is it all about?

Rapid Result Initiative (RRI) is a project aimed at transforming the lives of Nigerians.

It is tailored by the Buhari government to give quick and free surgery to those in need of such vital service, screen Nigerians for diseases, check their blood and sugar levels, de-worm them and render necessary health care to those who are very poor and incapable of paying for such services. This is geared towards transforming their lives.

How do you select the beneficiaries?

The Social Services Department of the Health Ministry developed some guidelines to identify the poor, the jobless in different parts of the country and we used the data to select the beneficiaries. Besides, when we go down for the exercise neighbours help to identify those who are really poor and we help them. The result has been very wonderful so far with lots of testimonies following each medical mission.

How many of such missions have you carried out so far?

We have so far carried out the outreach in 40 teaching hospitals and medical centres with 5000 surgery and 10, 000 people screened nationwide.

The Millennium Development Goals, MDGs have come and gone and we didn’t achieve much. Any lesson learnt from the failure?

(Cuts in) We did a lot but we couldn’t meet many of the targets. I think we should also do something about our achievements. I think there is a difference between “We did not do well and we haven’t achieved all targets”. We did well but we did not achieve the targets, let’s celebrate ourselves.

Where do you see Nigeria in the current Sustainable Development Goals 3 as regards achieving its health target come 2030?

Goal 3 is about Universal Health Coverage and we are committed to it, we are not only doing SDG 3 alone, but we are also partnering to achieve SDG 2. We are part of the Zero Hunger Initiative and we work with Ministry of Agriculture and former President Olusegun Obasanjo to develop the zero hunger document. The committee is meeting presently in Benue and we are part of that meeting to strategise on how to make more quality food available to end hunger and malnutrition in the country.

So are you seeing that goal being achieved?

Certainly, by 2030 we will be there With all these measures being put in place why do we still have malnutrition in the IDP camps across the North east?

(Cuts in) Who said so?

We have pictures on social media … (Cuts in)

I don’t know how the pictures came about but I came back from Maiduguri on Sunday and I visited one of the camps and the children there looked so healthy. So, I think some of those pictures are not current pictures

Some of them are pictures being used to raise money. Like I keep saying,   we must praise what we are doing, we must praise the effort of the Federal Government,   NEMA and the Government of Borno State for doing an excellent job.


Why do you think Nigerians still relish going abroad for medical treatment?

(Cuts in) Do you want my honest comment?

Of course yes!

Number one is that over the years, we have not invested in health. Two, we treated health more as a humanitarian gesture whereas health is business.   It’s a business that has a compassionate face but it is business first and foremost. Why? If you open a hospital today and say it is for charity in two years’ time it will close down. Thirdly, we need sustained investment in health,   we also need to recognise that without health, we cannot achieve anything.

That is why we are now changing the narratives that health is the requirement and ingredients for reducing poverty,. It is ingredient for generating wealth, promoting sheer prosperity and promoting socioeconomic development. Most countries that have achieved improvement in socioeconomic development across the world first achieved improvement in health. That is why   so our narrative must change: We must look at health with a different lens and as a must-do and a really serious matter.

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/07/cant-run-nigeria-like-health-minister-tells-commissioners/

Front Page: Lalasticlala Seun Mynd44
Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by pezest: 7:25pm On Jul 01, 2017
I know that Isaac Adewole too well. He used to be a brutal criminal before advancing to political thievery
Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by tit(f): 7:32pm On Jul 01, 2017
useless minister

abori ni en
Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by hakeem4(m): 7:33pm On Jul 01, 2017
H
Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by hakeem4(m): 7:34pm On Jul 01, 2017
Let's call those people that trekked for buhari to come and trek to London so thy can give us feed back about his health

1 Like

Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by Blue3k(m): 7:37pm On Jul 01, 2017
This was an excellent interview for anyway who's interested in health policy. The two big issues with health agencies is nobody is talking to eachother. When 17 people drop dead to some virus and nobody bothers mentioning it is crazy.

The government can't afford to buy vacancies left so the joint venture to produce vaccines is wonderful. Anyway if theyou want to do a national health insurance scheme they better get the citezens more productive. You already fund everything else with oil money.
Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by CROWNWEALTH019(m): 7:40pm On Jul 01, 2017
grin buhari was a mistake
Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by Blue3k(m): 8:01pm On Jul 01, 2017
Lol nobody read it. It's just another opportunity to vent frustrations.

1 Like

Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by laudate: 8:18pm On Jul 01, 2017
I wish he had said something about govt plans to manufacture vaccines. sad There is no reason why Nigeria cannot manufacture vaccines and even export them, to other African countries.

He also failed to tell Nigerians, how he intends to stop doctors from going on strike in the future. All these health campaigns will amount to nothing, if doctors keep going on strike at the drop of a hat! angry

Again, he should expatiate on how he intends to make health insurance compulsory. How? shocked Primary health centres in local govt offices nationwide do not even know what health insurance is all about! They need to do massive awareness from the grassroots, on what health insurance is all about and how beneficial it is to the public, so that the masses can buy into it. sad

2 Likes

Re: We Can’t Run Nigeria Like This, Health Minister Tells Commissioners by Blue3k(m): 8:33pm On Jul 01, 2017
laudate:
I wish he had said something about govt plans to manufacture vaccines. sad There is no reason why Nigeria cannot manufacture vaccines and even export them, to other African countries.

He also failed to tell Nigerians, how he intends to stop doctors from going on strike in the future. All these health campaigns will amount to nothing, if doctors keep going on strike at the drop of a hat! angry

Again, he should expatiate on how he intends to make health insurance compulsory. How? shocked Primary health centres in local govt offices nationwide do not even know what health insurance is all about! They need to do massive awareness from the grassroots, on what health insurance is all about and how beneficial it is to the public, so that the masses can buy into it. sad


He did mention how Nigeria's plans on Vaccine manufacturing. Nigeria entered into a joint venture with May & Baker Nigeria Plc. The company will be in Lagos. The government has 49% stake in venture. Yes youre are right there's no excuse why we aren't manufacturing and exportingredients when we used to do it anyway. We actually stopped ma king vaccines when yaba plant clossed in 1991.

I guess interviewer should have asked that one. I would hope we move more toward private clinic doing more business. The doctors strike probably because of non payments. My cousin is a Dr and they owed him salary I don't think he went on strike though.

How they will make NHI madatory don't know. He doesn't know yet either since committee still discussing it. They will probably just tax you directly or some vibrant industry. Who cares if PHC don't know right now they will learn. Insurance just indirect method of payment. As long as they don't go crazy like united states with stupid system cool.

(1) (Reply)

11 Things To Know About Late Maitama Sule / Free Advice To Senate: Amend Constitution To Impeach executive appointees / BREAKING: Wamakko Is Dead

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 46
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.