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Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective - Health (11) - Nairaland

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Ebola: Nigeria Reaches Out To U.S. For Experimental Drug; NMA Sets Up Committee / Nma Strike, The Nurses' Perspective. / JOHESU Press Release on the NMA STRIKE (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Samgreguc(m): 7:57pm On Jul 16, 2014
jpphilips:

If they are not physicians, why are they aspiring to eat the physicians pie?
If they are not physicians, why will they want the physicians title?
If they can only dispense drugs, by all means stick to your B.pharm and D.pharm respectively and trust me, NMA wont complain.
OR
Do you want Nigerian tax payers to pay you a consultant's fee just for dispensing drugs? haba! what else is theft?
av adviced u to go make a research on the world consult before inorder to show me where the meaning states that it is Physicia-only but, u seem adamat to dat.
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After your research, we can talk.
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Clinical Pharmacy is more than despensing but, we dont seem wanting to adopt it and thats one reason why we are where we are.
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Until, we cherish our Pharmacist as supposed and allow them play their role, we will never get good health care.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by jpphilips(m): 8:08pm On Jul 16, 2014
Samgreguc:
av adviced u to go make a research on the world consult before inorder to show me where the meaning states that it is Physicia-only but, u seem adamat to dat.
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After your research, we can talk.
.
.
.
.
.
Clinical Pharmacy is more than despensing but, we dont seem wanting to adopt it and thats one reason why we are where we are.
.
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Until, we cherish our Pharmacist as supposed and allow them play their role, we will never get good health care.


Sorry dear, Nigerian tax payers are not paying for a mere dictionary word, once JOHESU gets it, they will demand for harmonized salary with physicians when they know their input is no where near, I am not ok! with that.

secondly, the furore between the reg nurse and Bsc nurse did not look themselves up in the dictionary so why will I need a dictionary to leach a worker who is shying away from responsibilities while aspiring to dine with the gods?!

1 Like

Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by drered(m): 9:33pm On Jul 16, 2014
jpphilips:

If they are not physicians, why are they aspiring to eat the physicians pie?
If they are not physicians, why will they want the physicians title?
If they can only dispense drugs, by all means stick to your B.pharm and D.pharm respectively and trust me, NMA wont complain.
OR
Do you want Nigerian tax payers to pay you a consultant's fee just for dispensing drugs? haba! what else is theft?
You're not as smart as you like to think..

2 Likes

Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Nobody: 9:39pm On Jul 16, 2014
jpphilips:

Point of correction, I am not one of you, I just went through the demands of the NMA and realized a few that are legitimate from a patient's perspective, reason I opened the thread, that does not in anyway undermine the other demands of NMA, I just considered them inconsequential for the sake of the thread.
Haven said that, I was expecting that asking for consultancy would have been the last on the list of events, IMHO, it is putting the cart before the horse.

Now, if JOHESU members really want to advance their careers, I don't see why the title "consultant" should stop them, if it takes 33courses and 6yrs (an example) for a doctor to earn that title, I don't expect anything less from the other allied medicals else, it will be very unfair to the doctors at the same time, nature like we know will follow the path of least resistance.

Answer me honestly, have you seen the curriculum drafted by JOHESU before fighting for the "consultant" title? I was expecting that if this is about career advancement, JOHESU president or whatever they have, should be able to sit with the NMA chairman probably with the minister of health to discuss the blue print and the curriculum before talking about titles, for sake of confusion, they may be given a different title but retain the benefits.

There must be order in our health care delivery, I emphasized so much on the "owning the patient" part because I know that is where the bulk of the responsibility lies, now JOHESU has absolutely nothing in the works to assume that responsibility, is it fair to the Doctors who may likely find himself taking the fall on a case where a consultant nurse has messed up since the consultant nurse is absolved from having the final say on a patient?

See through the bricks, this is about money and position nothing more, I don't have any problems with both, all I desire is where every penny is earned, If a nurse wants to advance her learning and she goes so far where she cannot own a patient, what is the Nigerian tax payers paying her for? or don't you want us to get value for our money?

Let us look at the University for example though not quintessential to the subject of discourse, Professorship is conferred on all depts, but before you get one, there is a guideline, there is a path, once you meet those requirements, you can easily become one, that is why a professor of yoruba studies can stand shoulder to shoulder with prof. of chemical Engineering even though they set out on different career path.

Let me ask you honestly, have you seen the guidelines JOHESU wants to use to become consultants? at least we know how doctors get there, how do they wish to be there? do you want a situation where a radiographer goes to India to learn how to switch off an X ray machine and comes back to claim consultant and we start paying? it doesn't make sense, it will be anarchy in the end, most medical students in sophomore classes knowing there is a way out, will pull out and switch to allied medical courses, give Nigeria just 10yrs and we wont have a single doctor again, It has happened before and we don't want it to repeat again, we have learnt from our Saudi experience.

If JOHESU wish to become consultants by all means they should give Nigerians a workable guideline that will enable them to have the same capacity as the Doctors in terms of patient's care, anything short of that is wasting tax payers


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I didn't see the guidelines but I believe thats for the regulatory bodies.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Oduduwaboy(m): 9:53pm On Jul 16, 2014
joker5180:



I didn't see the guidelines but I believe thats for the regulatory bodies.
There is no guideline anywhere . Its all about ' i have spent 10 years on this job ' i should be made a consultant , beside ' i now have a M.sc. in Nursing administration ' from ' national open university .... so make me a consultant and subsequently ...i should also be made the Chief Medical Director etc . lol.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by prettyprettywow: 10:11pm On Jul 16, 2014
lol. so much bitterness. pele
Oduduwaboy:
There is no guideline anywhere . Its all about ' i have spent 10 years on this job ' i should be made a consultant , beside ' i now have a M.sc. in Nursing administration ' from ' national open university .... so make me a consultant and subsequently ...i should also be made the Chief Medical Director etc . lol.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Samgreguc(m): 10:53pm On Jul 16, 2014
The wise will always check histories when necessary and make do with it.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by sisinaijayeye0: 4:33am On Jul 17, 2014
Samgreguc:
lol. . . The Pharmacist play a very very vital role indeed.
.

Why are you shying away from the fact that pharmacists make this chalk drug? And we doctors do not know that it is fake when we administer it, you people are killers. That's all.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by sisinaijayeye0: 4:33am On Jul 17, 2014
sisinaijayeye0: .

Why are you shying away from the fact that pharmacists make this chalk drug? And we doctors do not know that it is fake when we administer it, you people are the killers. That's all.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by sisinaijayeye0: 4:35am On Jul 17, 2014
Oduduwaboy:
There is no guideline anywhere . Its all about ' i have spent 10 years on this job ' i should be made a consultant , beside ' i now have a M.sc. in Nursing administration ' from ' national open university .... so make me a consultant and subsequently ...i should also be made the Chief Medical Director etc . lol.

People are just greedy, if the pinacle of their career wasn't high enough they could have increased it. Instead of stealing anther persons profession...incompetent fulls.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Samgreguc(m): 5:09am On Jul 17, 2014
sisinaijayeye0: .

Why are you shying away from the fact that pharmacists make this chalk drug? And we doctors do not know that it is fake when we administer it, you people are killers. That's all.
yea. . . Making most ur diagnosis useless.
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So, is everyone important?
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Go make the drugs yourself since u can do everythg.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Nobody: 5:20am On Jul 17, 2014
.......
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Nobody: 5:21am On Jul 17, 2014
allycat:

There is no discharge in a patient with Otitis Media with Effusion, so what are you swabbing and doing an M/C/S on. The condition most non doctors know of is Suppurative Otitis media, this is when a patient has a discharge and even then an MCS is not one of the diagnostic criteri. But I really didnt expect you to know that. What I wanted to point out to you is there are so many conditions that do not need any laboratory tests to make a diagnosis at all. And many others that are diagnosed clinically and tests just used to confirm the diagnosis or to guide treatment. No one says investigations are not important but a doctor must first make a clinical diagnosis so he even knows what test are necessary.


Mr wardman, i'm not arguing with just as you can't argue with me on lab issues as you all goofed when i asked you all a simple lab question about wet mount and catalase-negatives when some of claimed you know everything a Scientist know.

" Traditionally,
laboratory tests have rarely been
used in the workup and diagnosis
of otitis media with effusion" ----->
www.medicinenet.com/script/main/mobileart.asp?articlekey=2013

The word 'rarely' is does not mean a total rule out.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Nobody: 5:53am On Jul 17, 2014
milychocs:



For a period of about six months last year at a teaching hospital in the East....all serum electrolytes results for patients were reading hyperkalaemia...high potassium .....then at a point low levels were reported consistently for months...

Do you know the catastrophe that would have resulted if doctors didnt question these results?....we would be looking at a patient and the result would not be in keeping with the clinical manifestations....heart, kidney and other systemic problems would have been rampant.

For me, the greatest danger to the patient in and out of the medical setting is the laboratory JOHESITE
They did not even notice the trend...found nothing wrong with the electrolyte results....for months! shocked
Truly horrible

Then if I had a 100 naira for every time a patient comes from a "doctor" in a private lab...with a wrong diagnosis of typhoid fever, and the attendant antibiotic abuse....I would be veeerry rich...true story
SMH

This thread is meant for the general populace and not medical doctors and other health personnel, so I will lipsrsealed
I just remembered that potassium horror and had to share it
(Shudders again)

Madam, the only time why you can get such kinda results (if true) is because someone, somewhere failed to do his calibrations, and QCs', it's possible. But you said 6months?..i think you lied there. You are telling me someone failed to run calibration and QC's for 6months?!
Please what's the name of the hospital, i'm really interested. i'd like to confirm.

Even external QC done intermittently would have had that lab error detected by external validators like SLMTA or MLSCN. It's possible but i think you really exaggerated the time range. Let's have the name of the hospital.

1 Like

Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by jpphilips(m): 8:45am On Jul 17, 2014
prettyprettywow: lol. so much bitterness. pele

This is the kinda phrase that really piss me off, what bitterness are you referring to? are JEHUSITES the only civil servants in Nigeria?

In most companies I am aware of, some OH(occupational health) nurses are MSc holders, yet companies start them at entry level with Engineers, have they gone to JOHESU to report that the companies have refused to recognize their MSc status?

Some construction companies keep OH nurses as project staff not even main staff, have they complained? all the company needs you for is just to administer first aid, and prolly dispense cough syrup, analgesics and antibiotics, is that why they have to pay for the silly MSc that does not benefit their operations? the company has a policy that if someone is sick, administer first aid to stabilize the patient, Use the ambulance and take him to a retainer ship clinic that has been paid for, so what is your MSc actually doing for them to pay you outrageous wages.

I don't blame you guys, It is only in govt establishments you will want to be a consultant with zero academic and clinical upgrade.

what do you want architects in Ministry of urban development to demand? what do you want the Engineers in the Ministry of works to demand, bureaucracy will not help anybody in this country.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by allycat: 10:40am On Jul 17, 2014
YourHealthlabs:
Mr wardman, i'm not arguing with just as you can't argue with me on lab issues as you all goofed when i asked you all a simple lab question about wet mount and catalase-negatives when some of claimed you know everything a Scientist know.
" Traditionally,
laboratory tests have rarely been
used in the workup and diagnosis
of otitis media with effusion" ----->
www.medicinenet.com/script/main/mobileart.asp?articlekey=2013
The word 'rarely' is does not mean a total rule out.

Why don't you just admit that you had never heard of Otitis Media with effusion in your whole life. In medicine we say never say never. That a thing is done rarely means that that is not the standard it requires exceptional circumstances. I don't want to do the job of a laboratory scientist that's why they employ lab scientist in the hospital to do the investigations the doctor requests. Heck I don't even want to do the job of a general practitioner. I specialized in a feild so I want to do my job which is consult with my patients make my clinical diagnosis and manage as I deem it fit. If I decide I need a serum E and U for instance I make a lab request. If I need a FNAC I send a consult to the Pathologist, if I need an X-ray is end an X-ray request , if my patient requires surgery I operate and when he requires drugs I prescribe what I deem fit. The problem most doctors I know have with JOHESU is in Nigeria people do not know their boundaries. People like you who think you know everything will start swabbing ears of patients with OME and start treating such results with antibiotics because you believe all otitis media is the same or doing MP and typhoid for every patient with a fever and treating those results when the patient may have a sinusitis and if you do not take a full history and examine you.
But once more I say it is no use preaching to the deaf.

3 Likes

Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by lexib(m): 7:34am On Jul 18, 2014
Samgreguc:
yea, u dont need to desend cos, u aint above the level of a Pharmacist.

this one is still battling with inferiority complex... smh
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by benghaziii: 9:03am On Jul 18, 2014
Take it anywhere
Any paramedics aside docs must nt n cannot be called consultant..lab scientist can not know more than a consultant heamatologist..any test dey do in lab..be it LFT..WIDAL... A consultant gastroenterologist knows better...E,U,CR..REnal function test.. A nephrologist knows better..if u ve spent 20yrs as a lab scientists.. Look fr anoda title apart from consultants n doctors..lan scientists alpha,beta or gama.....lolz...
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by sisinaijayeye0: 9:12am On Jul 18, 2014
Samgreguc:
yea. . . Making most ur diagnosis useless.
.
.
.
So, is everyone important?
.
Go make the drugs yourself since u can do everythg.

Our diagnosis are always spot on we are thought from school how signs and symptoms lead to our diagnosis from taking history we already have an idea of what's wrong, what we then get is differentials. We then confirm the most likely diagnosis with tests by sending to the lab (where people should know their jobs) they send the results back and from that we interpret the results, if you focused on what they taught you in school and stop hating other people's profession you won't sound like a miserable old hag as you are making yourself out to be. Don't quote me again enough of this incessant rubbish you really haven't given me a valid point all day so kindly F. The F off! We can't all be the same. We can't all do the same job everybody is different that's what makes us unique. If everybody did the same job the world would be a sad place. I place importance in people from carpenters to plumbers to cleaners to electricians people frown on them because their job aren't important but without this people you will be surprised at how stuck you will be. Who will fix your fan? Who will clear your poop? My point grow a little self esteem. Pharmacist are as important as doctors, cleaners are important. Nurses are the most vital people in the hospital, and lab attendants? Are next to the most needed people it is their results that diagnoses for the whole health team. Quit! Hating!!!!!!! Focus on the job God gave u.

3 Likes

Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Samgreguc(m): 11:05am On Jul 18, 2014
lexib:

this one is still battling with inferiority complex... smh
If u can't decipher wot I wrote there then, I advice u b careful b4 ur head fall off while u continue to shake it.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Mastershiffu(m): 1:03pm On Jul 18, 2014
Morotov1: Who says jaundice is uncommon in obstetrics cholestasis and that it occurs only after 25 weeks of gestation,it can occur anytime during pregnancy. Please update your textbooks. And even if your patient is either male or female, you will have a list of differential diagnosis that you have to rule out.
Not all jaundice with itching is post hepatic. WHAT ABOUT BRIC- benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis.
grin this right here is what makes the difference between a doctor's training and yours. You see whereas you are thought to think in concrete terms as regards the pathologic basis of diseases due perhaps to the technical nature of your field, the doctors horizon is broadened by a rigorous training that has stood the test of time. Where you for instance are thinking of a particular disease because your textbooks say so,the doctors mind is trained to entertain variables which will be confounding to you. Variables such as epidemiology of that particular disease. You see it is easy to attempt to bamboozle,or should i say,hoodwink, the unsuspecting public with medical jargon but a closer look at your diagnosis of OBSTETRIC CHOLESTASIS will show that it usually does not occur with jaundice and even though it is the commonest liver-related dx of pregnancy occurs in only 1% of pregnant women which by my training makes it a very low differential diagnosis. I could go on and on but i hope i have attempted to make it clear to you that by the very[color=#006600][/color] nature of our training I am the natural leader of the health team and you my dear friend are what you are. 8 grin grin

5 Likes

Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Morotov1(m): 3:10pm On Jul 18, 2014
Mastershiffu: grin this right here is what makes the difference between a doctor's training and yours. You see whereas you are thought to think in concrete terms as regards the pathologic basis of diseases due perhaps to the technical nature of your field, the doctors horizon is broadened by a rigorous training that has stood the test of time. Where you for instance are thinking of a particular disease because your textbooks say so,the doctors mind is trained to entertain variables which will be confounding to you. Variables such as epidemiology of that particular disease. You see it is easy to attempt to bamboozle,or should i say,hoodwink, the unsuspecting public with medical jargon but a closer look at your diagnosis of OBSTETRIC CHOLESTASIS will show that it usually does not occur with jaundice and even though it is the commonest liver-related dx of pregnancy occurs in only 1% of pregnant women which by my training makes it a very low differential diagnosis. I could go on and on but i hope i have attempted to make it clear to you that by the very[color=#006600][/color] nature of our training I am the natural leader of the health team and you my dear friend are what you are. 8 grin grin
You haven't made a point that has not been made by your defendant.
What we are ascertaining here is .......there are other intra hepatic conditions that occurs with jaundice and pruritus. Irrespective of the epidemiology, it might be rare but the fact remains that it can also be diagnosed with thorough examinations not half baked.... that is not based only on clinical findings.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Mastershiffu(m): 3:48pm On Jul 18, 2014
Morotov1: You haven't made a point that has not been made by your defendant.
What we are ascertaining here is .......there are other intra hepatic conditions that occurs with jaundice and pruritus. Irrespective of the epidemiology, it might be rare but the fact remains that it can also be diagnosed with thorough examinations not half baked.... that is not based only on clinical findings.
And if a doctor recommended a lab test for every possible differential?how affordable would that be for the patient? Which brings me back to my point and that which i think phantom was trying to make, viz: more than 85% of the time, the fact that i recommend xyz investigations for a patient, i have already,by virtue of my training and ability to factor in those confounding variables i mentioned earlier, narrowed down my diagnosis to a working one and a few differentials and require the lab to confirm.

3 Likes

Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Samgreguc(m): 5:06pm On Jul 18, 2014
sisinaijayeye0:

Our diagnosis are always spot on we are thought from school how signs and symptoms lead to our diagnosis from taking history we already have an idea of what's wrong, what we then get is differentials. We then confirm the most likely diagnosis with tests by sending to the lab (where people should know their jobs) they send the results back and from that we interpret the results, if you focused on what they taught you in school and stop hating other people's profession you won't sound like a miserable old hag as you are making yourself out to be. Don't quote me again enough of this incessant rubbish you really haven't given me a valid point all day so kindly F. The F off! We can't all be the same. We can't all do the same job everybody is different that's what makes us unique. If everybody did the same job the world would be a sad place. I place importance in people from carpenters to plumbers to cleaners to electricians people frown on them because their job aren't important but without this people you will be surprised at how stuck you will be. Who will fix your fan? Who will clear your poop? My point grow a little self esteem. Pharmacist are as important as doctors, cleaners are important. Nurses are the most vital people in the hospital, and lab attendants? Are next to the most needed people it is their results that diagnoses for the whole health team. Quit! Hating!!!!!!! Focus on the job God gave u.
am nt hating.
.
Bt, after all diagnoses what is given to 80 to 90 percent of ur patient?
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Morotov1(m): 5:07pm On Jul 18, 2014
Mastershiffu:
And if a doctor recommended a lab test for every possible differential?how affordable would that be for the patient? Which brings me back to my point and that which i think phantom was trying to make, viz: more than 85% of the time, the fact that i recommend xyz investigations for a patient, i have already,by virtue of my training and ability to factor in those confounding variables i mentioned earlier, narrowed down my diagnosis to a working one and a few differentials and require the lab to confirm.
Now, I am not disputing your training nor the way he was trained.
My point is, there are always exceptional cases we are not aware of that can be revealed and queried with thorough investigations, it might not be affordable but it will be worth it in the long run.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Nobody: 6:29pm On Jul 18, 2014
Judging from the doctors' contributions, it appears they feel threatened by other health professionals attaining consultant status in their different professions. Why exactly is that?
1) How would that endanger patient care? (verifiable facts, no "em-em-em, just doing feel good about it all!"
2) How would it make medical doctors less medical doctors? (facts, pls.)
3) Isn't there a chance, that such changes would ultimately benefit the patients?
4) If medical doctors specializing in different areas of medicine actually improves patient care, is there any ground to insist that similar specialization by other suitably trained health professionals would impair patient management?

Abi, won't a patient with diabetes, or hypertension receive better care when attended to by medical doctors, nurses, pharmacists (...etc) who have received further training that qualifies then as specialists in diabetes or hypertension, respectively?
Lastly, if specialist medical doctors can be appropriately referenced and remunerated as consultants, why should other health care professionals not be so treated when they possess the required qualifications?

Personally, I think it should be criminal for health care professionals to go on strike. But most of our doctors are so used to seeing human suffering and death that they have become incapable of valuing human life. But then, that is my own opinion and I think many Nigerians think the same way.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Mastershiffu(m): 7:29pm On Jul 18, 2014
jideolubiyi: Judging from the doctors' contributions, it appears they feel threatened by other health professionals attaining consultant status in their different professions. Why exactly is that?
1) How would that endanger patient care? (verifiable facts, no "em-em-em, just doing feel good about it all!"
2) How would it make medical doctors less medical doctors? (facts, pls.)
3) Isn't there a chance, that such changes would ultimately benefit the patients?
4) If medical doctors specializing in different areas of medicine actually improves patient care, is there any ground to insist that similar specialization by other suitably trained health professionals would impair patient management?

Abi, won't a patient with diabetes, or hypertension receive better care when attended to by medical doctors, nurses, pharmacists (...etc) who have received further training that qualifies then as specialists in diabetes or hypertension, respectively?
Lastly, if specialist medical doctors can be appropriately referenced and remunerated as consultants, why should other health care professionals not be so treated when they possess the required qualifications?

Personally, I think it should be criminal for health care professionals to go on strike. But most of our doctors are so used to seeing human suffering and death that they have become incapable of valuing human life. But then, that is my own opinion and I think many Nigerians think the same way.
It is indeed absurd for people who are entrusted with the job of caring for the sick to embark on a strike action,in saner climes other labour unions embark on such strikes in the stead of doctors and it usually takes a lot for things to degenerate to that level.but hey this is nigeria where everybody thinks the doctor is the enemy on account of his presumed bloated ego and the only language the govt understands is strike. You do not seem to understand the dynamics of the public health sector of this country and so your submission smacks of naivete when you say doctors are "threatened". These arguments cannot be reduced to those 4 questions you posed. The fact is that in a HOSPITAL SETTING, there can only be one set of consultants or Attendings going by the US system,and these are people with a basic MBBS degree who have gone through many more years of training in a well structured and regulated scheme called residency training to make you the go-to guy in a particular field of medicine including but not limited to laboratory medicine,pharmacology, therapeutics and sports medicine.it takes years of hard work and resilience to go through this training and i promise you, starting it is not a guarantee that you will finish it when you will be awarded a fellowship of whatever college you trained under.this still doesnt make you a consultant.the govt has to have need for your specialization in any of its tertiary institutions, where you are then APPOINTED a consultant.your job description includes taking the FINAL decision as regards the management of any patient under your care, as well as training other residents under you. This is the standard worldwide. You can therefore imagine the bewilderment of nigerian doctors when their colleagues who in a HOSPITAL SETTING are at best technical cadre staff woke up one morning and sayed they are now consultants. They attained consultant status by no laid down rules, no procedure other than longevity of service.Doctors thought it was a joke until these people under their amorphous group of JOHESU secured a court order to that effect and the govt was forced to circularize this anomaly. Do not be deceived by the various definitions of who a consultant is. The truth is every body who works in a hospital knows that that term is beyond a rank as it encompasses that as well as the fact that you are the final authority as regards patient mgt.to buttress this further, a professor of chemical pathology who after his mbbs got an MSc and a PhD in chemical pathology and having been found worthy by his peers promoted to the rank of professor in an academic setting is still not a consultant chemical pathologist! This is because his theses at masters and PhD level narrows his area of specialty unlike the doctor who has a fellowship in any of the colleges who has been trained in a HOSPITAL, to not only write theses on any field of chemical pathology but to understand these studies as it affects living patients daily. This is what these JOHESU people want to get by political gerrymandering and unionism. It doesnt work anywhere and nigeria will not be the first.

5 Likes

Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by 5minsmadness: 11:01pm On Jul 18, 2014
jideolubiyi: Judging from the doctors' contributions, it appears they feel threatened by other health professionals attaining consultant status in their different professions. Why exactly is that?
1) How would that endanger patient care? (verifiable facts, no "em-em-em, just doing feel good about it all!"
2) How would it make medical doctors less medical doctors? (facts, pls.)
3) Isn't there a chance, that such changes would ultimately benefit the patients?
4) If medical doctors specializing in different areas of medicine actually improves patient care, is there any ground to insist that similar specialization by other suitably trained health professionals would impair patient management?

Abi, won't a patient with diabetes, or hypertension receive better care when attended to by medical doctors, nurses, pharmacists (...etc) who have received further training that qualifies then as specialists in diabetes or hypertension, respectively?
Lastly, if specialist medical doctors can be appropriately referenced and remunerated as consultants, why should other health care professionals not be so treated when they possess the required qualifications?

Personally, I think it should be criminal for health care professionals to go on strike. But most of our doctors are so used to seeing human suffering and death that they have become incapable of valuing human life. But then, that is my own opinion and I think many Nigerians think the same way.
This your post smacks of ignorance and naivety. Read between the lines. Its obvious the other folks ganging against the doctors are doing it for political and selfish reasons.

All these years are you saying doctors have been preventing them from furthering their education? I think the main issue here is that they want to answer the post of 'consultant' , a position strictly reserved for the medical doctor and which position reflects an authority in charge of the patient
These consultants are the ones in whom the blame stops when it comes to life and death. I heard a young doctor say that a certain consultant owned a patient and if the patient dies he is the one that will be blamed; not the nurse, not the lab scientist, not the pharmacist, not even the house officer(the young doctor). And that'swhy they are paid the bIG money.

If the other health care professionals want to further their own field to the betterment of the patient I see nothing wrong in it. However I'm sure they have their own titles. They should be proud of their field and not try to encroach on or steal another specialties title in the name of 'helping the patient'. And I can assure you, knowing how Nigeria is, that no sooner they answer consultant that they'll start demanding for similar pay and wanting to have Dr attached to their names. Some are already doing it sef.

I just see selfishness and greed in this. haba. Let's tell the truth abeg.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Nobody: 12:38pm On Jul 19, 2014
5minsmadness:
This your post smacks of ignorance and naivety. Read between the lines. Its obvious the other folks ganging against the doctors are doing it for political and selfish reasons.

All these years are you saying doctors have been preventing them from furthering their education? I think the main issue here is that they want to answer the post of 'consultant' , a position strictly reserved for the medical doctor and which position reflects an authority in charge of the patient
These consultants are the ones in whom the blame stops when it comes to life and death. I heard a young doctor say that a certain consultant owned a patient and if the patient dies he is the one that will be blamed; not the nurse, not the lab scientist, not the pharmacist, not even the house officer(the young doctor). And that'swhy they are paid the bIG money.

If the other health care professionals want to further their own field to the betterment of the patient I see nothing wrong in it. However I'm sure they have their own titles. They should be proud of their field and not try to encroach on or steal another specialties title in the name of 'helping the patient'. And I can assure you, knowing how Nigeria is, that no sooner they answer consultant that they'll start demanding for similar pay and wanting to have Dr attached to their names. Some are already doing it sef.

I just see selfishness and greed in this. haba. Let's tell the truth abeg.

Maybe when you're done calling me ignorant and naive, you will realize that you're sounding scared, threatened by these other health workers. It takes someone scared out of his wits to consider that particular titles belong to you just because you are doctors. Are you kidding me! Specialist status doesn't belong to any group of people. It's the warped political culture in the country that encouraged the unwarranted arrogance of employees like medical doctors.
So you think I'm naive, ignorant because I gave no hoot about calling a spade a spade? We shall all stand here and see how these all turn out... The time is already ripe for the public to get involved in this madness, this madness that allows some dumb-ass health workers to think they can do just what they like. We are going to see more of what happened in Lagos, and by the time many of the hospitals are privatized, as a private owners some of us will set your salaries strictly based on output and market forces...
You wrote as if the public is so unaware of goings-on at the public hospitals. I make bold to say that once the medical doctors become consultants it virtually becomes impossible for patients to see them again. They simply disappear from the stations. In short, they become less useful to the public than before they became that. Now, how does medical consultancy help us? Apart from the fact that tax-payers' money used in training your lots become wasted...Yes, we still have to continue paying their inflated salaries while they disappear from serving the public to manning their private clinics.
You can abuse the public, even accuse us of being ignorant and unable to read the happenings. Go ahead and do all that. You are all moving us towards privatizing the sector, and some of us are waiting for just that. If a nurse practitioner is more useful to a patient care, then she/he is going to be remunerated accordingly.... By then you will lose your hideous confidence in such catch phrases as "pay relativity", "government is the root of all the evil in the health sector", "doctors own the patients"... Your possession of medical license..etc will cease to be your claim to public respect, but your contribution to patient management as adjudged by the public, by the patients. And not by either of NMA or JOHESU.
And when private investors control the sector, we shall see who is really ignorant...the investing public or our medical doctors.
Clown!
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by Samgreguc(m): 1:15pm On Jul 19, 2014
5minsmadness:
This your post smacks of ignorance and naivety. Read between the lines. Its obvious the other folks ganging against the doctors are doing it for political and selfish reasons.

All these years are you saying doctors have been preventing them from furthering their education? I think the main issue here is that they want to answer the post of 'consultant' , a position strictly reserved for the medical doctor and which position reflects an authority in charge of the patient
These consultants are the ones in whom the blame stops when it comes to life and death. I heard a young doctor say that a certain consultant owned a patient and if the patient dies he is the one that will be blamed; not the nurse, not the lab scientist, not the pharmacist, not even the house officer(the young doctor). And that'swhy they are paid the bIG money.

If the other health care professionals want to further their own field to the betterment of the patient I see nothing wrong in it. However I'm sure they have their own titles. They should be proud of their field and not try to encroach on or steal another specialties title in the name of 'helping the patient'. And I can assure you, knowing how Nigeria is, that no sooner they answer consultant that they'll start demanding for similar pay and wanting to have Dr attached to their names. Some are already doing it sef.

I just see selfishness and greed in this. haba. Let's tell the truth abeg.
like Dr. Ngozi Iweala and Dr. Goodluck Jonathan(GCFR) did sheay?
.
.
Pls, take it easy eh, the title Dr is not only for Physicians. A Pharm. graduate of UNIBEN is a Pharm. Doctor just like a Med graduate is a Med. Doctor.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by 5minsmadness: 1:40pm On Jul 19, 2014
Samgreguc:
like Dr. Ngozi Iweala and Dr. Goodluck Jonathan(GCFR) did sheay?
.
.
Pls, take it easy eh, the title Dr is not only for Physicians. A Pharm. graduate of UNIBEN is a Pharm. Doctor just like a Med graduate is a Med. Doctor.
At least its only the bolded you disagreed with me on.
These 'doctors' you mentioned are well known people and do not work in the health sector. Nobody is going to meet okonjo-iweala and ask her to treat them for malaria.

There is enough confusion in the health sector as it is with all of you wearing lab coats that we don't even know who the real doctors are anymore. Be proud of your own profession or if you envy doctors so much and want to treat patients like them, go to medical school. Its open to everyone and am sure nobody will object.
Re: Nma Strike: The Patients's Perspective by 5minsmadness: 1:52pm On Jul 19, 2014
jideolubiyi:

Maybe when you're done calling me ignorant and naive, you will realize that you're sounding scared, threatened by these other health workers. It takes someone scared out of his wits to consider that particular titles belong to you just because you are doctors.
OK. First off, I'm not a medical doctor. I notice that anybody who supports the doctors on this you guys turn to guerrilla tactics and bullying and declaring that the person is a doctor. Sorry but some regular people are actually on the doctor's side in this.

Specialist status doesn't belong to any group of people.
Lol. Yes it does. An engineer is an engineer is an engineer(repetition intended) just lik you are whatever it is you are. There are laid down rules to becoming a specialist in any field. You want to be a masters degree holder? Go for your postgraduate course. You want tobe a medical consultant? Go to medical school. Its simple, really.
It's the warped political culture in the country that encouraged the unwarranted arrogance of employees like medical doctors.
Its the warped political culture in the country that has made the doctors go on strike in the first place.
And what's all this about doctors and arrogance? How is it your business if they are arrogant? Your post reeks of arrogance itself. Check up the meaning in a dictionary.

So you think I'm naive, ignorant because I gave no hoot about calling a spade a spade? We shall all stand here and see how these all turn out
The statement wasn't meant to be offensive. Apologies.

The time is already ripe for the public to get involved in this madness, this madness that allows some dumb-ass health workers to think they can do just what they like. We are going to see more of what happened in Lagos, and by the time many of the hospitals are privatized, as a private owners some of us will set salaries strictly based on output and market forces...
And you might be surprised at the outcome. In fact I support privatization. It will put an end to most of the rubbish going on in the health sector.

You wrote as if the public is so unaware of goings-on at the public hospitals. I make bold to say that once the medical doctors become consultants it virtually becomes impossible for patients to see them again.
Fully agree on this as I have experienced it personally. However I know there are flaws in every profession. I'm sure if you were to be honest your oga doesn't come to work every time. I know mine doesn't. Someone else once said that by the time a consultant comes to see you everyday then it means your case is hopeless.
My battery is down, will continue after I charge my phone.
They simply disappear from the stations. In short, they become less useful to the public than before they became that. Now, how does medical consultancy help us? Apart from the fact that tax-payers' money used in training your lots become wasted...Yes, we still have to continue paying their inflated salaries while they disappear from serving the public to manning their private clinics.
Once again, very common in our govt civil service. People in other walks of life e.g accountants, secretaries etc leave their govt jobs to do their private businesses. Although wrong, It is not peculiar to the doctors .

You can abuse the public, even accuse us of being ignorant and unable to read the happenings.
those are your words not mine. I didnt abuse anybody. You are beginning to sound like a petulant child!
Go ahead and do all that. You are all moving us towards privatizing the sector, and some of us are waiting for just that. If a nurse practitioner is more useful to a patient care, then she/he is going to be remunerated accordingly.... By then you will lose your hideous confidence in such catch phrases as "pay relativity", "government is the root of all the evil in the health sector", "doctors own the patients"... Your possession of medical license..etc will cease to be your claim to public respect, but your contribution to patient management as adjudged by the public, by the patients
Hahaahahahha! So wait bros, if you have the money to start a private hospital, you'll employ a nurse consultant first? Do you know anything about business at all? I take it back. You are naieve!(and by you I mean you and not the public!)

And when private investors control the sector, we shall see who is really ignorant...the investing public or our medical doctors.
Once again, in support of this. Somehow I don't think our medical doctors will be shaking in thier boots if this happens. Quite the contrary.

Thanks grin

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