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LIVING
IN HOPE
THE QUAGMIRE OF MEDICARE IN NIGERIA
One
of the most disturbing features of life in Nigeria is the abject state
of the medical facilities and dispensation of medicare in the country.
This situation, sad as it is, is undeniably recognised at all levels of
the society. Worse still, the notoriety of the poor medical condition
in Nigeria is known all over the world. It features quite prominently
in the negative indices that are so readily bandied around the world.
Instances abound so let’s look at some excruciatingly painful illustrations.
The
US State Department Consular information Sheet on Nigeria and our medical
facility explains to all who seek information from it that medical facilities
in Nigeria are poor. It asserts that diagnostic and treatment equipment
is most often poorly maintained and that many prescriptive medicines are
unavailable. It asserts that counterfeit pharmaceuticals are a common
problem and may be difficult to distinguish from genuine medication. It
also adds that whilst Nigeria has many well trained doctors, hospital
facilities are generally of poor quality with inadequately trained nursing
staff. Providing further information to its readers, it asserts that the
quality of government’s medical facilities is unacceptable by US
standards and that the quality of health care providers ranges from poor
to fair. If further affirms commonly known facts that infrastructural
maintenance was mostly ignored for about 10 years prior to 1998 and that
although government has been upgrading some of the facilities, the quality
of physicians and nurses is poor considering that recent graduates lack
experience with modern equipment and sophisticated procedure. It is further
asserted that 80% of our pharmaceutical and medical supply needs are imported.
The tirade continues on other quite harrowing revelations, enough to warn
off only the most ardent visitors whose sustaining motivation to continue
their journeys can only be the obvious commercial potential that Nigeria
retains.
Nigeria’s
health indices make extremely poor reading. Some of the most disturbing
indices include those asserted by the World Bank, in 2005 that 1 in 5
children (approximately 20%) die before the age of 5 as opposed to say
the United Kingdom where the proportion is 0.6%. Average life expectancy
in Nigeria is 44 years, as compared to, say, the United Kingdom where
this is 79 years. Approximately 800 women in 100,000 die in child birth
and 4.4% of the population of Nigeria between 15 and 49 years (in the
region of 2.6 million) are living with HIV.
The
provision of comprehensive and adequate health care services to its citizens
should be one of the central objectives of any responsible government.
This is the approach adopted by developed countries and this much is acknowledged
by this and previous governments. In a public petition campaign initiated
by the Social-Economic Rights and Accountability Projects (SERAP), it
very aptly observes that
“every
human being is entitled to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard
of health conducive to living a life in dignity .... Nigeria illustrates
the paradox of poverty amidst plenty. Despite Nigeria’s oil wealth
and resources, full enjoyment of the right to health still remains a
distant goal for millions of Nigerian women and children and for those
of them living in poverty. This growth is becoming increasingly remote
... Gross under-funding and inadequate management of health services
have led to rapid deterioration of health infrastructures in hospitals.
Hospital patients including poor women and children are frequently asked
to buy drugs and supply needles, syringes and Suture threads, in addition
to paying for bed space, even in the so-called big teaching hospitals”.
This
assertion applies, with equal measure, to the vast majority of Nigerians
in all areas of medicare.
Amidst
these disturbing statistics and beneath the unanswered queries lie critical
questions aimed at examining what the current health policy is and the
reasons for its continued failure. The truth is that successive governments
have articulated National Health policies in numerous forms, all anchored
on an operational system that has failed and continues to fail the nation.
Presently, there is a 3-tier system of health care neatly but cumbersomely
divided into primary, secondary and tertiary. There, the efficacy of the
system ends.
Amidst
these disturbing statistics and beneath the unanswered queries lie critical
questions aimed at examining what the current health policy is and the
reasons for its continued failure. The truth is that successive governments
have articulated National Health policies in numerous forms, all anchored
on an operational system that has failed and continues to fail the nation.
Presently, there is a 3-tier system of health care neatly but cumbersomely
divided into primary, secondary and tertiary. There, the efficacy of the
system ends.
Encouragingly,
this government recognises and has asserted that this National Health
policy is innately flawed. This much is acknowledged by President Umaru
Musa Yar’Adua because, as recently as 18 September 2007, he urged
the Federal Ministry of Health to undertake a re-examination of the national
health policy to correct a number of inherent defects. One of those that
he pointed out was the assignment of responsibility for primary health
care to the local government. In the President’s eminently right
view, he explained that it was clearly a mistake to have assigned responsibility
for primary health care services - on which about 80% of the national
population was dependent - to local government, a tier of the government
that had the least capacity to providing these services. This, in many
senses, is only one of several defects and flaws in the delivery of health
care services to Nigeria as a whole. The Health Minister, Professor Adenike
Grange has also recently accepted that there was a need to embark on a
comprehensive health care reform programme with a view to restructuring
the sector by integrating and improving the availability and health management
of resources as well as increasing consumer awareness of their obligations.
That
the government is undeniably mindful of the unpleasant health indices
can now be taken as accepted. This signifies, in many senses, the engendering
of political will that is required to redress this disturbing and undesirable
position brought about by amongst many innumerable factors, sustained
infrastructural decay occurring over the last 30 years; chronic underfunding;
the irksome effect of the “brain drain” of medical personnel
from Nigeria abroad; institutional reluctance to formulate and implement
reform initiatives; all aggravated by in-grained corruption, to name but
a few.
Where
do we go from here? First, it is critical that the Presidency review the
exclusion of health from the President’s seven point agenda. On
inception of office, President Yar’Adua identified energy, power,
security, the Niger Delta, poverty and education, rule of law and land
reforms as the centre points of his Government’s governance of the
country for the tenure of his presidency. Revisiting the appalling medical
indices that the country has will be the rehearsing of the obvious. Central
to human existence is life expectancy. This is a recurring decimal in
every Nigerian’s outlook to life. DFID, one of the world’s
leading international bodies with a long involvement with the health sector
in Nigeria says that two of the leading causes of child mortality in Nigeria
are malaria (30%) and diarrhoea (20%). It also states that malnutrition
causes 52% of deaths in children under 5, with a mortality rate of 1 in
5 children dying before the age of 5. In 1999, life expectancy amongst
men, according to a World Bank Development report was 52 for the Nigerian
male and 55 for the Nigerian woman. In 2007, these have dropped to 44
and 47 for men and women respectively, a deterioration of 14.55%. Whilst,
as presently constituted, the significant responsibility for redressing
these indices lies with local and state governments, it is the Federal
Government that is responsible for setting overall policy goals as well
as coordinating activities to ensure that these goals are met. It is critical
to the sector’s revampment that health re-emerges from its current
relative obscurity to assume the position of priority that it so desperately
deserves. Adding health to the 7 Point Agenda; raising the profile of
the health sector and paying serious attention to its fortunes will initiate
the process of review necessary to begin to address this dire problem.
Second,
in enhancing the crucial importance that health bears for the average
Nigerian, a proactive disposition must be assumed in the reformed process.
Practical, viable initiatives must be conceived and implemented without
delay. The bridge between discourse and implementation must be narrowed
because, with the passage of time, Nigerians continue to be exposed to
significant risks entailing inevitable ill health and avoidable fatality.
One of the ideal models to observe if not copy would be the United Kingdom’s
National Health Service, this being, by a distant margin, the most far
reaching such system in existence in the world. Created after the 2nd
World War, this initiative came as part of the Government’s “cradle
to grave” welfare-state reforms. Whilst at the beginning it had
experienced teething problems, this programme has now evolved into the
world’s leader in the welfare- based health services, across the
world. The current United Kingdom National Health Scheme is divided into
trusts, comprising Primary Care Trust which administers Primary and Public
health. These trusts oversee over 29,000 General Practitioners and 18,000
dentists. Hospital trusts are responsible for 290 organisations that administer
hospitals, treatment centres and specialist care in over 1,600 hospitals
across the country. The scheme comprises also Ambulance Care Services
and Care Trusts. In addition, there are several special health authorities
who provide dedicated services including the NHS Blood and Transplant,
NHS Direct; NHS Professionals; NHS Business Services Authority; National
Patients Safety Agency; and the National Institute for Health and Critical
Excellence (NICE).
It
is also common knowledge that Nigeria’s Health sector is abominably
underfunded. In 2001, African Union members, meeting in Abuja –
of all places - promised to set aside 15% of the respective budgets to
meet compelling health care demands. This commitment was renewed in May
2006 at a special summit. Nigeria has not met this commitment. Despite
its resources, World Health Organisation figures suggest that in 2004,
health was responsible for only 3.5% of the budget. It is impossible to
achieve this target - which will have a significant effect on the delivery
of health services in Nigeria - without a proactive attempt being made
to make the resources available. Compare this, for instance, with the
United Kingdom, a country that we have, historically, sought to imitate.
The total NHS budget for the United Kingdom in the 2007/2008 year is approximately
£105 billion. This reflected an average increase per annum of 7.4%
for the 5 years prior to that and at an increase of approximately 43%
in real terms from 1997, when the Labour Government came to power. Health
is at the top of the political agenda in the United Kingdom. Quite simply,
a government that fails in maintaining and improving the sector is effectively
guaranteed electoral failure. Nigeria is, by posture and action, a long
way from this position. This picture is even bleaker when the circumstances
are considered in the light of the suspension of the construction of the
primary health care centres in 774 local governments in the country. There
are two features of this particular project that must convey serious disappointment
and embarrassment to those who were directly involved in its failure.
The first is that it is suggested of the N18.5 billion ostensibly deducted
over N5.8 billion had been paid out, some in circumstances that were clearly
not envisaged by the scheme. Simply, suggestions are rife that a large
proportion of those funds were diverted. The second is that, without prejudice
to the legality of the deductions, the basis of objection appears not
to be founded on the recondite application of the deducted funds, namely
the erection of health care centres that will provide ultimate benefit
to its citizens – but upon legal and political premises. There is
little doubt that the idea behind the scheme itself was a genuine one.
Government is encouraged, in its reform directives, to consider an apposite
replacement because it serves, in the short term, the critical function
of ensuring that a few more fatalities are avoided.
The
unavailability of committed and trained medical personnel is a significant
factor at the core of the deterioration of Medicare in Nigeria. It has
been suggested that as at 2003, there were approximately 35,000 doctors
involved in the practice of medicine in Nigeria. In 2005, there were approximately
25,000 doctors of Nigerian origin in various forms of employment in the
United States. There is an even higher number in the United Kingdom and
certainly in other parts of the world, particularly in the Middle East.
With the nurses, the statistics are even more disturbing. The reform initiatives
necessary to bring about amelioration and change must be designed at improving
first, teaching hospitals, training standards and universities which are
all central to supporting a training environment in Nigeria. This, combined
with improved service conditions for employees in the medical profession,
will enable the sector somewhat more adequately to deal with some of the
key issues surrounding the enforced emigration of trained personnel out
of Nigeria. Whilst emigration generally is dictated by, amongst other
features, prevailing economic circumstances in the country, an improvement
in these circumstances will at least operate, to a large extent, to maintain
a higher proportion of locally trained medical personnel in the country
than is clearly, presently the case. Additionally, incentivised investment
in the medical sector should be encouraged so that, like other areas of
commercial endeavour, foreign countries and their nationals will be attracted
to investing in medical structures in Nigeria. After all, the depressing
medical indices clearly mean that until this is redressed, there will
be no shortage of potential customers in various areas. In similar vein,
incentivised importation of medical technology must be encouraged. It
is embarrassing that diagnostic medicine in Nigeria - itself dependent
upon the availability of modern and sophisticated technology, - is in
a depressingly repressed state. It is commonly known that , for instance,
there are no facilities in Nigeria for MRI scanning, this being at the
peak of diagnostic analysis of some of the most serious medical conditions.
Serious consideration needs to be given to private sector participation
with Government in mega-sized hospital projects, especially those that
may be targeted at servicing a growing traffic of those seeking medical
attention and treatment abroad.
Institutional
corruption has not spared the medical industry. This sector is not immune
from the kind of scrutiny that currently exists in other sectors. The
consequences of corruption are even more dire because, as must be manifestly
evident, the consequences continue to ensure a degree of fatality amongst
Nigerians that is and will remain unacceptable. Project implementation
must be monitored with a high degree of watchfulness. It is suggested
that an anti-corruption unit is set up in the Federal Ministry of Health
and that this measure is encouraged at state and local government levels.
This, combined with an enhanced due process mechanism, will inevitably
provide a value for money service even if a complete solution to corruption
does not so emerge.
For
the sake of its citizenry, as well as prevailing emergencies, it behoves
those charged with the responsibility of the administration of the health
sector at local, state and federal levels to ensure that significant improvements
are brought about by the language of change. The sour state of affairs
is affecting people across all strata of the society. People – including
high profile Nigerians previously “immune” from the effects
of this decay – are now experiencing the pervading unpleasantness
that exists with poor medical facilities. By the day, lives continue to
be needlessly lost in circumstances where better diagnoses and treatment
would have ensured different results. As a nation, it is time for us to
ask our leaders to take our lives more seriously because without life,
the populace cannot enjoy or have access to “...energy, power, (adequate)security,
the( solution to the) Niger Delta problem, poverty and education, rule
of law and land reforms...” Governments in the country are requested
to begin processes to ensure that this appallingly depressive state of
affairs does not subsist before it is too late.
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