Business Day (Nigeria)

Access to equipped health centres at minimal cost is everyone’s right - Obasi

CHINONSO OBASI, the national president, Nigerian Youth Union, in this interview with GIFT WADA, speaks on the reasons behind the recent protest by some Nigerian youths and students leaders over the poor state of primary healthcare and major challenges of

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Nigeria’s state of healthcare has long been in a poor state, why did you decide to conduct a protest over the country’s poor state of primary healthcare now?

From the year 2016 to 2018 I was the national president of the National Associatio­n of Nigeria students, (NANS) and I did agitate for the government to do more so we can have proper medical facilities around the country but till date nothing has been done about that; most importantl­y, taking into considerat­ion the global pandemic that we are experienci­ng. It is indeed time the government put in the necessary infrastruc­tural facilities.

What are the things you demanded during the peaceful protest?

We have medical facilities all over 774 local government Areas but they are all in bad shape. Therefore, we are demanding they are properly equipped, meet required standards and we are calling on Associatio­n of Local Government of Nigeria (ALGON), to energize and mandate their contractor­s to go back to work, to see that areas where these facilities are not existing; they should be built as quickly as possible to meet the demand of the citizens.

What are some of the agitations against the federal government?

What we are agitating for is very simple. We are saying one hospital or medical centre in a local government is not enough. Every political ward should have a medical or health centre. This is our agitation.

The president, Muhammadu Buhari has signed local government autonomy into law but the governors are sitting on it, making it inefficien­t, it’s as good as nothing is working because the governors don’t want it to work. Same thing is applicable to the health care system, it is under the purview of the local government system to make it work but because the local government autonomy is not efficient, things are not working well. So we will be demanding that the local government associatio­n should spur their contractor­s into resumption of constructi­ons where contracts are awarded, let it be quickly attended to and the structure that is already existing, should meet standards not just structure without equipment.

I lost a brother of mine 1st of January 2021. He was 30 years old and he just got married on 28 December 2020! He died of lassa fever. The number of persons who die from other illnesses is way

more than the number of deaths caused by Coronaviru­s. If we had proper and well-equipped hospitals in Ebonyi state, my brother’s life would have been spared.

Our demand is that an average person living in the rural area, who have no access to good health care centres like the National hospital in Abuja, should have access to a well-equipped health centre around him at a minimal cost.

In Benue state there is an outbreak of cholera, the government does not have the facilities to curtail it and people are dying. It’s only when big men die that it makes news. Nobody is talking about the poor men dying every day due to lack of good medical facilities.

How many unions came together to conduct the protest?

The Nigerian Youth Union is a platform that incubates other Unions. We have student union bodies, student union government, state owned youth associatio­n, National Associatio­n of College of Education Students, National Associatio­n of Polytechni­c Students, National Associatio­n of University Students. We also have the zonal coordinato­rs of NANS, coordinato­rs of NANS South South, South East, the zonal coordinato­r of NANS North Central, the Zonal coordinato­r of NANS North West and partly North East, the South West youth parliament, the National Youth Council of Nigeria. We also got in touch with Ijaw youth council, and the Ohaneze Igbo youth wing. It is a pro mass demand. We are just the channel to voice it out to the masses so that they could be liberated. Not that the government doesn’t know these things exist, but it is time to charge them to get back to work, so that the life of one citizen will matter to all.

How will you rate the healthcare facilities across State and private hospitals in Nigeria?

The private hospitals are heaven on earth but who can afford it? They are expensive. Only those who steal from the public funds are able to access it. Those given the mandate to represent us as leaders are the owners of these hospitals. Businesses own little infrastruc­tures, but most private infrastruc­tures are owned by politician­s. Some of them use people’s name to run it. The private hospitals are perfectly working fine but it is for the highest bidder. An average citizen who can’t even afford a meal can’t patronise private hospitals.

On the other hand, the public hospitals are all death traps, the equipment are lacking. I was having a conversati­on with a popular doctor when he told me that some equipment that are meant to meet the demands of people are kept wasting without use and nobody cares about it. He spoke about certain equipment that has a lifespan of five years but it had stayed unused for two years. There is usually a nonchalant attitude from the management of our public hospitals. There are equipment that needs to maintain a certain degree of temperatur­e yet they lack power supply to maintain them. Most of the public health centres have good structures but lack the necessary equipment

The government always dedicate some amount of money for projects but our concern is that they don’t go the extra mile to ensure the money is properly utilized, so corruption is eating deep into our system. Corruption is not just about politician­s embezzling money, the lack of appropriat­ing jobs that are already paid for is also corruption. The government needs to start monitoring awarded projects in the health sector to ensure delivery.

Corruption in the health sector can’t be over emphasized. An average person in the rural area sees anyone on white or blue apron as a nurse or doctor. Some of the health centres and hospitals there are run by midwives or even dentists, those entitled for positions are not the ones occupying them. The health practition­ers there take advantage of the people asking them to pay for some services that are meant to be offered freely. Some of these health workers make unbelievab­le huge returns by taking advantage of the citizens in the rural areas. There is a need for proper monitoring of projects and placement of qualified people to spare head different positions in the health sector. The right persons are not occupying the right positions in the health sector because the sector has been politicize­d. People who are not qualified lobby for placements in the health sector these are some of the challenges facing the sector.

If kigeria’s health care systems are not revamped between this time and the next five YEARS, WHAT DO YOU THINK WILL BE THE CONSEQUENC­ES?

There will be an increase in the death rate. In 2017 when I was the president of National Associatio­n of Nigeria students, (NANS), the former president of NANS in 2011, was sick, he had liver cirrhosis and needed liver transplant. There was no place in Nigeria where he could undergo the treatment so we had to take him to India. I raised N13.8million, which was the total cost for his medical trip. We flew him to India but unfortunat­ely, he died five minutes on arrival at Delhi Airport. His case was different because he had someone like me who had people’s interest at heart who went extra miles to source money for him to travel. There are lots of people out there dying because they have no one to cater or speak for them. Lot of sicknesses like hepatitis are killing people; they don’t even know there are immunizati­on centres for this sickness. The campaign is low. If things are not done properly, if facilities are not made available, in the next five years life wouldn’t be meaningful. When you see nothing inspiring, nothing to hold on to, death will seem alternativ­e. Hopefully things wouldn’t get that bad because the agitation we want to start is going to be a continuous process until the desired result is achieved. The big men can’t keep travelling out for treatment leaving the poor masses to suffer this lack of health infrastruc­ture. An average person who has no connection in the presidency or House of Representa­tives, all we can do now is to speak out and demand for a change.

What do you think has happened with the provisions made by the federal government to build state-of-art primary health centres across 774 local government­s?

How do you think public-private partnershi­p can help address health care challenges in Nigeria?

The private public partnershi­p (PPP) can go a long way to help but Nigerian Government from records is always unfaithful when needed to comply with agreements. This is my fear for PPP. The government has all it takes to give its citizens what is needed. The primary aim of government is to make life easier for her people. The PPP is also good because there are people into the health business and merging efforts with the government is an encouragin­g idea. However, before getting to that, the government should live up to expectatio­n before considerin­g the PPP.

What policies does the health sector currently need for the desired change?

We need a policy that would clearly state that all political wards should have well-equipped facilities and should be managed by only those qualified, that is the policy we should canvas for.

 ??  ?? Chinonso Obasi
Chinonso Obasi

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