Daily Trust

Equipment rot as Gui PHC remains uncomplete­d

- By Taiwo Adeniyi, Isah Suleiman Kandi & Pebang Danladi

Multi-million naira medical equipment procured for the Comprehens­ive Primary Healthcare Centre in Gui have continued to deteriorat­e as the clinic’s structures remain uncomplete­d nine years after work on it started.

The building, which is at lintel stage, has now been converted into a place for open defecation while some portions have been overgrown with grasses.

The community is now left with a dilapidate­d structure with cracked walls and weakened concrete.

While the health facility remains uncomplete­d, equipment meant for the centre have been procured and kept in a room at the temporary primary healthcare centre used by the residents.

The poorly ventilated and lighted room has several beds, electrical equipment, scales and other measuring devices stacked in it.

A community health worker, who sought anonymity, said some of the facilities must have been damaged due to poor handling during the renovation of the temporary healthcare centre and the many years of laying unused.

While the building rots away, residents travel long distances to access healthcare. The temporary primary healthcare centre in the community could not stop the residents because it is short-staffed, poorly funded and lacks some amenities.

The community, about 10 minutes’ drive from the airport road after Sauka, despite its swelling population, has one health worker at the centre who residents said was hardly around on weekends and closed at about 4pm on week days.

Yamush Zephaniah said the uncomplete­d building has been unattended since he was posted to the centre few years ago.

“I have no idea why it has not been completed but all the required equipment needed for the hospital had been here for a very long time,” he said.

He said the equipment were packed but could not say if they are still functional.

Zephaniah said the temporary healthcare centre used by the residents was recently renovated and the government had assured on revisiting the abandoned project.

Despite the facelift, he said residents still patronised medicine stores and private hospitals in neighbouri­ng communitie­s. He said the renovated centre did little in encouragin­g the residents to patronise the centre.

He said despite his effort in making payment cheap and friendly, women in the community prefer delivering at home and using herbs. He said it was surprising why residents would prefer hospitals in other communitie­s and even spend more accessing such centres instead of using that provided them.

He said the poor patronage may, however not be unconnecte­d to the challenges of the centre because despite the renovation, it is without adequate provision for man power.

As the only health worker at the centre, he said, he sleeps in the facility and went home in Kwali on weekends. He said government had failed to employ a volunteer health worker that resides in the community and usually oversaw it in his absence.

Zephaniah said he leaves the centre on weekends as there was usually no patients that patronised the facility. He said not more than 20 people have visited the centre in the past two months as such he might stay and not have anybody to attend to.

“Last month, only two women came for antenatal,” he said.

The situation of the abandoned health facility is also disturbing to the District Head, Chief Alhassan Yusuf. He said residents do not patronise the temporary centre because it is short staffed and lacked some facilities.

He said the only personnel working there is not always available from Fridays to Sundays. He said the situation must have forced residents to patronise privately owned hospitals in the neighbouri­ng communitie­s.

On the uncomplete­d structure, he said, “Some government officials said the project would be captured in next year’s budget. I have done all I could to ensure it is completed, I sometimes invite many senators to the community to see the project and fast track its completion, yet nothing has happened.”

He however said the community would not give up because the equipment for the yet to be completed health facility have been provided.

“I once had to stop some government officials from moving the equipment elsewhere,” he said adding that it might be unaccounte­d for as the case of the ambulance for the project.

Chief Alhassan said when completed, the health facility would liberate residents and people from several communitie­s from medical tourism to distant places.

He said he had, however been encouragin­g residents to visit the newly renovated healthcare centre instead of going to other communitie­s. He said such messages are relayed to the residents during Juma’at services and in churches and there has been improvemen­t.

The chief also said the community lacks good roads and schools. He said the deplorable roads affect farmers while taking their produce to the market. He said students do not attend school when it rains in the morning because the road would be impassable while they are always in dilemma when rain falls while they are in school.

He said the roads are usually flooded and difficult to ply while not every parent could afford paying commercial motorcycli­sts to take their children to school.

He said even if the road is rehabilita­ted, establishi­ng a secondary school in the community would help in solving their education problems. A chieftain of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) in the FCT, Alhaji Musa Yahaya Muhammad, has said that his desire to join the race for the House of Representa­tives for Abuja South in 2019 is as a result of pressure from stakeholde­rs, associatio­ns and groups across the four area councils - Abaji, Kwali, Gwagwalada and Kuje.

Muhammad, who was also a former chairman of Abaji Area Council, stated this while addressing the party executives who visited him at his residence in Abaji on Monday.

He said it was after much pressure and the clarion call from the group that he also embarked on consultati­ons to seek the advise and views of other key party stakeholde­rs and later agreed to contest for Abuja South Reps ticket in 2019.

“Even though the consultati­on continues, but I will say with fervent prayers that the coast is clear as by the grace of God it is going to be a different ball game come 2019 general elections,” he said.

He said his representa­tion, if given the mandate would be a different ball game, stressing that he was going to ensure that he maintained an interface with the people of Abuja South on the issues that bordered on the constituen­cy at the National Assembly.

Muhammad also assured that he shall expanded the free scholarshi­p scheme across the four area councils to enable indigent students acquire education as currently being enjoyed by some students in his private school.

 ?? Photo Taiwo Adeniyi ?? The uncomplete­d Comprehens­ive Primary Health Care Centre in Gui
Photo Taiwo Adeniyi The uncomplete­d Comprehens­ive Primary Health Care Centre in Gui
 ??  ?? Some of the equipment stacked in a room
Some of the equipment stacked in a room

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