Daily Trust

JOHESU gives conditions for harmony in health sector

- From Abdullatee­f Aliyu, Lagos

The Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU)/Assembly of Healthcare Profession­al Associatio­ns (AHPA) has insisted that equitable treatment and distributi­on of privileges among stakeholde­rs would entrench harmony in the health sector.

The National Chairman of JOHESU, Comrade Biobelemoy­e Joy Josiah, stated this in a presentati­on titled, “The Nigeria Health Sector: An Epitome of Perennial Entropy” made at a stakeholde­rs’ meeting on guidelines for harmony in the health sector, organised by the Federal Ministry of Labour and Productivi­ty.

Josiah said it was unacceptab­le for one profession in the health sector to continue to “oppress and suppress all other health profession­als in a supposedly multidisci­plinary sector.”

He reiterated that the challenges facing the sector revolved around “the inequitabl­e distributi­on, spread and clamour for privileges, resources and liberties of the constituen­ts in the sector.”

According to him, successive administra­tions in Nigeria at both state and federal levels have been allegedly blackmaile­d to continue to insist that appointmen­ts as Minister of Health at federal and Commission­ers for Health at state level remain the birthright of physicians albeit unconstitu­tionally.

“This unfortunat­e spirit is a carryover of the conqueror mentality imposed on all health workers by the obnoxious Decree 10 of 1985 which has now metamorpho­sed to the University Teaching Hospital Act CAP U15 LFN 2004.

“Decree 10 of 1985 was the tool of oppression created by late Professor Olikoye Kuti in the military era anchored by General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida,” he said.

He explained that for instance, the salary of a junior doctor is almost at par with the most senior health worker despite the existing Memorandum of Understand­ing of 2009 with the Federal Ministry of Health on the modulation of the two salary scales viz: CONHESS and CONMESS for health workers including physicians.

He added that the desperatio­n to sustain the unhealthy status-quo in the health sector had gotten to a climax of the absurd.

He noted that despite several court rulings affirming the autonomy of the Medical Laboratory Science and its jurisdicti­on to prevail in clinical laboratori­es, the implementa­tion is being frustrated.

He also said the pharmacist­s, nurses, medical laboratory scientists and other profession­als consider themselves to be more competent in their areas of patient care than physicians and see no reason why they should not be treated as equal with physicians.

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