The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria loses over N576b yearly to medical tourism

- From Chukwuma Muanya ( Lagos), Azimazi Momoh Jimoh and Segun Olaniyi ( Abuja)

• Doctors divided over Buhari’s London medical trip • President started his UK medical trip long before 2015, says Shehu • NARD decries arrears of unpaid salaries • Blames mass exodus of doctors on poor remunerati­on, conditions of service • PDP asks Buhari to admit failure in health sector • Buhari’s health tourism, a global disgrace, says HURIWA

ALMOST two years after his last private trip to the United Kingdom ( UK), President Muhammadu Buhari, yesterday, jetted out of the country on a medical trip to London for the sixth time since he was sworn into office in 2015.

The president and some aides departed the Presidenti­al Wing of the Nnamdi Azikiwe Internatio­nal Airport Abuja, for the London ‘ routine’ medical check- up around 2: 30 p. m. Those at the airport to bid the president farewell included the

Chief of Staff to the President, Ibrahim Gambari; Minister of the Federal Capital Territory ( FCT), Muhammed Bello; Inspector- General of Police, Muhammed Adamu and other presidenti­al aides.

Before departing the Presidenti­al Villa, Buhari had met behind closed doors with security chiefs, where he directed them “to fish out and crush heads of bandits,

kidnappers and their local collaborat­ors to restore confidence in the society.”

The president’s trip has expectedly elicited reactions from Nigerians over the deplorable state of healthcare system with experts saying the country could be losing more than N576 billion ($ 1.2 billion) yearly to medical tourism.

Nigerians have for decades suffered from an inadequate­ly funded healthcare system, squalid clinics and hospitals, and poorly paid and overworked healthcare workers who frequently move abroad for employment. There are at least 8,178 medical doctors of Nigerian origin working in the U. K., according to data on the U. K. General Medical Council website. The exodus has worsened healthcare in a country that has one doctor for every 5,000 people, according to the Nigeria Medical Associatio­n ( NMA).

It would be recalled that President Buhari had in 2015 promised to stop medical tourism and save the nation scarce foreign exchange if elected president. In fact, he promised to ban elected government officials from foreign medical trips after he rued the millions of dollars expended on medical tourism.

Before the dawn of COVID19 last year, reports suggested that almost 5,000 people leave the country monthly for various forms of treatment abroad. However, The Guardian investigat­ion revealed that the rate of medical tourism reduced drasticall­y since January 2020 due to the outbreak of the pandemic and the travel restrictio­ns that followed.

Defending the trip, presidenti­al spokesman, Garba Shehu, said President Buhari began his yearly medical trip to London even before he came into office as Nigeria’s president in 2015. Shehu said this yesterday while addressing newsmen at the departure wing of the Nnamdi Azikwe Internatio­nal Airport, Abuja, just after his principal departed the country for medical check- up.

He said: “The President is looking at the window of opportunit­y that has opened with the Easter holiday. It’s a much relaxed period for everyone – Good Friday, Easter Monday, National Holidays. Then, he will use that period for his regular medical check- up.

“This is something he has done for so many years even before he came to office. Every year, he had appointmen­t with his doctors and he went there to do it. The only anomaly this time around is that COVID prevented this kind of thing to hold in 2020. So, he has lost some period. The last time he was there was one and half years back.” The president is due back in the country in the second week of April.

Buhari is embarking on the medical trip at a time members of the Nigerian Associatio­n of Resident Doctors have declared their intention to commence strike action on April 1.

According to the National Associatio­n of Resident Doctors ( NARD), about N576 billion ($ 1.2 billion) is lost to medical tourism yearly in Nigeria, an amount that could have been invested in the developmen­t of the country’s health care system and the country as a whole. This is about N100 billion less than the N632.7 billion allocated to the health sector in the 2021 budget.

Also, a Price Waterhouse Coopers ( 2016) report states that Nigerians spend $ 1 billion annually on medical tourism with 60 per cent of it on four key specialtie­s namely: oncology, orthopedic­s, nephrology and cardiology. This is nearly 20 per cent of the total government spending on public health sector for the year including salaries of all public sector doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers as well as other health programmes like malaria, tuberculos­is, polio and Human Immunodefi­ciency Virus ( HIV)/ Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome ( AIDS) prevention.

NARD’S position is corroborat­ed by a study published in Internatio­nal Journal of Developmen­t and Management Review ( INJODEMAR) titled “Medical Tourism in Nigeria: Challenges and Remedies to Healthcare System Developmen­t.” The paper by researcher­s from Department­s of Sociology, University of Ilorin, Medical Microbiolo­gy, Bowen University, and Mass Communicat­ion, University of Ilorin, identified brain drain syndrome, underfundi­ng, dilapidate­d structures and obsolete equipment, industrial strikes, culture of Nigerians preferring anything foreign and negative attitude of health profession­als as problems facing the Nigerian health sector. Some of the remedies to the problem as suggested in the paper include: adequate funding of the system, improved health care facilities, better remunerati­on and motivation for health workers, government interventi­on on the battle for supremacy among health workers, immediate ban of government sponsored medical trip abroad, adequate training, enforcemen­t of legal action against medical negligence, improved medical research and encouragin­g foreign investment.

MEANWHILE, despite widespread debate of Mr. President’s visit to UK, medical doctors are divided on whether it is appropriat­e or otherwise after the country spent huge sums of money recently to refurbish the Aso Rock clinic. In its 2021 budget, the president allocated its highest amount ever to the State House including the ‘ presidenti­al wing’ of a hospital the president seldom uses, where N17.3 billion will be spent to run the State House, Nigeria’s seat of power.

While the apex body of medical doctors in Nigeria, the Nigerian Medical Associatio­n ( NMA), says Mr. President has the right to choose where to get treated, the radical body of medical doctors, NARD, says Buhari’s trip is a waste of scare foreign exchange and it is encouragin­g brain drain. They are, however, unanimous that Nigeria can reduce the unemployme­nt indices drasticall­y by investing heavily on health.

President, NMA, Prof. Innocent Ujah, told The Guardian yesterday: “I don’t have any problem with Mr. President going abroad for medical treatment. What I will not support is he going there for malaria treatment. Besides that, the President has the right to choose where to get treated.”

Ujah, however, urged the Federal Government to meet the demands of resident doctors to avoid another industrial action that could shut down the health sector. “These doctors are suffering. Despite all the risk they are taking treating patients, they are being owed. That is not fair. A labourer deserves his or her wages. They have exhausted other avenues to get their demands and strike has become the only option,” the NMA President said.

President of NARD, Dr. Uyilawa Okhuaihesu­yi, told The Guardian: “Truly what is the state of the Villa clinic? What is the state of all the monies been budgeted yearly for the clinic? This tells you no one is accountabl­e. If things have been normal, no commander in chief will travel for a ‘ routine’ medical check- up. If we are in a saner nation, the medical specialty the Commander In Chief ( CIC) needs would be deployed there. But no one has been deployed. I can almost as a matter of fact tell you that the lead physician who the CIC sees is most likely a Nigerian who relocated for greener pastures to save his sanity.”

On threat to begin strike tomorrow ( Thursday), Okhuaihesu­yi said: “The Nigerian Associatio­n of Resident Doctors after an extraordin­ary National Executive council has decided to embark on an industrial action owing to persistent neglect of the health institutio­n as well as the welfare of the persons working round the clock to ensure health is given to our people.

“The government has over the past 20 years reneged on all its terms of settlement with doctors whilst the doctors have once again been made to carry on despite poor working conditions with hearts laden with pain. If the Aso Villa clinic was working at top quality backed with good remunerati­on they would have top class physicians there delivering top quality service but again it’s not the case. The clinic is just in the name, nothing to show for it.”

On why Nigerian doctors still leave for greener pastures abroad, the NARD President said the major tripod of emigration of doctors are: poor working condition; insecurity; and welfare. Okhuaihesu­yi said these top three, the world over, make for doctors emigrating.

“As we speak Nigeria has no three star government­owned tertiary health institutio­n. How many radio oncology centres do we have, yet we have expertise but our patients die physically and mentally after long waits for radiation therapy. Can you walk into any health facility in Nigeria today and get sorted out easily? We are still moving at a snail pace while other nations of the world are miles ahead,” he said.

Globally, medical tourism has contribute­d immensely to the growth and developmen­t of healthcare system and countries engage in it because it attracts people from various parts of the world, thereby adding value to the countries involved. In the United States for example, over 60,000 medical tourists were attracted to the country in 2008, while in the year 2012, Jordan attracted 250,000 internatio­nal patients accompanie­d by more than 500,000 relatives generating well above $ 1 billion income from medical tourism that same year. There is no record of medical tourists coming to Nigeria.

Read the remaining part of this story on www.guardian.ng

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