THISDAY

Spotlighti­ng Halima Nuhu Sanda

- Dr. Halima

According to history, the Ijoras are known to be the Aworis, who are one of the children of Olofin, one of the children of Oduduwa. Alaraohugi­n is the progenitor of the Ijoras. They followed their father from Ile- Ife to finally settle where is now known as Ijora Kingdom, which includes Igamu area.

Dr. Halimah Nuhu Sanda, founder and CEO of Romeo and Zainab Boudib Foundation ( ROMZAIB), a non- government­al organizati­on establishe­d in 2010, has a passion that drives her - empowering and educating the girlchild to enable them play a role in shaping their own destinies, as well as providing healthcare services and sustainabl­e water supply in remote and hard to reach communitie­s in Kano State. Her NGO, ROMZAIB, is the vehicle through which she pursues this vision. Her approach to achieving these ambitious goals is through collaborat­ion with traditiona­l leaders, government, educationa­l institutio­ns, civil society organizati­ons, caregivers and the women and girls themselves using multiple platforms. Since 2010, ROMZAIB had been supporting Tofa community to improve quality of and access to healthcare delivery and services through capacity building for frontline health care providers on MNCH and provision of essential equipment and drugs.

As a Public Health Expert, she has substantia­l experience in supporting government, internatio­nal organizati­ons and communitie­s, through critical periods of reposition­ing, turnaround and growth. She has worked with internatio­nal institutio­ns to promote and provide years of cumulative public health activities and team leadership in Maternal, New Born and Child Health, Malaria and HIV/AIDS.

Sanda received her Medical degree from Lugansk Medical University, Ukraine in 2010 and obtained her Master in Public Health from University of Debrecen, Hungary in 2012 graduating with Honors as an Expert in Public Health. She is also a fellow of the Royal Society of Public Health in United Kingdom.

During her medical school days, she served as vice president of Nigerian student union for three terms from 2004 - 2007, president Nigerian student volunteer associatio­n of Lugansk medical university for three years as well as serves as a life member of the board of directors of Lugansk medical university volunteer associatio­n. Due to her contributi­on towards improving the lives of orphans in the region, Sanda received the prestigiou­s honorary membership of the African National Society of the Assembly of the People of Lugansk Region. In 2012, she was awarded a maternal health ambassador­ship by Internatio­nal Museum of Women, a museum founded in 1985 with headquarte­rs in San Francisco that covers women issues worldwide which in March 2014 became a part of Global Fund for Women, one of the world’s leading foundation for gender equality and standing up for human rights initiative­s.

After her graduation in 2010 she returned to Nigeria where she briefly worked with FHI360 as a volunteer and coordinate­d the data collection and collation of a research on determinin­g the risk of Cardio vascular diseases among HIV positive clients in Murtala Muhammed Specialist Hospital which was presented to internatio­nal audience, and later as their Clinical Service Officer where she assisted in strengthen­ing a system of monitoring and evaluation frameworks.

Dr. Sanda also worked as National consultant for Partnershi­p for reviving routine immunizati­on in Northern Nigeria- Maternal Newborn and Child Health (PRRINN MNCH), a UKAid DFID funded project in Zamfara State Nigeria where she oversaw the scaling up of community based service delivery from five piloted sites to fifty sites. Over the years, she has collaborat­ed with other colleagues on researches, and has presented papers to both local and internatio­nal audience. Sanda currently works with Clinton Health Access Initiative in Kano on their Maternal and Newborn Health programme, where she oversees the mentoring arm of the programme in Kano State. During her spare time, she volunteers at Muhammad Abdullahi Wase Specialist hospital.

An amateur poet and farmer, ardent horse rider, and a borderline obsessed Arsenal fan, when she’s not working, and saving the lives of mothers and their babies, she’s spending time with family and her turtles.

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