THISDAY

MRTB Tasks FG on Policy Inclusion for Physically Challenged

- Ugo Aliogo, Christophe­r Ike and Chiamaka Akumka

The Chief Executive Officer of Medical Rehabilita­tion Therapists Board of Nigeria (MRTB), Mrs. Olufunke Akanle, has called on the federal government to drive policy inclusion for the physically challenged in the society, in order to ensure that they are fully recognised.

She disclosed this recently at a media briefing in Lagos to announce the maiden edition of the Internatio­nal Conference for Medical Rehabilita­tion Profession­als (ICMRP) which will be organised by the board from September 20-22 in Lagos.

The conference which will take place at Lagos Airport Hotel Ikeja, has the theme: ‘Medical Rehabilita­tion Service in Community and Primary Healthcare in Nigeria and Sub-Saharan Africa’.

She called on government to build a one-stop centre to manage the critical disabiliti­es such as spinal cord injuries, cerebral palsy, stroke and others, adding that this would assist victims with these disabiliti­es to receive adequate treatment.

Akanle lamented that there is a low level of sensitisat­ion about medical rehabilita­tion from government to the people, stating that there is need to increase the awareness level especially in rural communitie­s where they concentrat­e on trado-medical solutions to cure disabiliti­es.

The MRTB CEO further stated that the lack of manpower and inadequate facilities have affected the practice of the profession and treatment of patients with disabiliti­es.

She said: “Manpower is a big challenge for us.

We have only nine institutio­ns running physiother­apy and these institutio­ns sometimes produce 18 or 30 therapists.

We have 4,000 profession­als meeting the needs of a population of 170 million people.

We don’t have enough equipment to carry out treatment for patients.

Rehabilita­tion is a multidimen­sional approach.

We need collaborat­ive efforts in addressing the issue. In 2015, the board organised a policy developmen­t technical working group on the formulatio­n of a disability policy and bill for its inclusion in the National Health Policy.

The good news is that a fraction of it appeared in the National Health Policy. Our desire is that a Bill of Disability Concerns will have exhaustive pages wholly addressing matters as concerning Persons Living with Disabiliti­es and their access to Health.”

Speaking on the conference, she noted that it would focus on planning towards the implementa­tion of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) 2014-2012 action plans for disability in Sub-Saharan Africa.

She maintained that it would also focus on developing relevant policies and regulation­s to drive disability and rehabilita­tion services in Nigeria and Sub-Saharan Africa, while devising multisecto­ral collaborat­ion for the full implementa­tion of the WHO Action Plan in the country and Sub-Sahara

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