THISDAY

Presidency to Commercial­ise Operations of Aso Rock Clinic

- Omololu Ogunmade

Empty State House Medical Centre (SHMC) will soon be reposition­ed to offer profitorie­nted services, the Permanent Secretary, State House, Mr. Jalal Arabi, said yesterday.

Arabi, according to Deputy Director, Informatio­n in the State, Mr. Attah Esa, made the remark while reacting to a media report on the state of the medical centre.

The clinic, despite the annual budget of N3.8 billion, which is more than thrice of what major teaching hospitals get annually, lack even significan­t drugs and items such as paracetamo­l, syringe et cet era.

The statement said the permanent secretary disclosed that the management would among other things seek the commercial­isation of the centre to boost its revenue and augment the appropriat­ion it receives from the government in the quest for a better qualitativ­e service.

‘‘The Centre is the only health centre in Abuja where patients are not required to pay any dime before consultati­on.

‘‘In other government hospitals in Abuja, patients are required to pay for consultati­on, treatment, laboratory tests and others but that has not been the case with the State House Medical Centre.

‘‘The Centre offers free services, nobody pays a kobo for hospital card, consultati­ons or prescripti­ons and this has taken a toll on the subvention the Centre receives from the government.

‘‘We have some of the best equipment in the country. For instance, to maintain the MRI and other scan machines, we spend close to N2 million monthly. Yet we do not charge a dime for those who require MRI scans in the clinic,’’ the statement quoted Arabi as saying.

Arabi, the statement added, said the proposed reforms would ensure that those eligible to use the centre are NHIS compliant with their health maintenanc­e organisati­ons (HMOs) or primary health provider domiciled in the clinic.

‘‘We have already created a NHIS desk at the clinic where patients will be required to authentica­te their profile. If their HMOs are registered in other hospitals they will be required to transfer to the Centre.

‘‘This is another way through which we can boost revenue generation at the hospital and this has started yielding results because the stark reality is there is no free lunch anywhere,’’ he said.

Arabi was said to have also dismissed allegation­s of misappropr­iation and withholdin­g of funds meant for medical supplies in the Centre.

‘‘I know people will insinuate and give all sorts of reasons because they don’t ask but it will be foolhardy and madness for anybody in his senses to defraud a medical centre of a kobo and toying with people’s lives.

‘‘No sane person will do that, so the truth of the matter is the hospital is being run on subvention and appropriat­ion; if it comes we pile the drugs; but the truth is the drugs are always overwhelme­d by the number of people who use the Centre, because it is not controlled,’’ he said.

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