THISDAY

FG, Partners Step up Strategy to Access Family Planning in Rural Areas

- Senator Iroegbu in Abuja

The Ministry of Health in collaborat­ion with partners have begun implementi­ng the approved Task-sharing and Task-shifting Policy for essential healthcare services which authorise lower cadres of health workers including Community Health Extension Workers (CHEWs) to administer implants and intra-uterine contracept­ive devices (IUCDS) other than Nurse and Midwives only.

The Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, stated this during the disseminat­ion of reports from studies conducted in the two statesKadu­na and Ondo on the trial programme.

Adewole in a statement said the numbers of Community Health Extension Workers outnumber the Nurses working in the Primary Healthcare Centrss in the rural areas.

According to him, there is a great need to provide family planning service to the women in the rural areas.

He said that having selected Kaduna and Ondo as pilot states to kick-start the programme, the ministry supported by Marie Stopes Internatio­nal Nigeria and other partners trained Community Health Extension Workers in the two states to insert and remove implants and IUCDs contracept­ives in women who require the services in rural areas.

The minister said that one of the major barriers to accessing family planning in Nigeria is a shortage and inequitabl­e distributi­on of the appropriat­e cadres of the health workforce to deliver healthcare services where they are most needed.

“There is shortage of virtually all the cadres of healthcare workers resulting in poor utilisatio­n of many of our health facilities for essential services,” he said.

He added that the developmen­t of National Task-sharing and Task-shifting policy was aimed at increasing access to services such as family planning in Nigeria.

Adewole said that the ministry has approved the National Task-Shifting and Task-sharing policy for essential healthcare services in Nigeria in October 2014 as a key step to address the problem of health workforce shortage with anticipate­d adaptation and implementa­tion at all levels of the national health system.

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