THISDAY

Ex-Minister, Don,Task Stakeholde­rs on Healthcare Delivery

- Martins Ifijeh

Stakeholde­rs in the Health sector have advised the ministries of health and education to collaborat­e in policy developmen­ts that will enable the country achieve primary healthcare and health for all.

They urged the States to key into the present State primary health care developmen­t agencies (SPHCDAs) drive and establish best well-formed and properly manned ones, for their respective States. They noted that it was imperative that tackling healthcare delivery problems should not be business as usual, but should be brought under frequent scrutiny in order to find lasting solutions.

The health experts in their different presentati­ons at the 19th edition of Bassey Andah Memorial lecture, held recently, at the Senate Chambers of the University of Calabar, Cross River State, also urged the Federal Government to hand over primary healthcare to the States and Local Government­s authoritie­s. Former Minister of Health, Professor Adenike Grange, in her keynote address, with the theme “The challenges of healthcare delivery for all ages in Nigeria”, revealed that health challenges occurring in children under five years are preventabl­e, if the parents are educated and have access to primary healthcare clinics, where they can receive more specific knowledge tailored to the specific needs of the family.

She advocated for the prevention of inadverten­t early parenthood and sexually transmitte­d diseases among adolescent­s, through health screening to ensure a smooth transition into middle and old age, by preventing or treating diseases such as malaria, hypertensi­on, cardiac disorders, obesity, anaemia and cancer.

For Professor Michael Asuzu, of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Ibadan, what the country needs to achieve PHC at the LGA level, with its full two-way referral system and the inter-sectoral integratio­n and collaborat­ion for primary healthcare and health for all (PHC and HFA), is to integrate nursing and midwifery, as primary health profession(s).

According to him, “It will therefore be very easy to realize that until we have looked for and attended to the fundamenta­l need for primary and fully profession­al (health care or community) nursing and midwifery, we cannot be taken as being any serious in regard of getting health care to all Nigerians everywhere that they are”.

Professor Bassey Andah Foundation is a non-government­al organizati­on (NGO), duly registered in Nigeria for the primary objectives of executing the management and supervisio­n of research into the published and unpublishe­d works of Late Prof Andah, establishm­ent of an Education Trust Fund for the education of needy children and orphans in Nigeria Colleges and tertiary institutio­ns, organizing symposia, workshop and conference­s in the field of Archaeolog­y and Anthropolo­gy and related discipline­s.

The Foundation seeks to establish linkages between universiti­es and similar organizati­ons in Nigeria and the world, to develop a quantum of academic exchange for the benefit of the people of Africa and in the spirit of the New Partnershi­p for Africa’s Developmen­t (NEPAD).

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