THISDAY

Foundation Calls for Training, Supervisio­n of Volunteers in Health Sector

- Rebecca Ejifoma

With the launch of Volunteer Safe Project, George Kerry and Be in Health Foundation­s have called on the Nigerian Medical Associatio­n, the Federal Ministry of Health and all state ministries of health to develop training and supervisio­n strategy for volunteers in the humanitari­an sector in order for Nigerians to enjoy better health services.

The Founder of George Kerry Life Foundation, Dr. Matilda Kerry alongside her partner and founder of Be in Health Foundation, Ijeoma Ugwudi, said this during the launch of Volunteer Safe Project in Lagos, an initiative of both foundation­s.

Kerry said that volunteeri­sm in health was a necessary response to health disparitie­s and inequitabl­e access to healthcare in developing countries.

“And Nigeria, with a population of over 150 million and an average ratio of two skilled healthcare workers to 1000 Nigerians, volunteers would answer so many needs, from environmen­tal sanitation issues to emergency response, health education and promotion, vaccinatio­n efforts and health screening services among others.”

Giving statistics, she said that globally, volunteers contribute over $35 billion (13 trillion Naira) per year in volunteer hours. Adding, she said in Nigeria, volunteers form about 40 per cent of the Nigerian health sector. They are of high value to nations and organisati­ons, the community and the workforce in human developmen­t and capacity building.

According to Ugwudi, these groups of people play an important and often under-appreciate­d role in healthcare. “We can enjoy healthier communitie­s and better health services as a result of this special group of people.

Hence, volunteers in health need more training to get it right. Our training on ethics and accountabi­lity is a first step in the right direction.”

To achieve this, the project is conducting a one-day ethics and accountabi­lity in healthcare training workshop for 1000 volunteers working in the humanitari­an sector. This will, according to them, increase awareness and practice of ethical behaviour and accountabi­lity among volunteers in delivering services to the public and reduce medical negligence among volunteers providing health services among others.

This training, which began on February 9, will run till March 31st in Ikorodu, Badagry, Epe, Ikeja, Lagos Island, Lagos Mainland and Victoria Island, respective­ly. “After Lagos, we hope to take it to all states of the federation,” Ugwudi said.

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