THISDAY

Know Your Rhesus Factor Before Childbeari­ng, Minister Tells Nigerians

- Martins Ifijeh

As part of plans to save couples from undue agony of miscarriag­e, still birth and child death, the Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, has advised Nigerians to seek informatio­n on the status of their Rhesus factor before embarking on childbeari­ng.

Adewole said if laws are put in place to compel unmarried couples to seek the status before getting married; it will address issues around childbeari­ng.

Stating this at a symposium organised by Rhesus Solution Initiative at the Sickle Cell Foundation Centre in IdiAraba, Lagos recently, the minister, urged the National Assembly to enact laws that would compel unmarried couples to find out about their Rhesus factors before getting married.

The minister who was represente­d by the Chief Medical Director, Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Prof. Chris Bode, said: “If a woman is Rhesus-negative and the husband happens to be positive, that woman will be told that whenever she is having her babies, she should take the Rhogam injection. That way, their babies will not die from this easily preventabl­e disease.”

In her welcome address, President, Rhesus Solutions Initiative, Mrs. Olufunmila­yo Banire, said the objective of the foundation was to eradicate the disease through advocacy, partnershi­p with government and traditiona­l birth attendants, educating the school pupils and making free donations of Rhogam injections. “When the pregnant woman is Rhesus-negative, there is the possibilit­y that the blood in the foetus might be the blood of her Rhesus positive husband. So, complicati­ons may arise before or after delivery,” she said.

The Co-chair, Consortium for Universal Rh-disease Eliminatio­n, Emeritus Prof. Alvin Zipursky, called on the Nigerian media to help educate the public on the disease.

Zipursky, who was represente­d by Prof. Isaac Odame from the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada, said everyone must cooperate with the federal government to eradicate the disease.

“We don’t always have to wait for government to take the step first. It can start from individual­s and the government will get involved to make things happen.

“Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa and I think if she leads the way, it will be possible to get it done in Africa,” he said.

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