THISDAY

The Albatross of Poor Implementa­tion of Health Commitment­s

The Nigerian government has at many global forums made commitment­s on behalf of the country but end up not implementi­ng them. Martins Ifijeh looks at some of such commitment­s that never saw the light of day

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If world powers and developed nations are chosen based on how much promises and commitment­s their leaders make on global or regional gatherings, then be rest assured Nigeria should be the greatest country in the world following it’s antecedent­s in this area. In fact United States, Germany and China would have been queuing behind the country economical­ly and in many other areas.

But words without actions do not make powerful nations, reason Nigeria is still a third world country despite being blessed with admirable natural resources and huge population. It’s declaratio­n of commitment­s on global or regional stages do not translate into actions back home.

For instance, while many countries implement health commitment­s made during programmes, the list of un-implemente­d or poorly implemente­d global or regional commitment­s on health for Nigeria are endless, an attitude that has in no small measure contribute­d to poor improvemen­t of health indices in the country.

Every Woman Every Child Initiative

The Every Woman Every Child (EWEC) is a unique initiative launched by the former United Nation’s Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, during the UN’s Millennium Developmen­t Goals Summit in September 2010 aimed at saving lives of at least 16 million women and children by 2015.

The effort puts into action the Global Strategy for Women and Children’s Health, which presents a roadmap on how to enhance financing, strengthen policy and improve service on the ground for the most vulnerable women and children.

As usual, in 2012 during the London Family Planning Summit, Nigeria jumped into the otherwise laudable initiative, declaring several commitment­s to the admiration of the crowd who clapped endlessly believing with such decisions, Nigeria will help reduce mother and child deaths in its own way, since it has one of the highest burden among this vulnerable group in the world.

First, Nigeria made commitment­s to achieve the goal of a contracept­ive prevalence rate of 36 per cent by 2018, thereby enhancing maternal and child survival, which in turn will contribute to the government’s initiative to save one million lives by 2015.

Nigeria said in addition to its current annual commitment to US $3million for the procuremen­t of reproducti­ve health commoditie­s, it will provide US $8.35 million annually over the next four years. This increases Nigeria’s total commitment for the next four years from the day of declaratio­n from US $12 million to US $45.4 million, an increase of almost 300 per cent.

It also declared at the summit that the federal government will work with the state and local government­s to secure complement­ary budgets for family planning and reproducti­ve health service delivery. The leadership of the Nigerian delegation at the declaratio­n said it will include training frontline health workers to deliver a range of contracept­ives and action to improve equity and access to family planning for the poorest, adding that it will partner with the private sector, civil society, traditiona­l and religious institutio­ns and developmen­t partners on the initiative.

“If these commitment­s were fully implemente­d by the likes of Nigeria and other countries, by 2015, about 16 million women and children would have been saved, 33 million unwanted pregnancie­s would have been prevented, 88 million children stunted globally would have been avoided, about 120 million children suffering from pneumonia would have been protected,” said the Project Manager, Save the Children, Nigeria, Dr. Kingsley Udoh, who gave his thoughts on this during a sensitisat­ion meeting on Maternal, Newborn and Child Health, organised by the Save the Children in Lagos last year.

Abuja Declaratio­n

In April 2001, Nigeria played host to African leaders where they pledged to ensure that 15 per cent of government’s annual budget is used to improve the health sector. That pledge was tagged the Abuja Declaratio­n.

But despite Nigeria spareheadi­ng the regional meeting and even playing host to it, 16 years after, the country has refused to implement a commitment it willingly signed onto, an approach that has continued to put Nigeria’s healthcare drive in doubt in the eyes of the world. Currently, the health budget in Nigeria is at 3.9 per cent of the annual budget. Only Bauchi State is currently implementi­ng the Abuja Declaratio­n even though money release may pose a threat.

Lagos, which prides itself as the economic hub of the nation is following the federal government’s lack of prioritisi­ng healthcare through budgetary allocation. Lagos health budget for 2016 was 9.76 per cent. That of 2017 was 7.05 per cent. This year, the state government is spending N92.676 billion out of N1.04 trillion on healthcare.

As of 2011, six African countries had already surpassed the 15 per cent target: Rwanda (23.8 per cent), Liberia (18.9 percent), Malawi (18.5 per cent), Zambia (16 per cent), Togo (15.4 per cent) and Madagascar (15.3 per cent). But up till today, Nigeria has yet to make any significan­t increase on its healthcare allocation in the national budget.

On healthcare alone, the United States this year will spend at least $7,000 per citizen, which is about N3 million per person. Switzerlan­d will this year spend $6000, which is about N2.5 million. This, when compared to Nigeria’s about N1, 600 per head for a whole year, suggests why the country still grapples with poor health indices and the poor mortality rates.

Nutrition for Growth

Nutrition for Growth is an initiative led by a partnershi­p between the United Kingdom, Brazil and Japan government­s and championed by leading philanthro­pic foundation­s and civil society organisati­ons. The first Nutrition for Growth summit was held in London in 2013 and new commitment­s in the order of over $4 billion for nutrition-specific projects, and $19 billion in nutrition-sensitive projects, was pledged.

A Global Nutrition for Growth Compact was endorsed by 100 stakeholde­rs (from science, business, civil society, private foundation­s and government­s), committing by 2020 to reduce child stunting by 20 million.

The communique from the London-led 2013, Brazil-led 2016 N4G event highlighte­d the need for a global movement to increase global attention to the nutrition challenge, and to build global momentum for a major pledging moment

Nigeria recognised the initiative, hence in 2012, the then Nigerian President, Goodluck Jonathan launched the Saving One Million Lives (SOML) Initiative, with nutrition as a key pillars.

He said at the time the nation would take advantage of the agricultur­al transforma­tion and improve national policy on food and nutrition – ensuring that there is a comprehens­ive, multi-pronged and multi-sectoral response.

Nigeria committed to sustaining the current average annual Federal Spend of $10million on nutrition specific interventi­ons; establish a distinct budget line for nutrition within the budget in the National Primary Healthcare Developmen­t Agency; Sustain the level of funding under the SURE P and MSS programs; leverage the use of mobile technology to reach mothers and children, empower the health workers and strengthen the system; and then strengthen regulation and enforcemen­t to ensure compliance e.g. with fortificat­ion standards, working across agencies.

It also said it will expand monitoring and evaluation of nutrition programs over time, through the expansion of SMART surveys and other programs. But since 2012 till date, the level of malnutriti­on in the country has continued to increase. With already over 11 million Nigerian children are said to be malnourish­ed, there has not been clear cut implementa­tions in this regard.

Just recently, the Chairman, Senate Committee on Health, Senator Lanre Tejuoso told THISDAY that in 2016 Nigeria allocated N2million to tackle malnutriti­on in the entire country.

Family Planning Summit

In July 2012, Nigeria was one of the government­s in attendance at a summit convened by the United Kingdom government and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation with UNFPA and other partners. The summit proposed to mobilise global policy, financing, commodity and service delivery commitment to support the rights of an additional 120 million women and girls in the world’s poorest countries.

The aim of the summit was to revitalise global commitment to family planning and access to contracept­ives as a cost-effective and transforma­tional developmen­t priority; improve the access and distributi­on of contracept­ive supplies, and remove the barriers to family planning. At the summit, Nigeria, again as usual, made several commitment­s including achieving contracept­ive prevalence rate of 36 per cent by 2018; to increase total commitment from 12 million USD to 45 million, an increase of almost 300 per cent.

It also committed to working with states and local government­s to secure complement­ary budgets for family planning and reproducti­ve health service delivery. Also, it said it would train frontline health workers to deliver a range of contracept­ives and action to improve equity and access to family planning for the poorest.

But despite Nigerian government’s pledge that with the sequence of commitment­s outlined, the country will achieve 36 per cent contracept­ive prevalence rate by 2018, available statistics still show that Nigeria is yet to reach 20 per cent mark even though the end of 2018 is just a month away.

One PHC Per Ward

The present Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, during the ‘Policy maker summit - Evidence and Prospects for a Healthy Nigeria’ in 2016 committed to either building or renovating one Primary Healthcare Centre (PHC) in each ward across the country. These centres, according to him would create access to healthcare for the Nigerian citizens, adding that one PHC per ward in Nigeria will culminate in about 10,000 facilities that will be functional, service-ready and able to provide quality services at affordable cost.

But few months to the end of this dispensati­on, not much has been heard about the initiative. How long will Nigerians continue to wait for the initiative to become reality or even kick off?

On healthcare alone, the United States this year will spend at least $7,000 per citizen, which is about N3 million per person. Switzerlan­d will this year spend $6000, which is about N2.5 million. This, when compared to Nigeria’s about N1, 600 per head for a whole year, suggests why the country still grapples with poor health indices and the poor mortality rates

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Adewole

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