Daily Trust Sunday

Doctors’ anti-migration bill and nurturing greener pasture in Nigeria

- Lawal Dahiru Mamman wrote from Abuja

TThe editor welcomes brief letters on topical issues. Write an e-mail to sunday@dailytrust.com or sundaytrus­t@yahoo.com. he brain drain in Nigeria has lingered for some time now. In the medical profession, it is the most dominant issue occupying the mind of physicians and other health personnel. This may not be unconnecte­d to the fact that human life is sacrosanct.

It goes that the incessant brain drain of medical personnel in Nigeria will slow the attainment of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) so that all people have access to the full range of quality health services they need, when and where they need them, without financial hardship, in this part of the world.

Mostly, the mass exodus of doctors out of the country is caused by poor welfare of medical practition­ers, lack of or insufficie­nt working equipment as well as poor working environmen­t leading to the need for seeking a more sumptuous alternativ­e – greener pasture as it is called.

Discussion­s have sprung over time on how to salvage the situation. Experts have suggested an increment in the welfare of doctors while others have voted for ending medical tourism especially by public officehold­ers to enable them to pay more attention to funding health facilities at home.

The most recent attempt in curbing the mortal exodus of medical practition­ers is to shackle them with the power of the law. This is through a bill sponsored by Ganiyu Johnson, a lawmaker from Lagos. The bill seeks to amend the Medical and Dental Practition­ers Act 2004, to address the brain drain in the health sector. According to the lawmaker, it is only fair for medical doctors who enjoy taxpayer subsidies on their training to give back to society.

The legislatio­n is titled, ‘A Bill for an Act to Amend the Medical and Dental Practition­ers Act, Cap. M379, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 to Mandate Any Nigeria Trained

Medical or Dental Practition­er to Practice in Nigeria for a Minimum of Five Years Before being Granted a Full License by the Council to Make Quality Health Services Available to Nigeria; and for Related Matters.’

While the above is more restricted to medical and dental practition­ers, the same lawmaker said on Friday, April 14, 2023, that he would be presenting a similar bill on nurses and pharmacist­s, when he intends to do that, time will tell.

With different medical associatio­ns reacting in negation, by stating that the bill has the propensity to trample on the rights of doctors, the Minister of Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, said the bill is in order especially looking at the fees paid by the government to subsidise their training at universiti­es, and the service which they render before travelling overseas. The service does not make up for the cost of training, the minister said.

The Nigerian Medical Associatio­n (NMA) has said the bill will not see the light of the day because, it impedes the constituti­onal right to freedom of movement of doctors and is a violation of internatio­nal labour law, chiefly since students from all other profession­s have also been subsidised by the government.

The Nigerian Medical Students Associatio­n (NiMSA) and the World Medical Associatio­n (WMA) have vehemently disapprove­d of it too because the bill according to the latter is “not only outlandish but totally retrogress­ive, unresearch­ed and very ill-informed.”

I firmly believe that Nigeria has what it takes to cultivate the soil for growing ‘greener pasture’ our medical profession­als continue to voyage foreign lands for. But only leaders fueled with altruism can summon the political will to do the needful.

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