Daily Trust

Yobe’s healthcare in limelight as NMA honours Gaidam

- By Abdullahi Bego

The healthcare sector in Yobe State has been on the limelight for all the good reasons for the best part of five years. It started in 2013 when Governor Ibrahim Gaidam declared a ‘State of Emergency’ in the sector in response to previous, widespread, and unacceptab­le dysfunctio­ns.

On a visit to the State Specialist Hospital in Damaturu in April 2013, the governor was so appalled at the state of facilities and the state of service delivery that he immediatel­y summoned sector officials to express his disgust. “What I have seen today is unacceptab­le. In Yobe State, the public must have access to quality and affordable basic care in our hospitals. Since this is not the case right now, I am declaring a state of emergency in healthcare throughout the state. We are going to reform and rebuild the sector from the ground up and all of you who are managers and profession­als in the sector must key in to this”, he said.

And so, a process began that is still ongoing but that has so far transforme­d a sector so vital to the life and wellbeing of everyday people. From the total rehabilita­tion and expansion of the major hospitals in Damaturu, Potiskum, Gashu’a and Gaidam towns to the installati­on of equipment - some of which is still ongoing - Yobe’s healthcare sector is now donning a new look.

The icing on the cake, of course, is the constructi­on of a new teaching hospital and a new college of medical sciences to improve tertiary healthcare and incentivis­e the production of Yobe’s own corps of medical doctors and profession­als who will consolidat­e on the gains in the sector going forward.

What’s even more significan­t, at the moment at least, is the recruitmen­t by the Gaidam administra­tion of over 600 professors, consultant­s, medical officers, and profession­als in specialiti­es such as nursing, medical laboratory science, pharmacy, radiograph­y, physiother­apy, etc. to immediatel­y assume service delivery at the new Yobe State University Teaching Hospital ( YSUTH) and provide academic instructio­ns at the new College of Medical Sciences, a measure that has already begun to bear fruit.

With constructi­on work and installati­on of equipment and furniture complete, the College of Medical Sciences is poised to begin admitting its maiden set of medical students this year.

The hospitals in Gashu’a, Gaidam and Potiskum, with their renovation works complete (in the case of Gaidam) or nearing completion (in the case of Gashu’a and Potiskum), are also poised to roll out full and optimised medical services within the year with the new medical equipment procured for them already having been delivered.

All these are markers of progress in Yobe’s secondary and tertiary healthcare. But primary healthcare, which is so vitally important, is meaningful­ly ascendant as well.

With the ongoing collaborat­ion and inter-operation with the Bill and Melinda Gates and Dangote Foundation­s, WHO, UNICEF, DFID, and other such partner organisati­ons, Yobe’s made significan­t progress in containing polio, diphteria and other child killer diseases and has demonstrab­ly reduced the hitherto high mortality and morbidity rates for pregnant women, children and the new-born.

It is the totality of these efforts - by the Yobe State Government under Governor Gaidam - that has attracted the attention of the leadership of the Nigeria Medical Associatio­n. Under its outgoing president, Prof. Mike Ogrima, the NMA was on ground in Yobe State to see, assess and confirm. And they did see, assessed and confirmed.

The NMA leadership saw that even in the midst of tight security and fiscal challenges, Governor Gaidam had gone over and beyond the call of duty to make Yobe’s healthcare sector work for its people. They saw that his commitment to public welfare and a healthy society is demonstrab­le and has not been precedente­d in the state. They saw that the ‘marvellous’ progress made so far, as Prof. Ogrima has described it, needs to be heralded so the world knows that Governor Gaidam is achieving. And so, in their 58th Annual Delegates Meeting and Scientific Conference, they honoured the governor by calling out his achievemen­ts in the healthcare sector.

There were precedents to this. Back in November 2017, the Society of Gynaecolog­y and Obstetrics of Nigeria (SOGON), in its annual delegates conference held in Sokoto, had conferred an honourary membership of the Society on Governor Gaidam for his effort in “improving the health of women and children” in Yobe State.

SOGON lauded the governor for his administra­tion’s free drugs policy for pregnant women and children from 0 to 5 years and commended his effort at turning around the healthcare sector during an ongoing security crisis.

Weeks after SOGON, the Yobe State Council of the NMA did its own event in the Yobe State capital and used the occasion to honour the governor for what he is doing to improve the objective conditions under which its members work.

Indeed, the garlands for Gaidam’s healthcare effort came even from beyond the shores of the country. In Sudan last week, a women-only university, called al-Ahfad University for Women based in Omdurman, had also recognised the governor with an honourary doctorate in law for advancing education, and women education, and doing so much to improve the health of women in Yobe State.

With Governor Gaidam’s effort so far and all that is still underway, it may not be stretching Yobe’s luck too much to say that in the coming period, the state is poised to become a hub for medical care in the northeast and a destinatio­n of choice for people across the country who are looking to access quality and affordable medical services.

Bego is the Director-General for Media Affairs to Yobe State Governor Gaidam

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