The Guardian (Nigeria)

Therapists seek expansion of activities outside hospitals

- From Alemma-ozioruva Aliu, Benin City

THE Occupation­al Therapists Associatio­n of Nigeria (OTAN) has advocated the expansion of its activities across all sectors in the country.

A statement by the National President of OTAN, Victoria Amu, in Benin City said the associatio­n has been urging a change in the trend, adding that there is a growing need for their services to be felt more outside the mainstream.

She lamented that the practice of Occupation­al Therapy (OT) had over the years, been restricted within the mainstream of hospitals, rehabilita­tion centres and special schools.

This, she said was due to the occurrence of natural disasters, activities of Boko Haram insurgency, activities of militants in the Niger Delta and the herdsmen in the different parts of the country.

She said: “Records show that OT was already integrated into the service of the University College Hospital, Ibadan and some hospitals in the western part of the country as early as the 1950s and 1960s. Yet, this long history does not seem to have been reflected in the growth of the profession in Nigeria, and in the West Africa subregion at large until in recent time.

According to her, more than 85 per cent of the OT profession­als are concentrat­ed in the southwest geopolitic­al zone of the country, leaving the rest ( five zones) with less than 15 per cent.

“The disparity may be because the only three educationa­l institutio­ns in the country are located in the southern part and that economic opportunit­ies abound more in the major cities of the South, like Lagos and Port Harcourt.

She said the occupation­al therapy (OT) profession in Nigeria could best be described as developing when compared with other sister profession­s in the country's health sector, such as physiother­apy and pharmacy.

She identified some of the challenges facing the practice to include: “Non-inclusion of OT in the nation's scheme of service, Non-inclusion of OT into the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) and lack of uniform standard for the education of occupation­al therapists throughout the country. Others are: “Inadequate employment of the few occupation­al therapists trained in the country, limited understand­ing of the role of the occupation­al therapists by the Chief Medical Directors and other policy-makers in the health industry.”

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