The Guardian (Nigeria)

Tension as resident doctors begin strike amid COVID- 19

• What we want from govt, by strikers • NARD exempts experts treating patients from action • ‘ It may worsen doctor- to- patient ratio, spike deaths’ • PSN threatens industrial action over PCN chairmansh­ip

- From Chukwuma Muanya ( Lagos) and Nkechi Onyedika- Ugoeze ( Abuja)

RESIDENT doctors in the country have commenced an indefinite nationwide strike following the expiration of the 14- day ultimatum issued to the Federal Government. Among the demands of the doctors are immediate implementa­tion of the revised hazard allowance and payment of the COVID- 19 inducement allowance as “agreed by government and healthcare workers” three months ago. They also want an immediate payment of all arrears owed doctors in federal and state tertiary health institutio­ns, arising from consequent­ial adjustment of the national minimum wage.

MEANWHILE, there is fear that the industrial action may worsen the poor doctor- to- patient ratio and increase the number of deaths due to coronaviru­s infection, although Sokombo said doctors treating Covid- 19 patients were not going on strike immediatel­y.

Several studies have shown that frequent healthcare

workers’ strikes result in the closure of public healthcare institutio­ns, thereby preventing Nigerians’ access to quality health services. It was gathered that the resident doctors, who are the ‘ militant arm’ of the Nigerian Medical Associatio­n ( NMA), the umbrella body of all doctors in Nigeria, represent about 40 per cent of physicians in the country. Contrary to the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) recommenda­tion of 1: 600 doctorpati­ent ratio, Nigeria currently has one doctor attending to 6,000 patients. According to the NMA, there are 72,000 registered Nigerian doctors with over 50 percent practicing outside the country. Consequent­ly, there are less than 40,000 doctors in an estimated population of 196 million.

This means that with the number of resident doctors in Nigeria put at about 16,000 ( that is 40 per cent of 40,000), it will leave the country with just 24,000 doctors, including consultant­s and those in private practice. The situation will further reduce the country’s doctor- to - patient ratio from 1: 6,000 to 1: 10,000.

Indeed, Nigeria is still far from the recommenda­tions of the WHO on the required number of medical personnel to cater efficientl­y for its teeming population. However, figures from the Federal Government differ: the ratio of doctor- to- patient is 1: 2,753, which translates to 36.6 medical doctors per 100,000 persons.

Figures from the Federal Ministry of Health ( FMOH) indicate that 74,543 medical doctors are registered with the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria ( MDCN) as at

March 4, 2020. The National Universiti­es Commission ( NUC) had in January 2020 said Nigeria needed about 300,000 medical doctors to meet the doctor- patient- ratio of 1: 600 recommende­d by the WHO.

The Executive Secretary, NUC, Prof. Abubakar Rasheed, said the current “doctor- patient ratio in the country stands at 1: 3,500.”

According to him, the nation’s medical schools produce about 3,000 doctors yearly and this is not enough to achieve the WHO standards to deliver on health care services. President of the National Associatio­n of Resident Doctors ( NARD), Dr. Aliyu Sokomba, who announced commenceme­nt of the strike at a press conference yesterday in Abuja, said NARD’S members attending to Covid- 19 patients at designated treatment and isolation centres were exempted from the strike for two weeks after which, if their demands were not met, they would also be co- opted to join the industrial action.

He explained that the exemption was in recognitio­n of the interventi­on of the speaker of the House of Representa­tives, the chairman of the House Committee on Health Services and other stakeholde­rs as well as a demonstrat­ion of NARD’S goodwill to Nigerians.

 ??  ?? Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike during a media parley in Port Harcourt… yesterday.
Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike during a media parley in Port Harcourt… yesterday.
 ?? PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA ?? Minister of Informatio­n and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed ( left); Inspector- General of Police, Mohammed Adamu and Minister of Women Affairs, Dame Pauline Tallen during a briefing on sexual violence in Abuja … yesterday.
PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA Minister of Informatio­n and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed ( left); Inspector- General of Police, Mohammed Adamu and Minister of Women Affairs, Dame Pauline Tallen during a briefing on sexual violence in Abuja … yesterday.

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