Senate Summons Ministry Of Health, NUC, Others

The senate yesterday issued sweeping summons to the Federal Ministry of Health, the National Universities (NUC) and other agencies to address lawmakers on the plight of new medical doctors awaiting residency.

The senate also urged the federal government acredited health institutions for the training of house officers to enforce the utilisation of the full quote.

Other agencies invited are the Provost of Colleges of Medicine, the Nigerian Medical Council (NMC) and the Chief Medical Directors (CMDs) of federal and state medical institutions.

This was sequel to a motion sponsored by Senator Mao Ohuabunwa representing Abia North senatorial district.

Leading the debate ,he said the that malaria alone is responsible for 20 per cent of annual deaths in Nigeria with pregnant women and children as the worst affected.

He also said that Pneumonia and other lower respiratory tract diseases are responsible for 19 per cent of all deaths in Nigeria, while Nigeria is the second largest group of people living with HIV with a death rate of 3.1 per cent in 2015.

“Over 140 people everyday in Nigeria die from pregnancy and prenatal related consequences even after recovery.

“Our nation is not doing enough to improve the health statistics and the death rates in our country even by African standards. These can be relevant to how we have addressed the important conditions and timeliness of the training of new doctors who can begin to take new responsibilities.

“The result has been a frustrated class of locum doctors working as contract doctors under very harsh and tedious conditions that encourage quackery,” he said.

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Ministry of Health Perm Sec Arrives After Ban Ki-Moon Leaves Polio Eradication Event

The permanent secretary of the Federal Ministry of Health, Mr Linus Awute yesterday caused a stir when he arrived late for about eight minutes after the visiting United Nation Secretary-General, Mr Ban Ki-Moon had departed a Primary Health Centre in Abuja venue of an event on polio eradication.

Awute also tried to rehash the event by vaccinating a child, while his press unit mobilised the press to capture him.

He, however, said Nigeria’s new government needed support to encourage and sustain tempo in “seeing that polio is completely eradicated.”

But Ban Ki-Moon commended Nigeria’s polio eradication efforts, pledging to mobilise necessary resources and financial support for the country to exit polio endemic countries by 2017.

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