15th
August, 2014
PRESS RELEASE:
SACK OF RESIDENT DOCTORS:
MURIC APPEALS TO FG TO REVISIT
ACTION
Nigerian resident
doctors who have been on strike since July 1, 2014 were sacked on Wednesday 13th
August, 2014 by the Federal Government (FG). According to government sources,
the strike has compounded the health crisis in the country. The FG argued that
the striking doctors had rejected all moves to end the strike. The sack affected about 16,000 resident
doctors.
It is not too
difficult for the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) to understand where members of
the Nigerian Medical Council (NMA) are coming from. With the deteriorating health
situation in the country coupled with the presence of archaic health facilities
in the public health sector, NMA as a union is seeking improvement in health
delivery.
It is on record that
NMA leadership raised the alarm last year concerning the implications of
manpower flight. The body complained that out of the total number of registered doctors which stood
at 65,000 in 2013, only 25,000 are practicing in Nigeria and this is the number
that attends to 170 million Nigerians. 40,000 qualified and registered Nigerian
medical doctors are practicing outside Nigeria.
We regard this
development as pathetic, unfortunate and appalling. MURIC is of the opinion
that those who chose to stay behind for love of their country deserve better
treatment.
MURIC is disturbed by
FG’s poor response to the allocation to and provision of sufficient funds for
the health sector. Whereas
the 2001 Abuja Declaration stipulates that 15% of every African country’s
budget should be devoted to the health sector, FG allocated a paltry 4% to the
sector in 2011, 5% in 2012, 6.04% in 2013 and even reduced the allocation to
the sector in 2014. The N262.74 billion budget for the health sector
in 2014 represents a 6.7 percent decrease against the 2013 allocation of
N273billion.
The result is quite
glaring in terms of health challenges in Nigeria. Whereas by 2013 life span in Japan was
82.6 years and in America it is 78 years, it is still 48 years in Nigeria.
The scenario sends the
red signal when one considers the poor data in the health sector. For instance,
30 million Nigerians are hypertensive. 4 million suffer from diabetes. Pneumonia
kills 130,000 Nigerians yearly. Malaria kills 4,500 pregnant women yearly in
Nigeria alone. 400,000 Nigerians are infected by tuberculosis while 32 million
Nigerians have river blindness.
The maternal mortality
ratio is bad enough to shoot up the adrenalin. Whereas the MDG sets a ratio of 75 deaths only per every
100,000 pregnant women, Nigeria’s ratio is 948 per 100,000.
As a result, 52,000 Nigerian
women die annually from maternal mortality. Why should 145 women die during
childbirth on a daily basis in Nigeria alone when only 6 out of 100,000 die
annually in Canada and an average of 9 in every 100,000 yearly in the United
States?
Nigerian children are the worst victims of our poor
health delivery system. Malaria kills 300,000 Nigerian children annually. As if that is not enough for our children, Nigeria’s figure is the
highest among the 3.5 million world children who die annually from diarrhea and
other infections.
Whereas the Millennium
Development Goal (MDG) aspires to 30 per 1000 live births or 64 per every 1,000
by the year 2015, Nigeria’s rate is 115 per 1,000. Under-5 mortality is worse
as it stands at 210 per 1,000.
MURIC therefore advises FG to revisit its decision to
sack 16,000 resident doctors. If we sack 16,000 doctors, it leaves only 9,000
doctors to attend to 170 million Nigerians. It is paradoxical coming at a
time when the nation faces the Ebola saga.
The decision to sack is therefore rash, reckless and
ill-advised. The international community must be laughing its head off by now. We
therefore appeal to FG to recall the doctors for the survival of 170 million
Nigerians.
Flexing muscles will
not solve the problem at a time like this. One does not cut off his head
because of headache. What next after the sack? Is FG going to import doctors
from the US or from Canada? Those ones will not want to risk their lives by
coming to Nigeria when ebola is ravaging the population.
Can we think of getting doctors from Liberia or Sierra
Leone? This sack will not only complicate
matters, it will also endanger the lives of millions of Nigerians.
Yet NMA must not abdicate its responsibility to lead the
nation at this critical stage when we are all faced with the threat of
annihilation a la Ebola. The medical profession belongs to the humanitarian
arena. NMA should have been more responsive particularly with the outbreak of
Ebola.
How can it be
reasonable for firefighters to go on strike when whole cities are on fire? MURIC
appeals to the NMA leadership to exhibit greater sense of sacrifice and
patriotism. It should therefore call off the strike as soon as the FG recalls
the sacked doctors. The agitation can start afresh when the Ebola emergency is
lifted.
Finally, MURIC urges all
Nigerian ex-heads of State, the leadership of the Nigerian Labour Union (NLC)
and all other stakeholders to intervene in this crucial matter and save our
country from imminent self-destruction. Both sides appear to have taken extreme
measures in the conflict and compromise must emerge from either side in the
interest of the common man.
Professor Ishaq
Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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