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Medical tourism: Senate to block revenue loss, address exodus of doctors, nurses

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By Valentine Amanze, Online Editor

The Nigerian Senate has resolved to block revenue leakages from medical tourism.It is therefore considering a bill that would reduce number of Nigerians traveling to other countries for medical care.

The bill titled: “Federal Medical Centres (Establishment) Bill, 2021,” was sponsored by Senator Aishatu Dahiru Ahmed (APC, Adamawa Central), according to a statement issued by Ezrel Tabiowo, the Special Assistant (Press) to President of the Senate.

Leading debate on the bill, Senator Ahmed said that the absence of a legal framework for the regulation, development and management of Federal Medical Centres to set standards for rendering health services was responsible for hindering the provision of intensive, effective and efficient health care services to the people of Nigeria.

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According to the lawmaker, “this has led to a number of challenges in the health sector including but not limited to under-funding, weak facilities and infrastructure, poor motivation of health workers, low budget, weak accountability, conflicts with the political structure of the states and industrial strikes which has led to inadequacies, shortcomings and weaknesses which hinder effective health care delivery services.”

She said that the passage of the bill would “reduce the number of Nigerians who go to other countries for medical care.”

The lawmaker lamented: “An average of 20,000 Nigerians travel to India each year for medical assistance due to the absence of a solid healthcare system at home.”

Ahmed pointed out that the piece of legislation would also sufficiently address remuneration of the employees of the Medical Centres, which in turn would check the exodus of doctors and nurses to other countries.

“Seventy-seven percent of black doctors in the US are Nigerians and there is rarely any top medical institution in the US or Europe where you don’t find Nigerians managing at the top level.

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“Hardly a year passes without a major national strike by nurses, doctors, or health consultants. The major reasons for these strikes are poor salaries and lack of government investment in the health sector,” she said.

Citing a report of the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund, Ahmed stressed that the bill would “improve on the persistent rate of avoidable deaths of all Nigerians.

“A recent UNICEF report has it that “preventable or treatable diseases such as malaria, pneumonia, diarrhea, measles and HIV/AIDS account for more than 70 percent of the estimated one million under-five deaths in Nigeria,” she said. 

She added that with the right data, Nigeria would witness improvements to the health information system, regular and sustainable population and health-facility-based surveys; as well as have a centralized management of the many challenges of the 23 Federal Medical Centers in the country.

Contributing to the debate, Senator Yahaya Oloriegbe (APC, Kwara Central) said that Federal Medical Centres were incapacitated as a result of the absence of legal backing establishing them and insufficient funding. 

“We have about 23 Federal Medical Centres that were established across the country, but without legal backing.

“The consequence of such is that there are, what I will call policy somersault as regards the operations of these centres.

“You see some of the centres that have enough facilities and manpower to even be termed a Teaching Hospital, but because the legal framework did not state the standard, in terms of infrastructures, manpower and services, they remain like that, and it becomes at the whims and caprices of the policy makers in the Federal Ministry of  Health.

“The consequences in terms of funding allocation, Federal Medical Centres receive less fund compared to Teaching Hospitals, the lawmaker said.

On his part, Senator Ibn Na’Allah said that the bill was timely as it seeks “to ensure that all institutions of government are governed by law.”

“We cannot continue to operate a democracy where public funds are disbursed to institutions that are not recognize by law. That is not right,” Na’Allah added.

The bill after scaling Second Reading was referred by the Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, to the Committee on Health for further legislative work.

The Committee which is Chaired by Senator Ibrahim Yahaya Oloriegbe is expected to report back in four weeks.

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