Nigeria’s health system relatively weak, says Prof. Hamidu

The Guest of Honour, Hon Dr Yusuf Tanko Sununu, and the CMD UDUTH,Sokoto Processor Ana's Ahmad Sabir at the CHS maiden Scientific Conference and Alumni AGM in Sokoto. Photo by Ankeli Emmanuel

By ANKELI EMMANUEL, Sokoto –

A consultant and Professor of Paediatrics Neurology with the Usmanu Danfodiyo University Teaching Hospital (UDUTH), Sokoto, Professor Ahmed Hamidu has decried that the health system in Nigeria is relatively weak, leading to some of the avoidable challenges confronting delivery.

Professor Hamidu, who is a former Provost in the institution, spoke on Saturday at the College of Heath Sciences Maiden Scientific Conference and Alumni Annual General Meeting, where he further warned that building health facilities without adequate manpower is a waste of resources.

Delivering his keynote lecture, on the theme,”” Challenges of Health Sciences Education In The 21st Century” with a sub theme, “The Role of Alumni In The Development Of Institutions’, Prof. Hamidu said, “building expensive health facilities and procurement of medical consumables without manpower to take charge is a waste of national resources”.

Speaking on the factors responsible for the country’s weak heath institution, Prof Hamidu divulged that it stems from the areas of lack of proper education, poor funding, and low employment and deployment of health workforce.

He further advised that, every member of the health workforce mattrrs and should be treated with respect.

While noting that Nigeria’s raising population has increased the country’s vulnerability to climate change, Prof. Hamidu appealed to legislators in the nation to urgently make policies that will encourage medical workforce to stay back and serve in Nigeria rather than moving abroad.

Prof. Hamidu, who noted that, ‘Supremacy battle between medical doctors and health workers is a serious concern for attaining medical excellence in Nigeria’, however, appealed to all alumni to be good ambassadors of their institutions and contribute their qouta to it’s growth.

Earlier in his opening address, the host and Provost, College of Health Sciences (UDUTH) Sokoto, Processor Sule Ahmed Saidu, said the UDUTH College of Health Sciences comprises of 5 Faculties, 2 advanced research centers that are integral to the college, and 34 departments, 8 undergraduate and several post graduate degree programmes.

While noting that the hallmark of their relationship in UDUTH CHS is the industrial harmony, mutual respect and dignity of labour in spite of professional diversity, Prof Saidu said products of the school compete favourably with other famous and reputable medical schools worldwide in terms of character, learning, professional competence and compliance with ethics.

In his opening remarks, the chairman of the occasion, Dr Nasiru Sani Gwarzo, who is the Parmanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, said government alone cannot fund almost every project, hence the need to look into the alumni strategy of getting things done.

On his part, the Guest of Honour, Dr Yusuf Tanko Sununu, who is the House of Representative Member, Yauri, Shanga, Ngaski Federal constituency, Kebbi State in a goodwill message, said health of Nigerians remain his priority as a federal lawmaker.

Sununu further appealed to electorate to encourage progressive minded people to be at the National Assembly.

Addressing the conference, the Chief Host and Vice Chancellor of Usmanu Danfodiyo University (UDUS) Sokoto, Professor Lawal Bilbis, represented by the Deputy Vice Chancellor (DVC) Research, Innovation and Development, Professor Yusuf Saidu said, “‘Our approach to practicing medicals must continually change and evolve to meet the challenges of the 21st century”‘.

Thanking dignitaries in an emotion laden goodwill message, the Chief Medical Director of UDUTH, Professor Anas Ahmad Sabir, decried that doctors are massively leaving Nigeria.

“This is a very big danger for our hospitals. We cannot sustain medical expertise without manpower. Virtually, everybody in our nuclear medicine have gone abroad”. He noted.

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