The doctors demand pay rise, improved welfare, infrastructure and other
benefits which was promised to them
The President of the Nigerian Medical Association, Dr Osahon Enabulele said
this is the first phase of the strike, that the second phase would be effective
after the yuletide if there are no favorable developments.
The Nigerian Medical Association had on Dec.15 directed its members to
embark on the nationwide strike. The strike is to protest the doctors’
poor working conditions, inadequate funding, and poor infrastructure in the
nation’s health sector.
NAN correspondents, who visited the Lagos University Teaching Hospital ,
Idi-Araba, the Lagos State University Teaching hospital , Ikeja, Federal
Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba and National Orthopaedic Hospital, Igbobi,
report that the strike paralysed activities at the facilities.
Consultants and resident doctors were unavailable to attend to scores of
patients who thronged the hospitals. The correspondents also said the
situation was the same at the emergency units of the hospitals.
At LASUTH, some patients who were on admission appealed to the doctors to a
better means of resolving their grievances with the government instead of
embarking on strike. They said that the striking doctors should consider
the health conditions of the common people.
In his comment, a senior resident doctor at LUTH, Dr Peter Ogunnubi, told
NAN that a full compliance of the strike by doctors was being enforced. He
said the delay by the Federal Government in addressing the “deterioration’’ in
the nation’s health sector had forced them into an industrial action.
“As a result of the poor state of the nation’s health facilities, many
of our doctors have been forced to leave the country and work where the
condition of service is better.
The budgetary allocation of five per cent to the sector also falls short
of the World Health Organisation’s standard that stipulated at least 15 per
cent.
The Federal Government has allowed certain policies in the running of
healthcare system, which if not checked, will lead to total collapse and
paralysis of the system,” Ogunnubi said.
Ogunnubi added: “We are not leaving the patients in the lurch, but we
are fighting for the good of all.”
Also, Dr Oluwajimi Sodipo, the President, Association of Resident Doctors,
LASUTH Chapter, noted that there was full compliance with the NMA’s directive
on the strike at the hospital.
The State NMA Chairman, Dr Francis Faduyile, believed that the strike was
necessary in a bid to draw the government`s attention to their demands.
In his reaction, Dr Olugbenga Owoeye, a Consultant Psychiatrist at the
Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba, also said that both consultants and
resident doctors withdrew their services at the hospitals.
Another consultant at the National Orthorpaedic Hospital, who pleaded
anonymity, said doctors at the hospital had also joined the strike.
Dr Osahon Enabulele, the NMA National President, however, indicated that the
strike would continue until their demands were met.
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