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Over 30,000 Indigenes Benefit From ‘Araya’ Scheme In Ogun

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Chioma Umeha  The Ogun State government says over 30,000 indigenes have benefitted from the Community Based Health Insurance Scheme, tagged, ‘’Araya’’, as part of government’s effort at providing efficient and free health care service delivery to the residents of the state. The wife of the Governor, Dr. (Mrs.) Olufunso Amosun, through the Press Officer, Ministry of Health. Miss. Omolola Awolana unveiled this assertions at Araya Scale Up, held at Totoro Comprehensive Health Centre, Abeokuta, said the Scheme was created to deliver free healthcare services for pregnant women and children under the age of five, urging members of the community to register, so as to benefit from the programme. “I would like to reiterate that the health care services here would be free for pregnant women and children under five. It is essential for you to have an Araya so as to be able to get free health care service. Yes, it is free and open to all members of the community, howeve

Academy Of Pharmacy Advocates Safe, Affordable Medicines

Chioma Umeha The Nigeria Academy of Pharmacy has   called for better, safer, more convenient and affordable medicines as well as treatment regimens for diseases that afflict humans, especially those that are endemic to African region. Making the call during the Nigeria Academy of Pharmacy annual Investiture ceremony in Lagos was   Prince Julius Adelusi-Adeluyi, President, Nigeria Academy of Pharmacy, who stressed that the academy is committed to cheap innovative and effective medicines and treatment. Prince Adelusi-Adeluyi said, “The Academy of Pharmacy owes society a duty to help unravel better, safer, more convenient and more affordable medicines and treatment regimens for diseases that afflict mankind, especially those that are endemic to our region of the world.” A major high point of occasion was the presentation of a ‘Lifetime Achievement Award’ to Chief Oludolapo Ibukun Akinkugbe for his huge contribution to the growth of pharmaceutical sector in Niger

This 15-Year-Old Boy Needs N4m Heart Surgery To Live

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By Our Correspondents  LAGOS – Fifteen-year-old boy, Kehinde Emmanuel Mutairu was seen lying critically ill and helplessly at the Department of Paediatrics and child health, Lagos State Teaching Hospital (LASUTH). His condition appears life-threatening and requires immediate attention. He was said to be having a history of dyspnoea, an abnormal beating of the heart and bilateral swollen leg, mild excretion, cough and is easily fatigued. Mr. Hakeem Osho Mutairu and Mrs. Abiodun Mutairu, his parents, said their son has suffered greatly with the ailment for more than five years without any obvious improvement.   Following the boy’s debility, attempts at self-medication and his parents’ inability to decipher what was actually wrong with him, they decided to seek help. They took a decision to meet with a specialist in the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH). There it was later discovered that the child has a hole in the heart which is the obvious cau

Revitalise Primary Health Centres To Achieve Universal Health Coverage – CISLAC

Chioma Umeha To address shortage of infrastructure, health personnel and equipment   at the Nigerian primary health care system (PHC) a not for profit organisation, the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre   (CISLAC) has said that revitalisation of primary health facilities should be made priority by state governments in order to achieve universal health coverage. Canvassing for this in Lagos, Mallam Auwal Ibrahim Musa, the Executive Director of CISLAC, said “the situation of primary health care in Nigeria worsens, as financial and political commitment from the government is lacking.” Musa also noted “In cases where there have been financial pronouncements, they have been partially or entirely not implemented.   Inadequate funding and non-commitment of state governors and local government authorities to provide skilled manpower at the primary health care centers impede adequate health intervention. “Thankfully, health is on the concurrent list of the gov

APBN President Pays Courtesy visit To PSN Office

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Chioma Umeha Stakeholders have called for collaborations among professional bodies, noting that team spirit among experts is critical to tackling national problems and forms the bedrock of any nation’s development. The call came when Dr. Omede Idris, President, Association of Professional Bodies of Nigeria (APBN), weekend, led top officials of the association to pay a courtesy visit to the leadership of the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN) in Anthony, Lagos. Dr. Idris stressed that the development of any nation completely depends on work interactions among professionals, adding that with all the professionals working together most of the problems facing the nation and the health sector could be solved. He stated that the APBN established 26 years ago has done well despite the hard times which Nigeria is going through. However, the APBN boss noted that a lot more can still be done if all professional bodies work together to build the nation. Dr. I

UK-based Nigerian Neurologist Receives Order Of British Empire

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Chioma Umeha UK-based Nigerian, Dr. Abdullahi Shehu, Consultant Neurologist and Deputy Lord Lieutenant, West Midlands has been awarded the membership of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) by Her Majesty, the Queen of United Kingdom. The award was conferred on him on August 16, 2018. His childhood friend and President of the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN), Pharm. Ahmed Yakasai disclosed this in a congratulatory message. Dr. Abdullah Shehu MBBS (ABU), FRCP, MBE, DL is a Consultant Neurologist, University Hospital NHS Trust and Deputy Lord Lieutenant of West Midlands. Dr. Shehu is from Yakasai, Kano and elder brother of the former President of the Nigerian Society of Engineers, Engr. M B Shehu. He left Nigeria for UK in 1986, moved to Coventry in 1993 and became a Consultant Neurologist in 1996. He was a Clinical Director for eight years, then Divisional Medical Director for four years. His commitment in community work has seen him serving in d

Birth Registration: Over Four Million Nigerian Children Miss National Planning Radar Yearly

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Chioma Umeha With little resources to cater for the needs of a fast growing population put at 200 million in a country that boasts of four million unregistered births annually, stakeholders foresee more hard times for Nigeria in the nearest future. Out of over seven million babies born yearly in Nigeria, the equivalence of the population of Sierra Leone, more than four million of these babies lack legal existence as their births are not registered. In view of this, experts say, “they are worried.” There is no gainsaying that knowing the number of children born in a country would allow the government to make right policies for the betterment of all citizens. Similarly, the United Nation’s Children Fund (UNICEF) notes, “Children with no birth certificate don’t exist before the law, and are in danger of remaining on the margins of society, or being shut out altogether. “They are more likely to face major challenges in accessing healthcare, education and soci

Yakasai Meets New FIP President On Pharmacy Development In Africa

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Pharm. Ahmed Yakasai, the President of the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN) ; Dominique Jordan, President, International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP), Mr. Emeka Duru, Secretary PSN President, and two others after the World Congress of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences in Glasgow, UK, which ended at the weekend. Chioma Umeha  Pharm. Ahmed Yakasai, the President of the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN) and Dominique Jordan, President, International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) have held a strategic meeting to fashion out a roadmap for the development of pharmacy profession in African continent, especially Nigeria. The duo met when Yakasai visited Jordan to congratulate him on his emergence as the President of FIP after the World Congress of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences in Glasgow, UK, which ended at the weekend. According to the PSN boss, the newly elected FIP President invited him for a consolidation meeting to parley on how the

FG Appoints Adigwe NIPRD Director General

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Chioma Umeha LAGOS – The Federal Government has appointed Dr. Obi Peter Adigwe as the new Director General/CEO for the National Institute for Pharmaceutical Research and Development (NIPRD), Abuja. The appointment which takes immediate effect comes eight months after the expiration of the tenure of the former Director General of NIPRD, Prof. Gamaliel Karniyus. DAILY INDEPENDENT findings revealed that Adigwe’s approval by the Presidency followed his emergence as top scorer in a merit driven rigorous and comprehensive interview processes organised by the federal government few months ago. It was also learnt that the interview had in attendance some of the best brains in Nigerian Pharmaceutical Research and Development sector including, two renowned professors currently working at the NIPRD. Further investigations by DAILY INDEPENDENT showed that Dr. Adigwe scored 80 points and was closely followed by two Professors currently working at the NIPRD who scored 70 and

Three Nigerians Die Every Second From Tuberculosis – WHO

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•Lagos State Ranks First Among States With Highest Burden Chioma Umeha No fewer than 18 Nigerians die of tuberculosis, TB, every hour totalling 432 deaths daily, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) which ranks Nigeria as having the second highest incidence rate in Africa and seventh among the 30 high TB burden countries in the world. In effect, no less than three Nigerians die every second from Tuberculosis, a disease that is preventable and curable, stated the global health body. Every hour, 47 Nigerians develop active TB, seven of who are children, even as Nigeria is ranked among the 14 high burden countries for TB, TB/HIV and Multidrug Resistant TB (MDR-TB), the WHO further said. Revealing these and other statistics on Monday in Lagos, Dr Linda Ozor, the Acting Coordinator, Non Communicable Diseases Cluster, WHO, said Nigeria is also among the 10 countries that accounted for 64 per cent of the global gap in ‘missing TB cases.’ Citing the