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Declare State Of Emergency In Health Sector – Nurses Plead With FG

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People cast their letters of complaint to Zimbabwe deputy President Chiwenga among nurses who had gathered at Unity Square in Harare on April 20, 2018 to demonstrate their discontent in a #BringBackOurNurses campaign after being summarily dismissed by Zimbabwe Vice President Constantino Chiwenga. / AFP PHOTO / Jekesai NJIKIZANA

The National Association of Nigerian Nurses and Midwives (NANNM) on Wednesday pleaded with the Federal Government to declare a state of emergency in the health sector.

Mr Wale Olatunde, Chairman, NANNM Public Health Institutions Sector, made the call at the on-going annual labour workshop in Abuja with the theme, “Harmonious Trade Dispute Resolution: A Panacea for Healthy Industrial Relationship”.

Olatunde said that such measure would purge the sector of inefficiency and corruption.

He said there was need to liberate the administration of health care system from doctors, who, he claimed, were ruining the public health institutions “through privatisation.”

He urged the Federal Government to ensure full and urgent implementation of the terms of agreement it entered into with the Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) on Sept. 30, 2017.

Olatunde said that urgent implementation of the said agreement would save Nigerians further pains and untimely death.

According to him, the agreement was supposed to have been fully implemented five weeks after but almost seven months after, nothing had been done.

He claimed that medical doctors were deliberately ruining the health sector and ensuring industrial disharmony for pecuniary gains.

“This is to promote their private practices that are often the beneficiaries of industrial crisis in the health sector.

“By so doing they make the vast majority of poor Nigerians who cannot afford their private facilities to suffer and die unnecessarily.

“Their allegiance and loyalty is more to their medical profession than to the good people of this country.

“Countries with best health indices within and outside Africa do not leave the administration of health care system in the hands of medical doctors as a birth-right.

“They rather depend on the best hands from within and outside the health sector, ” Olatunde said.

He said the workshop was aimed at exposing the union’s executives at the national and the local levels to the rudiments of trade union practice for efficiency.(NAN)

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