SPECIAL REPORT: Shortage Of Medical Personnel: Tougher Times For Patients In Osun

VOICE AIR MEDIA, News Update

In 1978, Nigeria and other members of the World Health Organisation (WHO) adopted the Alma Ata Declaration which recognised that PHCs are a basic structure and functional unit of public health delivery systems. Since then many countries got grants to develop their PHCs.

Unfortunately, it was alleged that the contracts were awarded to party loyalists who did not deliver to the standards recommended for PHCs in Nigeria.

Minimum Standard For PHC

According to the report of the Alma-Ata Conference on primary health care, PHC evolved from experiences with Basic Health Service (BHS) provision and delivery in several settings over the last couple of decades.

However, it says PHC is a lot more than the provision of BHS.
WHO further identified four categories of indicators; namely, health policy, socio-economic factors, health service provision and quality of life indicators.

The Alma-Ata Conference also specified eight minimum health service areas that have since been referred to in many places as the minimum service components of PHC.

These are education on prevailing health problems and how to prevent them (health education); provision of water and basic sanitation (environmental health); adequate food supply and good nutrition (public health nutrition); maternal and child health including family planning (reproductive and family health), and immunisation against the common communicable diseases.

Others are control of common endemic diseases (epidemiology and disease control), treatment of common diseases and injuries (primary medical care), and provision of essential drugs (community pharmacy practice).

NPHCDA recommendation vs Osun PHCs

One of the health facility

In Nigeria, the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), established in 1992 following a recommendation by the World Health Organisation (WHO), is tasked with ensuring a proper and functional PHC system in the country. Its role includes stipulating infrastructural standards for PHC in Nigeria.

NPHCDA has a clear-cut specification and standard for establishing and constructing PHCs.

According to the agency, a PHC should at first cover a minimum land area of 4,200 square metres and should have a detached building of at least 13 rooms, access to clean water possibly sourced from a motorised borehole, and functional separate male and female toilet facilities.

NPHCDA also noted that a PHC must be connected to the national grid and other regular alternative power sources, have a sanitary waste collection point and a waste disposal site, be clearly signposted – visible from both entry and exit points – be fenced and have a generator and gatehouses. Also, staff accommodation of 2 units of 1-bedroom flats should be provided within the premises.

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The agency also recommends that a proper PHC structure comprises a building that has sufficient rooms and space to accommodate; Waiting/Reception areas for Child Welfare, ANC, Health Education and ORT corner, a staff station, 2 consulting rooms, an adolescent health service room, pharmacy and dispensing unit, two delivery rooms, maternity/lying-in section, in-patient ward section, laboratory, medical records area, injection/dressing area, minor procedures room, food demonstration area, kitchen store, among others.

According to the NPHCDA, an ideal PHC should have at least 24 workers on its staff, including a medical officer, four nurses or midwives, three Community Health Extension Workers, a pharmacy technician, an environmental officer, a medical record officer, a laboratory technician, two health attendants/assistants, two security personnel and one general maintenance staff, among others.

NPHCDA’s recommended equipment for PHCs includes consulting cubicle, artery forceps, bedpan, stainless steel, stainless bowls with stand, covered bowl for cotton wool, delivery couch, dissecting forceps, and dressing trolley, among others.

Sadly, all of the PHCs visited in Osun State fell short of these minimum standards.

However, these shortcomings are not peculiar to PHCs in Osun. Their abject conditions reflect the situation across Nigerian PHCs and hinder effective healthcare service delivery across the country.

In 2022, a heart-wrenching incident occurred in Odeyinka, a small community in Ikire, the headquarters of Irewole Local Government Area of Osun State.

A pregnant woman, Bidemi, was admitted to the Odeyinka Community Health Centre, a primary healthcare centre (PHC). That same day, she delivered a baby boy, but because the centre lacked adequate medical facilities to manage the excessive blood loss she experienced during childbirth, she was referred to another hospital in Ikire town. Still, the family was dissatisfied with the handling of her case in this second hospital.
Her husband decided to take her to their hometown, Cotonou in Benin Republic, for further medical attention. But the woman unfortunately died on their way to Cotonou a week after her delivery. Three days after the woman’s death, her son also died.

Eunice Ogundele, the only health worker in the PHC in Odeyinka, said the report she got indicated that the woman lost a lot of blood and never got well until she died.
She also said the baby became ill and did not recover.

“I was told that the child began to show very serious signs of illness. They took the baby to the hospital but I guess it was too late. The woman’s husband came back to pack their things and left for Cotonou after the child died,” Mrs Ogundele, a health technician.

Osun Government Speaks

The Osun State Commissioner for Health, Sola Akintola, said the state government led by Governor Ademola Adeleke has embarked on the renovation of the 332 PHCs that were not done well by his predecessor.

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He said: “We want to renovate 332 PHCs, and I am happy to inform you that we have started with 50 and Odeyinka you mentioned is one of the 50 and it is at 60 per cent completion now. We are renovating and upgrading the PHCs, we want to dedicate it to be functioning 24 hours.

“At least there must be boreholes and electricity supply 24 hours. So we are giving solar to each of the 332 PHCs and functioning boreholes.”
Mr Akintola said the new administration noticed that apart from the fact that the PHCs have a shortage of personnel, there was also no provision for recruitment of staff for them in the budget inherited.

“So as regards that, the first thing we did was to have budgeting provision for that in the 2024 budget which has been approved. We will also be releasing the 40 per cent fund for the renovation. So before April runs out we are going to start the recruitment process. And we are releasing money for the second phase of the PHC,” the commissioner added.

He said what the previous administration did in the name of renovating the PHCs was just window dressing.
“You see there is a difference between actual renovation of PHCs and political renovation. You know we have to move around to see what they said they did and thank God the Odeyinka you went to is part of the one they claimed to have renovated.

“And what you met at Odeyinka is not different from the other 332 PHCs we are talking about. So what they did was just window dressing. So we want to renovate and upgrade now,” he said.
But contrary to the commissioner’s claim, when this reporter reached out to members of the community in April, they said the facility in Odeyinka was still in bad shape and there was no recent renovation, although some government officials visited the PHC at the end of February.

“No, nothing has been done here, maybe the model, but not at the PHC here. They only came around February ending and since then nothing has been done. In fact, we are currently cutting the grass around the facility and someone has been paid N4,500 to handle the thickly bushy areas within the premises,” a resident said.

By Popoola Ademola.
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