Strike: FG, doctors’ talks deadlocked

Secretary to the Government the Federation, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim
Secretary to the Government the Federation, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim
HOPE for an early resolution of the strike called by medicos working in regime hospitals dimmed on Wednesday as a meeting between the Federal Regime and the Nigerian Medical Association in Abuja ended in a deadlock.

This is as reports from across the country betokened that the strike embarked upon by the medicos on Tuesday worsened the situation in the hospitals.

The Secretary to the Regime of the Federation, Pius Anyim, on Wednesday met with the NMA officials, led by its president, Dr. Kayode Obembe. The Minister of State for Health, Dr. Khaliru Alhassan; and the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Mr. Emeka Wogu, attended the meeting.

Obembe told one of our correspondents around 9.30pm on Wednesday that the NMA officials withal met with the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa. Senator Chris Ngige was withal verbally expressed to have been in the meeting with the medicos.

The NMA boss verbalized the association had not reached any accedence with the regime and that the strike would perpetuate.

“We were able to go through the items, we are working out areas that can be concluded immediately. We are additionally working on other areas that may be delayed for sometime but the strike perpetuates,” he verbalized.

However, the Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, who was out of the country, on Wednesday sent a text message to one of our correspondents, verbalizing the regime would work towards bringing the strike to an early end.

The PUNCH correspondent had sent a message to the minister seeking his position after the regime-NMA meeting deadlocked.

“We will do our best to resolve it,’’ he replied.

The NMA had on June 14 given the regime a two-week deadline to meet the doctors’ demands, failure which a strike action would follow.

Our correspondents who monitored the strike on Wednesday reported near-total compliance across public hospitals in the country.

At the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, and the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, accommodations were at skeletal level. The same scenario obtained in Ibadan, Oyo State; Ilorin, Kwara State; Uyo, Akwa Ibom State; Akure, Ondo State; and other states.

The Chairman of the NMA in Cross River State, Dr. Callistus Enyuma, vowed that his members would not return to work until regime met the 24 ordinant dictations of the association.

The NMA, among others, is authoritatively mandating the engenderment of the office of a Surgeon-General of the Federation as well as a review of doctors’ salary scale “to reflect relativity in international best practices.”

The NMA additionally wants the retention of the post of Deputy Chairman, Medical Advisory Committee. It additionally opposes the appointment of directors in hospitals; asks that the consultant designation be restricted to medical medicos; as well as the immediate adjustment of doctors’ salaries to reflect the relativity as acceded and documented once Consolidated Health Salary Structure is adjusted.

“Until these authoritative ordinances, which I must tell you are 24, are met, we will not admit incipient patients. However, all the patients who have been in the hospital and whose cases were solemn would be attended to,” the Cross River NMA boss verbalized.

At the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital and other General Hospitals in Cross River State, health accommodations have decelerated drastically as the indefinite strike entered its second day.

When one of our correspondents visited the hospitals on Wednesday, it was observed that nurses and other health workers only attended to patients who were not in critical conditions.

Patients in critical conditions and in desideratum of doctors’ attention were being peregrinate to private hospitals.

A nurse at the General Hospital in Calabar told The PUNCH that most of the medicos had left. “Though a few of them are still around, they would not attend to anybody. Anybody who wants to get any doctor’s attention should peregrinate to a private hospital or wait till they call off the strike,” the source verbalized.

In Rivers State, the regime verbally expressed it had entered into partnership with eight private hospitals to give free medical care to patients registered under the Free Medical Care Programme of the state.

The State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Sampson Parker, who verbally expressed this at the Regime House in Port Harcourt on Wednesday, expounded that the Memorandum of Understanding signed by the state regime with the private hospitals was a crisis management strategy to alleviate and ameliorate the effects of the nationwide industrial action on the people.

“These hospitals will offer accommodations to women in labour, accidents, surgical intervention. You can imagine a woman, who has been attending the Braithwaite Specialist Hospital, and her due date for surgery is near; you cannot sanction a woman like that to go into labour.

“We have decided to hand over such persons to qualified medical medicos in the private sector so that we don’t suffer many casualties. The arrangement perpetuates as long as the strike persists.

“It is genuinely a crisis management strategy. When the strike is over, the patients will return to regime hospitals.”

Meanwhile, the Abia State branch of the NMA has threatened to drag their members in the private sector to join in the industrial action if the regime fails to heed their agitation soon.

The association’s chairman in the state, Dr. Gad Uzoaga, who made the threat in an interview with journalists on Wednesday in Umuahia, the Abia State capital, verbally expressed the striking medicos had abstained from asking their colleagues in the private sector to join the strike because of their patients.

When one of our correspondents visited the Federal Medical Centre, Umuahia, one of the patients, Sir Fynecountry Ogbonna, expressed total disappointment at the non-availability of medicos, lamenting that his case was critical and that he had no option but to resort to self- medication.

“I have come to optically discern my medico according to the appointment he gave me three weeks ago. Incidentally, the nurses told me that they are on strike. I have to peregrinate to a chemist to accumulate drugs that I cerebrate that will retain me for another seven days he will be in the office,’’ he verbally expressed.

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