What this triggers off is
that only well-heeled groups in society can have the basic necessities in
Nigeria.
The doctors are moving to societies
where they are better paid because staying back in Nigeria keeps them on the
poverty belt. A country that devalues its currency like Nigeria has done in
relation to other major currencies like the Euro, dollar and pound is
definitely going to have a huge crisis within its society.
Nigeria started the devaluation
policy from the Babangida military government and since he has remained a god
to the ruling elite, none of them has had the wisdom to look at what is wrong
structurally and economically with Nigeria. The way salary structures have been
fixed in the public and private sectors is not encouraging to entice medical
personnel with experience and special skills to remain within Nigeria as
everything is a cash-and-carry system. There are no mortgage systems for owning
homes and credit systems are non-existent for car owners where down payment can
be made for easy car loans. Government schools have been abandoned or are not
well-funded and only highbrow privately owned schools are well-funded and
well-equipped. This also comes at a high cost as school fees are not regulated and
are left to market forces leading to very high and unaffordable fees for the
majority. This has also affected housing as this is left to market forces.
What this triggers off is that only
well-heeled groups in society can have the basic necessities in Nigeria. House
rents are hitting the roof and life in urban areas are becoming “too brutish
and nasty”, and since many cannot afford the high rents of apartments
within the city, they move to the outskirts. This makes life unbearable as
people commute long distances and stay long periods in traffic. This is a huge
amount of stress on car owners and those who go on public transport. The
Nigerian government has not built a metro train anywhere in the country
operating within any of her cities which makes living in these states stressful
as traffic gridlocks put a huge pressure on the citizens. Doctors get between
$60,000 and $100,000 if they work overseas, an amount they can never get in
Nigeria, except only those who own hospitals. These are the major attractions
for going overseas; a country that devalued her currency to N360 to a dollar
and has just recently upgraded the minimum wage to a hundred dollars a month
leaves much to be desired. Nigerian doctors want a good life and the equivalent
of what their colleagues earn around different parts of the world.
The World Health Organisation
recommends a doctor to about 600 people. Nigeria currently has about 35,000
doctors serving a country of almost 200 million people, meaning we should have
237,000 doctors. But Ngige says we have surplus and can export to other
countries. The Nigerian government has to improve on citizens’ health and
increase its budget to 15 per cent for the health sector, which currently is at
a miserly 4/6 per cent, too low to fund and improve the sector.
Nigerian doctors have had difficult
times since 2015 as many state governors refused to pay workers’ salaries.
Workers are being owed salaries and their wages ranging from four to 10 months
and despite President Muhammadu Buhari giving the state governors bailouts many
of them allegedly diverted to buying property overseas. Probes are still in
progress in many states concerning the handling of the funds.
The doctors continue to leave
Nigeria in droves and are given easy passage to other countries as they are
often hardworking and make very few complaints in their new working
environments. Hundreds leave the country monthly, a development that is
becoming a source of concern as this has led to shortage of experienced and
specialised doctors. The relocation has triggered the exodus of government
officials, politicians and political appointees and the well-heeled in society
to get medical treatment and checks overseas. The successful in Nigeria don’t
use Nigerian hospitals; if they have a headache, they are on their way to
Europe and America.
The questions now are what the
Federal Government is doing to the challenge of inadequate manpower in the
health sector and what is the leadership going to do to turn things around for
the benefit of the Nigerian people.
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