Jennifer Thompson
Wed, Aug 2, 2023 1:50 PMJOHESU Urges President Tinubu to Appoint Non-Physician Health Minister and Opposes Sale of Teaching Hospitals
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Lagos - As the Senate reviews the ministerial nominees, the Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) has urged President Bola Tinubu to appoint a non-physician health minister while renewing its opposition to the sale of teaching hospital facilities to private profiteers.
In its letter to President Tinubu, signed by Mathew Ajurotu Ag. National Secretary for the National President, JOHESU, and AHPA alerted other health professionals that the sale of the teaching hospitals would adversely affect their emoluments contrary to their thinking.
JOHESU insisted that the sales of Federal Health Institutions (FHI) is not in the interest of 20 percent of the sector's workforce whose salaries represent 60 percent of the personnel costs of the entire health workforce in FHIs.
It warned other medical professionals who have been assured that the sale of the facilities won't affect them are advised to apply caution and good judgment.
Elaborating, JOHESU said that despite constituting 20 percent of the total workforce in the sector, it is certain that private profiteers will fire them in view of reducing overhead costs.
According to JOHESU and the Assembly of Healthcare Professional Association (AHPA), those advocating for concessionaires are avaricious and would increase the healthcare problem and indexes.
The group pleaded with well-meaning Nigerians to take action and prevent the Federal Government from privatising the FHIs.
"Conscionable Nigerians should assist the Federal Government to be decisive in taking a position that the profiteers, concessionaires, greedy entrepreneurs and their collaborators in Government jostling to take over the FHIs be responsible enough to build their own world-class health facilities like their presumed equivalents do in the global arena. Even in Nigeria today, we have a few tertiary hospitals like Duchess and Reddington Hospital which continue to make footprints in the sands of our evolving healthcare dispensation.
"In Lagos State, where the privatization of healthcare was kick-started by these same dramatis personae, the experiment has failed. The privatised pharmacies which were about six at inception have totally failed in at least four of the centres at huge losses to the Lagos State Government (LASG).
At the Federal level, the commercialization of the Pharmacy facility of the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan collapsed and the concession of Garki Hospital, Abuja has never been a value-added decision. Today, that facility is a shadow of itself, as it has become inaccessible to a wide range of consumers of health in the Abuja area.
"We therefore strongly urge the Federal Government not to contemplate the privatisation of Teaching Hospital facilities to private profiteers. We must seize the discourse to advise other health professionals who have been promised that the concession of these facilities will not affect them to be wary and discern wisely.
"Private profiteers will naturally get rid of the block of health professionals whose wages consume 60 percent of the personnel cost of the entire health workforce in FHIs even when they constitute less than 20 percent of the entire personnel in the health sector," it added.
Privatising FHIs, Against Healthcare Equity, Accessibility
JOHESU listed the consequences of concessions, privatisation, and outsourcing saying that it does not promote Universal Health Coverage, but would lead to inequity and accessibility rather than efficiency and profitability.
The letter further reads, "In view of the monopolistic nature of health systems because of the inelastic nature of their demands, there is little or no probability of competitiveness. It follows that a monopoly that comes with exploitation becomes the order of the day. High charges generate crazy profits at the detriment of efficiency, which ultimately defeats the goal of accessibility to health facilities in real terms because health cannot be delivered to vulnerable groups.
"Equity and accessibility rather than efficiency and profitability should be the benchmark to measure performance in healthcare. Patient-care-centered services cannot be the hallmark of concessions and privatisation because profit is the watchword.
'In the proposed privatisation and concession models, the Government's role is largely regulatory, which is at the same cost of owning the FHI. As stronger institutions outlive the weaker ones which further limits the availability and choices of the citizens, the monopolistic tendencies of formidable profiteers play out at the detriment of consumers of health.
"Privatisation calls to question the integrity of the management of the FHIs dominated by Physicians since the advent of the Teaching Hospital Act of 1985. It is the biggest confirmation of the failure of Physicians in the running of the public hospital system in Nigeria. How come these same facilities hitherto dubbed Centres of Excellence in some instances have suddenly become failed enterprises? The only explanation remains that Nigerian Physicians are not seasoned administrators or managers of cognate experience. The government, therefore, needs to tinker with the health system by reverting management of FHIs to professionally trained administrators and managers, while health professionals are allowed to embrace their areas of due competence in the public's good. This is the trend which is in alignment with global best practices," JOHESU added.
Increased Drug Costs, Out-Of-Pocket Expenses
The health workers further said that privatising teaching hospitals would increase the cost of drugs and diagnostic services which will lead to higher out-of-pocket expenses, leading to more difficulty in healthcare access.
The letter reads, "Generally, privatisation of health services is a precursor to the increased cost of drugs and diagnostic services which will naturally impact on out-of-pocket costs, leading to hardship and more stress junctures in accessing healthcare.
"The privatisation of health facilities is a hurricane that compounds unproductivity in healthcare. The preponderance of Nigerians who live in poverty and squalor will not be able to access or afford health and its major components, which include the use of safe and efficacious drugs in the event of this dreaded reality," it added.
CEOs Of FHIs, MDAs Must Take Hospital Management Courses
While alleging that the MDAs are adjudged to be the most corrupt sector, JOHESU urged Federal Government to compel CEOs of FHIs, Departments, and Agencies to undergo Health Systems and hospital management courses.
The letter said, "In the interim, the FG must compel all the CEOs of the FHIs, Departments, and Agencies of the Health Sector to run administrative as well as management programmes in Health Systems with bias in hospital management. This will help these incumbent CEOs to administer albeit much better the FHIs, other Departments, and Agencies.
"The FMOH must however make it abundantly clear that it will no longer be automatic for erring CEOs of FHIs to complete their tenure of four years when found wanting.
On a permanent basis, the FG must return the business of hospital management and administration to seasoned administrators and managers of cognate experience.
All health professionals who desire to head hospitals in Nigeria must henceforth undertake specialist management and administrative courses at post-graduate levels in specialised schools and institutes.
"These health professionals including Pharmacists, Physicians, Physiotherapists, Medical Laboratory Scientists, and other health workers must be made to study health administration and management in their reviewed curriculum even at the undergraduate level moving forward.
"The Federal Government is enjoined to encourage the management of FHIs that are ready to embark or consolidate the concept of amenity facilities in the FHIs. These services will be available to the nouveau riche who can afford such hyped services.
It will reduce health tourism and save the nation's hard-earned forex.
"The militating bane remains the tendency to abuse these amenity facilities in FHIs by some of the CEOs.
"We at JOHESU/AHPA have had cause to send evidence-based complaints about misnomers in the handling of DRF Funds and mismanagement of amenity ward resources by some of the CEOs of FHIs.
"An outstanding instance was the report made on the MD/CEO of the NOH, Igbobi which made the FMOH initially declare its readiness to probe this MD/CEO until it later reneged on the probe," it added.
Incentivise Health Workers Offering Surgeries, Pharmaceutical Care
JOHESU appealed, "Government must incentivise all health professionals and workers who render services including surgeries, pharmaceutical care, diagnostic services with agreed percentages of income realized as amenity allowances to compensate for their skills, time and the totality of their output.
The way forward, therefore, is a regular audit of the proceeds of the amenity/quick service facilities in the FHIs in the quest for better standards.
"Your Excellency, as Ministers will be deployed to Ministries in the days ahead,
JOHESU/AHPA reiterates its calls for the appointment of a non-Physician Health Minister to pave the way for the restoration of the hitherto great times when Health Administrators steered the ship of healthcare successfully to attract the likes of the Saudi Royal family to UCH, Ibadan in the '70s. This was the era our Health System was rated as one of the top five in the commonwealth," JOHESU added.
Source of content: OOO News 2023-08-02 News
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