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UNICEF urges Nigeria to reduce reliance on external health funding

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The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has called on the government at all levels to reduce reliance on external sources for health funding and instead make adequate provisions in their budgets.

UNICEF Deputy Representative in Nigeria, Dr Rowan Khan, made the statement on Wednesday in Abuja at the Primary Health Care (PHC) Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) Learning and Dissemination Event.

The PHC MoU Health Systems Strengthening Initiative is a three-year partnership (2022 to March 2025) between GAVI, the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, and UNICEF.

The initiative also involves eight states: Bayelsa, Gombe, Jigawa, Katsina, Kebbi, Niger, Taraba, and Zamfara.

The initiative aims to strengthen routine immunisation and PHC systems to reduce morbidity and mortality by addressing vaccine-preventable diseases and improving essential health services.

According to Khan, the U.S. administration’s pause of foreign aid, affecting nearly all its foreign aid programmes, is no surprise but a wake-up call to stop reliance on external funding for health.

“Looking at what is happening at the global level, we need to really reduce the reliance on others at all levels.

“What has happened with the U.S. government’s decision has shaken us to the core, but honestly, we knew this was coming because we cannot forever rely on external support.

“All of us need to have our own ownership, our own accountabilities, and our own responsibilities as well.”

She also emphasised the importance of coordination among stakeholders and optimizing available resources, considering the limitations in both financial and human resources.

Khan added that such efforts would have a more significant impact on Nigeria’s future.

To sustain the gains made in the past three years from the PHC initiative, Khan suggested that state governments should conduct a proper budget analysis.

The analysis, he said should focus on identifying gaps, particularly regarding basic services for children and the revitalisation of PHCs in each ward.

“So, I urge all state authorities to look at this very carefully.

“Please look at your budgets and see how we can intuitively allocate resources for the basic services of health, specifically for immunisation and other basic services,” she said.

Dr Manasseh Jatau, the Deputy Governor of Gombe State, stressed the importance of Nigeria beginning to sponsor research to produce medicines and vaccines from local plants.

He explained that Nigeria had sufficient plant resources to produce vaccines, which could reduce the cost of vaccine importation.

“We must take responsibility for our health issues. My dear governors and medical personnel, we are challenged to take responsibility for obvious reasons.

“In the long run, we should be prepared in case there’s donor doubt, donor denial, donor fatigue, and eventually donor stoppage.

“If we don’t get ready for that, a calamity is waiting for us,” he said.

Jesicca Crawford, the Country Manager of GAVI, commended the governors of the implementing states for their commitment to the programme.

She said such commitment was necessary to build a healthier, more resilient Nigeria, where every child, citizen, and woman had access to quality PHC services.

She urged the governors to ensure that the services were sustained and that the achievements made through the MoU were replicated in other states.

Dr Mya Ngon, the Team Lead for Communicable and Non-Communicable Diseases at the World Health Organisation (WHO), acknowledged the successes recorded but stressed the need for further work to reduce zero-dose immunisation among unimmunised children.

“We also need to sustain government efforts to implement PHC strengthening and immunisation to improve equitable access to vaccines and reduce zero-dose children.

“We should remember our national goal to invest in reducing reliance on campaigns and focus more on strengthening the health system,” she said.

Halima Muhammed, Senior Programme Manager for Immunisation at the Nigeria Governor’s Forum (NGF), noted that the MoU hasd significantly strengthened PHC systems over the past three years, ensuring that many children received vaccines.

“The NGF, alongside our esteemed partners, has played a pivotal role in implementing targeted interventions.

“These efforts have enhanced service delivery, increased demand generation, strengthened disease surveillance, improved governance, optimizsed human resources, fortified supply chains, and driven high-level advocacy to ensure sustained political commitment to PHC,” she said.

Muhammed also highlighted the importance of sustaining these gains through the Sector-Wide Approach (SWAp) programme by integrating resources, policies, and initiatives across the health sector.

To ensure sustainability, the initiative is transitioning programme ownership to state governments.

NAN

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My Herbal Medicines Are Well Accepted Across The Globe, Prof Amodu Reveals

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By David Maxwell

One of Nigeria’s leading voices in the support and propagation of herbal medicine, Professor Benjamin Amodu has revealed that his herbal medicines are widely accepted across the globe.


He made this revelation while speaking to our reporter at his laboratory in Abuja.


Amodu, known for his herbal cure for serveral communicable and non-communicable diseases like malaria, asthma, diabetes, enlarged heart, various cancers, chronic kidney disease even into the end stage, has boldly revealed that his herbal products enjoy a huge acceptance across the globe.


“Our medications are well accepted, both at home here in Nigeria and abroad too.


“This is because we’ve been sending our medicines not only to countries within the African continent, but also countries in Asia, the Middle East, Europe, America and even Oceania.


“We usually send our herbal medicines to Ghana, Cameroon, Egypt, South Africa and many other African countries, and even to Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the United Kingdom, USA, France, Australia, the Netherlands, Germany, Ireland, Canada and virtually everywhere around the world without any issues.


“We have been sending them to these places via DHL and we haven’t had any issues whatsoever.”
Amodu also spoke of the wide acceptance his his herbal medicines have been enjoying at home here in Nigeria.


He said, “even though we may not have had the support anymore expects from the government, but the Nigerian people are not waiting for the government to tell them to either accept our medications or not.


“Since many patients we have treated with our products and get cured of the ailments keep talking about and announcing for others to know, we haven’t had a short supply of patients who either come to us themselves or through family members and other caregivers.


“So if the USA, UK, Canada and all these other countries can accept our treatment, plus those at home here in Nigeria, then I can confidently say that my products are well recognized and accepted across the world.”


Having spent about four decades researching into Traditional, Complimentary and Alternative Medicine, TCAM, with scores of papers published in reputable health journals and peer reviewed, Amodu, a professor of phytomedicine from the Triune Biblical University, USA, is no doubt a leading advocate for alternative medicine.

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