The Chairman of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) in Rivers, Dr
Ibifuro Green, has decried the shortage of doctors and nurses in the
country and called for massive upgrading of personnel in the healthcare
sector.Green told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Port Harcourt on
Monday that the ratio of doctors to patients in the country was one to
4,000.
‘’The World Health Organisation (WHO) has recommended that one doctor
should attend to not more than 600 patients but the ratio in Nigeria is
one doctor to about 4,000 patients.
‘’The ratio is even worse with nurses; the nurse–patient ratio
compared to doctors is even worse because you should have one nurse
attending to about four patients.
‘’When you work out the ratio, you know why nurses are always badly
painted in public hospitals because they are not enough,’’ he said.
According to Green, the number of nurses are inadequate in the
country’s public hospitals as one nurse attends to no fewer than 31
patients.
‘’We need massive upgrading of personnel in the healthcare industry;
there are some categories of personnel we need that are not available at
all; the biomedical engineers for example.
‘’In India, you have biomedical engineers who go round the wards two
times a week, checking out the trolleys, checking out the doors and
closing them and so on.
‘’In the theatres, before a surgeon goes in to operate, they
(engineers) have to check out the instruments and okay them; they do
that on a daily basis and they are around within the theatre
environment,’’ he said.
Green said that there are always spare instruments to change should anything go wrong during the surgery.
He said the country’s healthcare industry had not made provision for biomedical engineers.
‘’We buy state-of –the- art equipment, use them for six months and
when they break down, nobody is there to fix them; these are the things
we go through,’’ he said.
The chairman noted that the situation was getting worse as doctors
were now migrating overseas for greener pasture and job satisfaction.

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