Healthcare delivery over the past three decades has witnessed a gradual yet significant shift from curative to preventive health, from a traditional hospital based care to care at the community level, from individualized care to care of a group or community.
Nursing as with all
other health professions in Nigeria has also paid attention to the need for
nursing presence at the community level with the introduction of revolutionary
concepts to that effect. Typical examples include the introduction of community
midwifery program and the midwifery service scheme which where both designed
based on the need to increase the community or primary health care presence of
nurses to enable members of the community to adequately benefit from their broad
perspective of healthcare knowledge gained through training and knowledge. It’s
obvious that Nigeria’s PHCs, which should be the first contact for healthcare
services, are at best comatose or at worse non-existent. This is as a result of
shortage of human resources – large chunk of which should be nurses – rendering
the centers into safe haven for rodents and reptiles and also hideouts for
criminal elements.
Additionally, many of
such centers have tuned into practicing and molding grounds for quacks. Its
common sights these days to behold PHCs without a single professionally trained
or skillfully qualified health care personnel in the roll calls. Even where one
is fortunate to find some, they usually abandon their responsibilities for the
quacks to be having hay days irrespective of the repercussions. In an effort to
salvage the situation and revive those centers into functionally efficient
institutions, wide attempts were made ranging from technical, infrastructural,
administrative and partnerships.
Technically, with the
poor record of maternal and infant mortality the National Primary Healthcare Development
Agency (NPHDA) in 2009 mobilized newly qualified, unemployed and retired midwives
for the one year Midwifery Service Scheme (MSS) aimed at increasing the number
of Skilled Birth Attendants at the rural areas of country. As at 2005 the
maternal mortality rate, as posited by the Mamaye Initiative, was put at 74 to
1000 livebirths but dropped to 56 to 1000 by the year 2013 – a feat achieved
through various initiatives and chief among was the Midwifery Service Scheme.
The introduction of the
Community Midwifery Program by the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria
(NMCN), though at its infancy and can’t be measured to determine its success
and impact on the overall health matrix of the country, points to a remarkable
feat towards reducing maternal and infant mortality through enhancing the
professionalism of the midwifery practice and averting the dangers of quack
practice. The program which is run by
only 5 institutions, at least for now, spread across the north western states
of Sokoto, Zamfara, Kano and Katsina and
one in the north eastern state of Bauchi. Note that these are the regions with
the highest number of maternal and infant mortality in Nigeria. Laudable as
this initiative is, it’s grossly inadequate and unevenly spread if the aim of
the program is to be achieved. More schools in different regions of the country
therefore need to commence the Community Midwifery program to ensure equitable
distribution and presence of skilled birth attendants in the primary healthcare
sector of Nigeria.
The innovations and
creativity that brought great success at the primary health care level with
midwifery can be replicated with general nursing through the introduction of
the Nurses’ Service Scheme (NSS) which would mobilizes and deploys newly
registered, retired and unemployed nurses to the rural areas with the view to
providing healthcare services at the grassroots, as was done with the Midwifery
Service Scheme. This will, in essence, reduce the healthcare burden of major
communicable diseases which account for a great majority of mortality and
morbidity.
Also a basic Community
Nursing program can be designed and run by schools of nursing which would
guarantee a more permanent presence of nurses at the community level providing
both preventive and curative health services. It will also ensure ownership of
primary healthcare services as those to be trained or mentored must be
permanent residents of such communities. There’s also the issue of rampant negligence
and misdiagnosis and or treatment carried out by quacks. The presence of nurses
at the primary healthcare centers would address such through efficient service
delivery.
One of the major causes
of mortality of whatever nature is absence of effective referral system. Many
PHCs are run and administered by large number of quacks, making it difficult
for referral to be made when necessary. Many do not even know or understand
what referral is and or how referral works. They remain bent on treating every
ailment irrespective of their complications and sophisticated nature. Nurses
presence at such centers will go a long way in checking this tragedy and reduce
the unnecessary difficulty patients are being subjected too through quacks. On
a final note, one major problem with Nigeria’s healthcare system generally is
the absence of reliable data, if at all it’s available. I believe a good
starting point are the PHCs equipped with professionally trained nurses, not
quacks masquerading as nurses) especially as we have thousands of them now all
over the country, of which many are unemployed). The nurses, as part of their
routine duty, will record every patient and case efficiently and ensure the
confidentiality of such data. Such data in return can be used in evaluating and
reviewing the impact and otherwise of government policies and as yardstick for
luring NGOs partnerships for modern service delivery.
The place of the nurse
in healthcare is irreplaceable and indisputable as core professionals with the
technical skills backed by theoretical concepts which are employed for the
betterment of patients, community and the system. Healthcare system is a team
comprising of various professionals and nurses are core members of the team. Having
them at all levels is an asset that cannot and must not be ignored, all the
time.
G.A Mustapha
Collage of
Nursing and Midwifery Sciences Sokoto
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