NIGERIAN
NURSES AND MIDWIVES UNEMPLOYMENT SURVEY
University
Graduates of Nursing Science Association (UGONSA)
gnan2ugonsa@gmail.com
ABSTRACT
Background:
The
quacking controversy that trailed the Nursing & Midwifery Council of
Nigeria’s (N&MCN) release of a “License Community Nurse (LCN)” circular (Ref
No. N&MCN/SG/RO/CIR/24/VOL.4/152 dated March 3, 2020) which conveyed the
intention of the council to lower the existing standard of nursing education for
the LCN programme that will take secondary school leavers at least a credit in
English and Biology to be admitted into and two years to complete, and inter alia blamed the crude situation
and abysmal performance of the Nigerian Primary Healthcare (PHC) system in the
community settings on mass migration of Nurses & Midwives to urban areas
and to other countries prompted UGONSA to initiate this survey to empirically
determine whether there are indeed a shortage of Nurses & Midwives to fill
the manpower need of the Nigerian PHC system in the community settings or not,
or whether the shortage is as a result of the deliberate age-long policy of attrition
and displacement of Nurses & Midwives from the PHC system in the community
settings and their replacement with Community Health Extension Workers (CHEWs) [who
do not have nursing education, training, skills or the ethical leaning to be
responsible and accountable for nursing & midwifery services] by the National
Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHCDA).
Objective:
The
main aim of the study was to determine if there is a shortage of nurses that
could fill the nursing needs of the PHC system in the community settings. The
study also sought to compile the list of unemployed and underemployed Nurses
& Midwives and to find out if unemployed Nurses & Midwives are willing to
work in the community settings if the opportunity to serve the PHC system in
the community setting is offered to them by the NPHCDA. The study further sought
to determine the ratio of unemployed Nurses & Midwives in relation to the possible
number of graduates that can be licensed by the N&MCN in a session.
Methods:
Using Google forms an
online compilation was carried out from
March 7 to April 08, 2020, in a descriptive survey of unemployed Nurses &
Midwives that could be reached online within the timeline. Names, Phone
numbers, State of Residence, Year of Graduation, Qualification(s), and how long
they have remained unemployed after graduation were compiled. In addition, two
questions were asked about the objective of the study. Analysis of data was
done via Google forms statistical tools.
Results:
A total of 3317 unemployed Nurses & Midwives responded to the
survey. Among these unemployed
Nurses & Midwives – 38% holds RN only, 19% holds both RN & RM, 15.4%
holds RM only, while 27.6% holds BNSc plus another qualification. For the year
they have remained unemployed after graduation 57.1% have spent 0–2 years,
29.9% have been unemployed for 3–5 years, 7% have been unemployed for 6 – 8 years
and 6.1% have been unemployed for more than 8 years. To the question, “Do you think there is a shortage of Nurses
and Midwives in Nigeria?” – 47.5% said yes, 43.5% said no whereas 9% were undecided
(said maybe). Furthermore, the result showed that while 95% of the unemployed Nurses
& Midwives are willing to work in the rural community settings, 1% was not willing
to work in the rural community settings and 4% were undecided (.i.e. said maybe)
on whether they will work in the rural community settings or not. The result
also revealed that the 3317 unemployed Nurses
& Midwives captured in the survey represents graduates of 66 Nursing
& Midwifery schools per session out of a total of 162 schools that are
currently accredited by the N&MCN. This represents 41% of the possible number
of graduates that can be turned out of the accredited Nursing & Midwifery
Schools (excluding Post-basic schools) in a session.
Conclusion:
Despite
the reported migration of Nurses to urban areas and other countries, at least 41%
of Nigerian Nurses & Midwives produced in a session remain unemployed and
95% of them are willing to work in the rural community settings if given the
opportunity. These unemployed Nurses & Midwives can bridge the Nursing
& Midwifery manpower needs in the Primary Healthcare System should the
NPHCDA engage their services with a commensurate or higher payment to what
their employed counterparts receive in Federal Government-owned establishments
and hospitals. There is no current shortage of Nurses that necessitates the lowering
of the existing standard of nursing education. Nurses & Midwives are not
responsible for the design, implementation, and delivery of healthcare services
at the PHC level and therefore are not culpable for the deplorable condition
and abysmal performance of the Nigerian PHC System.
Recommendations:
1 1. NPHCDA
should create a department of nursing & midwifery services to oversee and
handle issues of nursing & midwifery services rather than outsourcing nursing
& midwifery services to the CHEWs as it has perennially done and currently
does.
2 2. NPHCDA should start recruiting Nurses
& Midwives to carryout nursing & midwifery services for which they were
educated, trained, and licensed rather than outsourcing these services to the
CHEWs.
3 3. The NPHCDA should spend a greater part
of its yearly budgetary allocation on upgrading the Primary Healthcare
facilities to at least the minimally acceptable global standard.
4 4. Nurses & Midwives working in the
rural community settings in the PHC system should receive an equal or higher
remuneration than their counterparts working in Federal Government-owned
establishments and hospitals.
5 5. State Governments should start recruiting and deploying to the rural community settings in their respective States at least 100 (one hundred) Registered Nurses and Midwives, including those with Bachelor of Nursing Science (BNSc) degree, every year to boost the availability of skilled nursing workforce in the rural areas.
6.The Nursing & Midwifery Council of Nigeria (N&MCN) should engage the NPHCDC to create a Department of Nursing Services for Nurses & Midwives and to start employing them to render nursing & midwifery services for the PHC system in the community settings.
6.The Nursing & Midwifery Council of Nigeria (N&MCN) should engage the NPHCDC to create a Department of Nursing Services for Nurses & Midwives and to start employing them to render nursing & midwifery services for the PHC system in the community settings.
6 7. The N&MCN should retract the
circular (Ref No. N&MCN/SG/RO/CIR/24/VOL.4/152 dated March 3, 2020) that
erroneously blamed the failure of the PHC system to make the desired impact in
the Nigerian health system on the migration of Nigerian Nurses to urban areas
and other countries rather than on the real cause which is the deliberate perennial
war of attrition on Nurses & Midwives by the NPHCDA that has ended up ostracizing
them from the system and replacing them with the CHEWs.
7 8. The
N&MCN should create clinical licensure for Nurse Practitioners in the Community
Health Nursing specialty at MSc & Ph.D. levels that will equip and empower post-baccalaureate
prepared Community Health Nurses to independently diagnose and treat common
ailments suffered in the communities and coordinate the care of patients in the
community settings as done by Nurse Practitioners in developed climes such as
the United States and Canada.
8 9. UGONSA should engage with and submit the
compiled list of the unemployed Nurses & Midwives to the Federal Ministry
of Health (FMOH), the National Assembly, the National Association of Nigerian
Nurses & Midwives (NANNM) and the N&MCN for robust and comprehensive engagement
of all stakeholders and the NPHCDA to absorb the unemployed Nurses &
Midwives in the PHC system to work in the community settings in line with the
extant schemes of service for Nurses & Midwives and pay them similar or
higher salaries and allowances payable to Nurses & Midwives in Federal
Government-owned hospitals and establishments.
This article should be cited
as follow:
{University
Graduates of Nursing Science Association [UGONSA]. (2020). Nigerian Nurses and
Midwives Unemployment Survey. Position paper/Survey Diary 3}.
Limitations:
1 1. The
findings were based on the fact that the N&MCN grants 50 slots to each
school per session and thus the possible number of graduands per session being
when each school presents 50 candidates for the council exams and all the
candidates presented passed the exams (100% pass rate). This rate was adopted
in order not to overestimate the unemployment rate of nurses and midwives in
relation to the number of nursing & midwifery schools.
2 2. The number compiled and computed was the
number of unemployed Nurses & Midwives that willingly responded online to
the survey within a month (March 7 to April 8, 2020). Those that were not
online during this period and even those that were online but chose not to
respond to the survey were unaccounted for. Therefore the figures contained in
the findings of this study may be far less than the actual number of unemployed
Nurses & Midwives in Nigeria at the time of the survey.
Keywords: Unemployment, Nursing, Midwifery, opportunity, remuneration,
facilities.
Background:
The
Nursing & Midwifery Council of Nigeria stirred a quaking controversy in the
Nursing community when on March 3, 2020, it released a circular Ref No:
N&MCN/SG/RO/CIR/24/VOL.4/152 which conveyed its intent to lower the
existing standard of nursing education via the introduction of a 2-years program
for a lower cadre of Nurses christened “Licensed Community Nurse (LCN)” with
having a poor O’level result (.i.e. at least a credit in English and Biology) being
the principal admission requirement. The circular titled, “ INTRODUCTION OF
COMMUNITY NURSING PROGRAMME AS A MODALITIES FOR STRENGTHENING NURSING HUMAN
RESOURCES AT THE PRIMARY HEALTHCARE LEVEL AND REDUCTION OF MATERNAL AND INFANT
MORTALITY IN NIGERIA” sounded that currently there is a great demand for
nursing care to be assessable to children, adolescents, adults, older people,
vulnerable groups, victims of crime and disasters, and internally displaced
persons, in their communities and settlements [which indeed is the primary
reason for the existence of the Primary Healthcare (PHC) system]. The council
in the circular attributed its reason for embarking on the voyage of breeding
this lower cadre of nurses to “gross
shortage of Nursing manpower at the community level occasioned by the mass
migration of Nurses to urban areas and other countries with a resultant
weakening of the Primary Health System and poor access to healthcare by rural
dwellers in the country”. The
council went further to cast the health-related Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs) and Universal Health Coverage (UHC) as unmet in the country owing to
shortage of Nurses to paddle the boat of care in the rural community settings hence
the need to lower the existing standard of nursing education and create the
lower LCN cadre to fill the gap (N&MCN, 2020a). Put in another way, the
N&MCN acknowledged that the Primary Healthcare system of Nigeria is in a
total mess but that Nurses should be blamed for this mess for their migration
to urban areas and other countries.
While
many nurses and nursing groups agreed with the council that the Primary
Healthcare (PHC) system is in a degrading rot they vehemently disagreed that
the appalling state of the system was caused by a shortage of nursing manpower to
drive the system and cautioned the council not to jeopardize the existing
standard of nursing education or the quality of nursing manpower with the
planned lower cadre nursing program which prospectively targets the weakest
secondary school graduates (.i.e. those with at least a credit in English and
Biology) for admission into nursing (N&MCN, 2020a). Many believed that
there is no shortage of nursing manpower in Nigeria citing the mammoth crowd of
nurses that apply for recruitment whenever any government-owned hospital floats
advert for recruitment of nurses as the basis for their stand. They argued that
if similar payment for the nursing & midwifery job opportunities availed
for Nurses & Midwives in Federal Government-owned hospitals or
establishments that do attract a mammoth crowd of unemployed Nurses &
Midwives, whenever job adverts are made in Federal Government-owned hospitals
or establishments, should also be made available at the rural community
settings via the Primary Healthcare (PHC) system, many Nurses & Midwives
would troupe into the communities for employment. The
case of Nurses and Midwives signing up with Non-Governmental Organisations
(NGOs) in large numbers to work in rural areas hardest hit by terrorism,
despite no guarantee for their safety and security, due to good pay package was
also cited. The argument was that if nurses and midwives can sign-up in large
number to work in the rural community settings of war zones especially in the
North-East, Nigeria, they will sign-up more to be deployed to the rural
community settings of peaceful zones, if motivated with similar or even a
higher pay as what their colleagues receive in government-owned health
facilities such as Federal Teaching Hospitals and Federal Medical Centres
(FMCs).
In the opinion of many nurses, the National
Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHCDA) was rather to be blamed for
failing to engage the services of the many unemployed Nurses & Midwives who
are roaming the streets in search of scarce nursing & midwifery jobs. Nursing
is the heartbeat and cornerstone of the PHC system globally but in Nigeria, the
NPHCDA has since its creation in the year 1992 removed nursing as the
cornerstone and rather made the outsourcing of nursing & midwifery services
to the Community Health Extension Workers (CHEWs) its driving policy. The CHEWs
were created as a smokescreen for waging an organized war of attrition on
Nurses & Midwives in the PHC system by the medical doctors who hold sway at
the Federal Ministry of Health right from the inception of the NPHCDA principally
to dislodge nursing from holding any position of influence in the system that
may attract respect for the profession from the rural community dwellers and the
general public. In bowing to pressure from his medical colleagues to create the
CHEWs as a tool to wither the influence and contribution of Nurses &
Midwives in the health system, Prof. Olikoye Ransome-Kuti (the Minister of
Health under whose tenure the NPHCDA was established in the year 1992) had
falsely alleged that Nurses & Midwives had rejected taking up nursing &
midwifery services in the rural community settings even when nobody had
mobilized them for such in the then newly established PHC services and thus he
sinisterly created the CHEWs as a replacement for Nurses & Midwives in the
PHC system using this false allegation as a red herring. Professor Ransome-Kuti
had regretted this action when he left office after seeing the health indices
of the country worsen as a result of this faulty policy he had promoted in the
health system. As he admitted when he stood down as the Minister of Health, "my only regret as I leave the ministry
is that I have not been able to mobilize all health workers behind the medical
system. Most health workers are only interested in how to maintain their
position in the hospital system." (Raufu, 2003). Thus, Prof.
Ransome-Kuti, like other Ministers of Health (MOH) who are medical doctors,
have had the golden opportunity of mobilizing all the health workers behind the
Nigerian health system but chose to be divisive & chauvinistic and more
interested in assigning and maintaining positions for their medical colleagues.
The parsimonious regret and acknowledgment of Prof. Ransome-Kuti that he had deliberately
ostracized and replaced Nurses & Midwives with the CHEWs instead of
mobilizing them behind the health system because he chose to appease his
medical colleagues who are more interested in occupying and being in charge of positions
over deploying skilled nursing & midwifery services in delivering
qualitative healthcare to the people in the rural community settings was rather
playing to the gallery as nothing has been done till date to correct the
anomaly.
Nigeria
thus sadly represents an anomalous situation where the central coordinating roles
of nursing have been ceded to the CHEWs at the detriment of quality client care.
This has made the health indices of the country negatively nosedive and has catapulted
the country’s health system to an exalted seat among the global worse health
systems despite having a PHC system that has engulfed millions of dollars over
the years. NPHCDA has over the years relegated Nurses &
Midwives to the background and egregiously made the CHEWs the cornerstone of
nursing & midwifery services of the PHC system in the rural community
settings despite that the CHEWs do not have nursing education, training, skills
or the ethical leaning to be responsible and accountable for nursing &
midwifery services. The situation is so bizarre that the CHEWs are made to even
assume leadership over nursing in a few situations where Nurses & Midwives
are allowed access to the system that has been deliberately gated against them.
In other words, the CHEWs are in charge of and administer nursing &
midwifery services in the Nigerian PHC system despite not being qualified
Nurses & Midwives or having the competency and the capacity to do so and
they are bizarrely in charge of nursing & midwifery services in the rural
community settings even when qualified, capable and competent Nurses &
Midwives are available.
The
deliberate displacement of Nurses & Midwives from their jobs with the CHEWs
is glaringly evident in the NPHCDA dedicating one out of its nine departments
to the services of the CHEWs (.i.e. the Department of Community Health
Services) whereas no department of Nursing services exist at the agency to
coordinate and oversee nursing & midwifery services as is the norm in
climes where nursing is playing its normal central coordinating roles in the
PHC system. Nursing which ordinarily should be the bedrock, backbone, heartbeat
and the cornerstone of the system is alas the rejected central pillar in the
Nigerian PHC system.
Nursing
is nowhere near the system design or leadership of the PHC, which are mainly occupied
by physicians, few administrators, and the CHEWs to the exclusion of Nurses
& Midwives, despite that the core of the services rendered by the system is
nursing & midwifery services. Not having a department of Nursing Services at
the NPHCDA portends that nurses have no frontline roles in the PHC system of
the country and therefore are not responsible for the mess in the system. This
is especially as the model of healthcare services delivered in the community settings
under the PHC system in Nigeria is CHEW-driven, CHEW-centred, and, CHEW-headed
rather than nursing driven, nursing-centered, or nursing-headed. To dish out
CHEW services in place of nursing & midwifery services and expect to get
the results for nursing & midwifery services is foolhardy. To blame nursing
for the failure of the PHC system whose nursing & midwifery services are handled
by the CHEWs (who have no nursing & midwifery background or preparation) at
the expense of Registered Nurses &
Midwives is preposterous. The case of the PHC system in ceding nursing &
midwifery services to the CHEWs in the rural community settings is akin to ceding
engineering works to carpenters and still expecting to get a good result. The
Nigerian PHC system is arguably in a total mess because people that do not have
nursing & midwifery background were mobilized and made the centrifuge for
nursing & midwifery services over the years. Therefore, the failure of the
PHC system should be squarely blamed on the NPHCDA for making the system more
of an obtuse political system that is interested in maintaining positions, as
confessed by Prof. Ransome-Kuti, than a healthcare delivery system that
mobilizes appropriate personnel for qualitative care delivery. Until the square
peg is put in the square hole the PHC system of Nigeria will remain a sham.
A
review of the contemporary health indices of the country especially those of
the rural community settings which the NPHCDA was established to turn around
are imperative in the subject matter. The National Primary Healthcare
Development Agency (NPHCDA) was established in the year 1992 with a mandate to
make healthcare delivery in the community settings robust to achieve universal
health coverage for Nigerians and stem the tide of high maternal and child mortality
& morbidity in Nigeria. However, the worsening contemporary health indices of
the country show that the agency is very far from achieving this mandate and
needs an urgent systemic rejig and a comprehensive overhaul. Nigeria has consistently
remained among the most dangerous place for a woman to be pregnant or a child
to be born in the world courtesy of failure of the PHC system to address the health
needs of the rural communities (Odetola, 2015; Odogwu, 2018). Ononokpono and
Odimegwu (2014) lamented that although there has been a decline in maternal
deaths globally, the maternal mortality rate in Nigeria is still unacceptably
high as pregnancy & delivery is still very well associated with suffering,
morbidity, and death especially in rural community settings. In Nigeria, it has
been reported that an estimated 2,300 children under the age of five and 145
women of childbearing age die every single day, making the country to account
for the second-largest number of maternal and child deaths in the world (United
Nations Children’s Emergency Fund [UNICEF], 2015; Ifijeh, 2016). CIA World
Factbook (2018) equally reported that the maternal mortality rate resulting
from obstetrics episodes in Nigeria is estimated to be 814 deaths/100,000 live
births, which is about four times higher than the global average of 216 deaths
per 100,000 live births (WHO, 2018), making Nigeria that accounts for 2.4% of the
global population to carry 14% of the global burden of maternal mortality
(USAID, 2016). The high maternal & child mortality rate in
the community settings has been attributed to inadequate utilization of skilled
manpower to provide maternal & child healthcare services (Ononokpono
and Odimegwu, 2014). Delivery in a health facility, staffed with skilled
healthcare providers such as Nurses & Midwives is associated with lower
maternal & child mortality and morbidity rates compared with delivery at
centers that lack skilled Nursing & Midwifery services (Odetola, 2015; Ifijeh,
2016; WHO, 2018). The National Primary Health Care Development Agency (Nigeria)
[NPHCDA] itself in its report confirmed that the Nigerian Primary Healthcare
(PHC) system grossly lacks the services of skilled care providers such as
Nurses & Midwives and attributed such to be responsible for the high
incidence of maternal & child mortality and morbidity witnessed in the country.
NPHCDA (2016) had reported that of 61% of pregnant women receiving care by a
skilled provider in Nigeria, only 38% of births are attended to by skilled
birth providers while only 36% deliver in health facilities with skilled
providers, which mostly are located in urban settings. This report by the NPHCDA
itself shows that it knows that its age-long practice of relegating skilled
nursing & midwifery services to the background with the CHEW services in
the rural community settings is the bane of the PHC system but elected to
continue to perpetuate such on the chancel of politics. The poor state the PHC
system has been heralded into over the years was even corroborated by an earlier
report from the 2008 Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) which stated
that only 38% of pregnant Nigerian women deliver in a health facility with
skilled providers which are mostly located in the urban areas (National
Population Commission, ICF Macro, 2009). WHO (2011) capped it with its report that
Nigeria has had a very poor record regarding maternal and child health outcomes
as an estimated 53,000 women and 250,000 newborns die annually mostly as a
result of preventable causes. This figure is even worsening as the years go by
(Odogwu, 2018). There has been an air of suspicion among Nurses that the
Midwifery Service Scheme (MSS) established in the year 2009 for the deployment
of qualified, unemployed or retired midwives, to selected primary health care
facilities in rural communities to facilitate an increase in the coverage of
Skilled Birth Providers (SBP) to reduce maternal, newborn and child mortality was
allowed by the NPHCDA to die off out of lack of funding because some highly placed
individuals in the agency were at odd as per why the scheme should engage the
services of midwives and not that of the CHEWs. The introduction of the now-defunct
MSS would not have even arisen or been necessary in the first place had Nurses
& Midwives been engaged and deployed for the services of the PHC system in
the rural community settings over the years.
At the present moment, the woes of those in
the community setting are further compounded by different factors that fuelled
the surge of internally displaced persons (IDPs) within the past decade such as
terrorism, herdsman crisis, communal clashes, and natural disasters. Having a
litany of IDPs camps in the face of non-functional PHC system with crude
facilities dotted with CHEWs’ services supplanting the much needed skilled
nursing & midwifery services portend that children, women, adolescents,
adults, older people, vulnerable groups, victims of crime and disasters, and
internally displaced persons have been abandoned to their fate in the community
settings.
From
the foregoing, it is convenient to infer that the Sustainable Development Goal
(SDG) 3, which borders on good health and well-being, will perpetually remain a
mirage in Nigeria rural communities as long as the status quo of relegating
skilled nursing & midwifery services to the background persists in our PHC
system. Since the N&MCN blamed
the failure of the PHC system on the shortage of nurses and on the other hand, many
Nurses and nursing groups denounced and disagreed with this claim by the
council and rather blamed the mess on the NPHCDA for supplanting nursing &
midwifery services with CHEW services, it is thus imperative to determine empirically
whether there is indeed a shortage of nurses or not and whether unemployed
nurses & midwives are willing to work in the rural community setting should
the opportunity be offered to them.
Methods:
A compilation of unemployed Nurses & Midwives was done online via various social
media platforms of the Nigerian nursing community using Google forms. Data
collection was done from March 7 to
April 08, 2020, compiling unemployed Nurses & Midwives that could be
reached online within the timeline. The descriptive survey sought to have a
compiled list of unemployed Nurses & Midwives at the time of the study and
as well elicit their responses on the notion of a shortage of nurses and their
willingness to work in the rural community setting if offered the opportunity. The
following socio-demographic data were collected: Names, Phone numbers, State of
Residence, Year of Graduation, Qualification(s), and how long they have
remained unemployed after graduation. In addition, two questions were asked in
line with the objective of the study with options for selecting “Yes, No or
Maybe”. The two questions are: (1) Do you think there is a shortage of Nurses
and Midwives in Nigeria? (2) With a good remuneration, good working condition
and good facilities, will you be willing to work in the rural community
setting? Data collected were analyzed using Google forms’ statistical tools.
Results:
A total of 3317 unemployed Nurses &
Midwives responded to the survey. Among
these unemployed Nurses & Midwives – 38% holds RN only, 19% holds both RN
& RM, 15.4% holds RM only, while 27.6% holds BNSc plus another
qualification. For the year they have remained unemployed after graduation
57.1% have spent 0 – 2 years, 29.9% have been unemployed for 3–5 years, 7% have been unemployed for 6 – 8 years and
6.1% have been unemployed for more than 8 years. To the question, “Do you think there is a shortage of Nurses
and Midwives in Nigeria?” – 47.5% said yes, 43.5% said no whereas 9% were
undecided (said maybe). Furthermore, the result showed that while 95% of the
unemployed Nurses & Midwives are willing to work in the rural community
settings, 1% was not willing to work in the rural community setting and 4% were
undecided (.i.e. said maybe) on whether they will work in the rural community
setting or not. The result also revealed that the 3317 unemployed Nurses & Midwives captured in the survey
represents graduates of 66 Nursing & Midwifery schools per session out of a
total of 162 schools that are currently accredited by the N&MCN as stated
on the council website [.i.e. 85 Schools of Nursing, 42 Schools of Basic
Midwifery, 27 Departments of Nursing and 8 schools of Community Midwifery
program] (N&MCN, 2020b). This was derived from the fact that the Nursing
& Midwifery Council of Nigeria (N&MCN) allots 50 indexing slots per
school per session. This infers that the existing schools have the potential to
graduate 8100 Nurses & Midwives per session should they all present 50
candidates each for council exams with all the candidates passing the exams. Therefore
the unemployed Nurses & Midwives represents at least 41% of all graduates
expected to be turned out by all the Nursing & Midwifery Schools combined (excluding
Post-basic schools) in a session assuming that all the schools index and
present 50 candidates each for the Nursing & Midwifery qualifying exams and
that all candidates presented for the exams pass them.
How long have you been unemployed?
Do
you think there is a shortage of Nurses & Midwives in Nigeria?
With
good remuneration, good working condition, and facilities will you be willing
to work in the rural community setting?
Qualifications
Discussion: The
findings that 7% of the unemployed Nurses & Midwives have been unemployed
for 6 – 8 years and that 6.1% have been unemployed for more than 8 years is
striking for a country whose PHC system was said to be having a gross shortage
of nursing manpower. The results showed that available Nurses & Midwives are
in excess and unemployed for many years after graduation and not in shortage as
stated by the N&MCN. The finding that many Nurses & Midwives who are
willing to work in the rural community settings remain unemployed for even up
to more than 6 to 8 years after graduation strongly disagreed with the position
of the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria in the circular, (Ref No.
N&MCN/SG/RO/CIR/24/VOL.4/152 dated March 3, 2020), wherein it posited that the
quest to fill in the gap of ‘a great shortage of nursing manpower’ to be
engaged for delivery of care in the rural community settings had necessitated its
move to lower the existing standard of nursing education to produce a lower
cadre of Nurses in the form of Licensed Community Nurses (LCN) who would be
admitted into nursing for a two-year program with a poor O'level result of at
least a credit in English and Biology. The study showed that there is no
Nurses’ shortage gap for the N&MCN to fill with the proposed LCN since a
good number of the available Registered Nurses & Midwives are still unemployed
years after graduation. Again, the findings that among the unemployed Nurses
& Midwives are nurses with dual or multiple qualifications indicates that
these unemployed Nurses & Midwives have specialized skills to bring on
board in the community settings to improve health and well-being of the rural
dwellers should their services be engaged by the NPHCDA to serve the PHC system
in the community settings.
The findings that 95% of the unemployed Nurses
& Midwives are willing to work in the rural community settings if offered
the opportunity confirms that it was not a shortage of nurses that buoys their
little or none visibility at the rural community settings but not being offered
the opportunity to work in the PHC system at the community settings by the
NPHCDA. Not finding any opportunity at the community level they switch to any
available option such as self-employment, abandoning nursing for other businesses
or vocations and turning to urban areas or other countries for employment
opportunities. The study, therefore, contradicts the postulation of the N&MCN
that the inability of the people in the rural community setting to assess the
much-needed nursing services is due to the shortage of nurses occasioned by the
mass migration of nurses to urban areas and other countries.
The findings that at least 41% of the possible
numbers of Nurses & Midwives that can be licensed by the N&MCN in a
session are unemployed shows that unemployment is a serious issue among
Nigerian Nurses & Midwives. This unemployed leftover from the annual
turnover of Nurses & Midwives in Nigeria can bridge the nursing manpower needs
in the rural community settings if engaged and deployed to serve the system from
year to year. From the study, it is now comprehensive that while other
countries make deliberate effort to build up their nursing manpower at the
grassroots and ensure universal health coverage across communities by adopting
extreme staffing measures for skilled healthcare providers such as engaging the
services of foreign nurses, in Nigeria, the reverse is the case. The Nigerian
Primary Healthcare (PHC) system has perennially adopted an uncouth extreme
measure of ostracizing Nurses & Midwives from the system such that the skilled
nursing manpower that is supposed to cover the rural communities remain
unengaged as nursing & midwifery services are egregiously ceded to the
CHEWs who are not prepared educationally, ethically, or professionally to render
nursing & midwifery services or be accountable for such. Thus, unemployed
Nurses & Midwives that have been dislodged from the PHC system where they are
supposed to serve and help improve the health indices of the country readily fall
into the prying eyes of exploitative private hospitals in urban areas and the
health system of other countries that are looking for nursing manpower to make
up their deficits. Despite migration to the urban area and other countries, at
least 41% of Nigerian Nurses & Midwives produced in a session still roam
about without a job.
Conclusion:
Giving
the opportunity 95% of unemployed Nurses & Midwives are willing to work in rural
community settings. At least 41% of the possible numbers of Nurses &
Midwives that can be licensed by the N&MCN in a session are unemployed. The
unemployed nurses can bridge the nursing & midwifery manpower needs in the
Primary Healthcare (PHC) system should the NPHCDA engage their services with
commensurate or higher payment to what their employed counterparts receive in the
Federal Government-owned hospitals and establishments. It was erroneous for the
N&MCN to blame the crass failure of the Nigeria PHC system to meet its
mandate to the Nigerian people on the shortage of Nurses & Midwives or
their migration to urban areas or other countries. There is no current shortage
of Nurses that necessitates the lowering of the existing standard of nursing
education. Despite the said migration of Nurses to urban areas and other
countries, at least 41% of Nurses & Midwives produced in a session remain
unemployed and 95% of them are willing to work in rural community settings. Nurses & Midwives are not responsible for
the design, implementation, and delivery of healthcare services at the PHC
level in the community settings and therefore are not culpable for the
deplorable condition and abysmal performance of the Nigerian PHC System.
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