In a joint statement by its National President, Chief (Hon).
Solomon E. O. Egwuenu, and its Ag. National Secretary, Nurse Philip O. Eteng,
the association said that such a move may be good for other sectors of the
economy but certainly not for the health sector.
According to the association, the period of internship is the most
critical period of training of the healthcare professionals be it the nurse,
the doctor, the pharmacist, or the Medical Lab Scientist. It is at this period
that the foundation for practice is laid. Toying with such programme amounts to
toying with the foundation; a house built on a faulty foundation is doomed to
fail.
The statement read, “The bulks of the healthcare professionals
that constitute the interns are a critical part of the healthcare workforce and
fill a considerable manpower gap in the health sector.
“Removing them from the Civil Service cadre in our own assessment
can never be to give an incentive to them but rather a fig tree for slashing
their salaries. Our health system is already at a crossroad and needs good
incentives to motivate the workforce to continue their sacrifices for the
nation rather than floating a kite for slashing their already paltry salaries
which are nothing when compared with what healthcare professionals earn
elsewhere in the world.
“The healthcare sector is very peculiar in the sense that the
lives of people are tied to it. Healthcare professionals whether interns or not
are supposed to be properly taken care of such that they can concentrate all
their energies and attention to taking care of others rather than being pronged
by hunger and hardship which may take their attention away from their central
calling which is to live their lives wholly for the health of
humanity.
We have lost many of our seasoned healthcare professionals to the
health system of other nations who pay and appreciate their services better. We
cannot afford to lose more by toeing a path that will lead to further slashing
of their already paltry salaries especially for our young generation who shall
be heavily traumatized by such development which is capable of puncturing their
faith in our health system beyond repair.
The poor performance of our health system in global ranking is
never the fault of our healthcare professionals. It is a systematic fault of
not putting the right facilities and motivation in place to enable our
healthcare professionals to replicate the type of wonders they have been
performing when they travel abroad in our own health system.
The monies wasted on medical tourism is enough to rejig our health
system and make a competing payment to the healthcare professionals that will
dissuade those currently practicing in the country from contemplating going
abroad and compel those that have left for greener pasture to return home.
Rather than scrapping the internship post from the civil service
grades and telling the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission (NSIWC)
to offer the interns some allowances, we recommend that NSIWC’s allowance
should be offered to them in addition to their retaining their grades
in the
civil service and the remunerations for those grades, to engender a motivated
workforce.
We also call on the Federal Government, the National Council on Establishment, and the office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation to expedite action on the lingered issue of proper placement of the graduate nurses as no health system in the whole world has ever thrived or evolved better by treating the nursing workforce, which is the heartbeat of care delivery, as subservient to other healthcare professionals- the statement concluded.
This is good.Please, UGONSA should do well to write to the appropriate body/Person(s) as did NMA
ReplyDeleteThis is a good step to this cause.
ReplyDeleteVery recommendable
ReplyDeleteI used to wonder seriously how some people think in this nation. Some countries are struggling to improve their standard but but we are always going back. What a country pls.where are we heading to. May be they have forgotten that "A healthy country is a rich country"
ReplyDeleteI used to wonder seriously how some people think in this nation. Some countries are struggling to improve their standard but but we are always going back. What a country pls.where are we heading to. May be they have forgotten that "A healthy country is a rich country"
ReplyDeleteBold step from Ugonsa. May God help our Dear Nation and may they have a good rethink on how to foster our growth!
ReplyDeleteAm proud of you, nice one Ugonsa
ReplyDeleteThis is nice job.
ReplyDeleteMay God help UGONSA to achieve her goals for the betterment of the profession
Nice effort, to Nigerian government they are doing health workers a favor by paying salaries and allowances, not knowing that no matter how much they pay them, it can never commensurate their efforts because no one can pay back a sacrifice. Notwithstanding, the internship program actually cover up the failure on the part of government to employ health workers and as such I urge the NCE and the federal government to reconsider
ReplyDelete