Editorial
COVID-19: No Time For Strike
In this era of global pandemic occasioned by Coronavirus (COVID-19) when national
and international emergencies are being declared by countries and international agencies to contain the dreaded disease, and when all medics are being required to step up their game by exhibiting the highest sense of professionalism and commitment to their calling in accordance with the Hippocratic Oath, the downing of tools by resident doctors in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and their counterparts in Gombe State is not only untimely, worrisome and condemnable but also unacceptable by well-meaning Nigerians.
Ordinarily, Nigerian medical personnel should be on red alert following the pandemic’s rising death toll without being prompted. But for doctors who naturally constitute the first responders to declare industrial dispute and indefinite strike under whatever guise at this time is, to say the least, unfathomable and unjustifiable when vulnerable Nigerians are dying by the day.
The report that amidst the increasing cases of COVID-19 in Nigeria, the Association of Resident Doctors, FCT and Gombe State chapters, at this critical time, we think, should be reviewed for national interest.
While we agree that the reasons adduced, among which include poor working conditions, demand for timely and adequate payment of salaries, among others, are cogent enough to down tools, it is our candid opinion that the doctors should soft-pedal for now in order to save innocent lives.
Considering the essential services these medics offer to humanity and their critical roles in our general and specialist hospitals, primary and secondary health care facilities, their absence from duty will inflict unimaginable fatality in our healthcare delivery system.
From all indications, the strike should have been avoided if their members were not thrown into serious financial crisis following the non-payment of their salaries as at when due, after series of negotiations to forestall the industrial dispute.
“The money we received as salary ranges from one fifth to one-tenth with the exclusion of the newly employed members who have not been paid for five to seven months”, Dr Roland Aigbovo, President of ARD-FCT declared in a statement and this was also corroborated by his counterpart in Gombe State.
We had had reasons to condemn the lackadaisical approach by policy makers and managers of the nation’s health sector on lack of the political will and the drive to push health care to the next level, but unfortunately such admonitions fell on deaf ears.
As paltry as budgetary allocations for health services are for effective healthcare delivery system, the little released is either embezzled or misappropriated by those at the helm of affairs. And this is why we keep having issues with doctors and paramedical bodies in the country.
However, we implore medical and paramedical staff associations to place their services above other considerations until the country overcomes the COVID-19 pandemic which clearly constitutes a present threat to our existence.
In all intents and purposes, government may not have done enough in terms of doctors’ welfare and equipping our health institutions, medics should not transfer their grievances or vent their spleen on the innocent citizens who cannot afford medical trips abroad, especially now that there are travel bans almost everywhere across the globe. Insensitivity on the part of government on health matters is not an isolated one as virtually all sectors of the economy and society are begging for attention.
It is against this backdrop that The Tide implores our doctors to call off their indefinite strike now and continue the negotiation after the national emergency occasioned by the Coronavirus pandemic.
Life is precious and has no duplicate. A life lost now as a result of the strike definitely cannot be replaced.
Time to call off ARD’s strike is now, at least, on humanitarian grounds. Meanwhile, the authorities in FCT and Gombe State should, as a matter of urgency, facilitate the process of reconciling all grey areas with the aggrieved doctors before other similar medical bodies join the fray on sympathy considerations.
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