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Obio Cottage Hospital, Model For Nigeria – WHO
The World Bank has ranked Obio Cottage Hospital in Rivers State as a model clinic not just in Nigeria but in the world.
The ranking was based on assessment of the clinic by the International Finance Corporation, IFC/World Bank on facilities, staff and general performance variables as are practically obtainable in Nigeria, Africa and the world at large.
Dr Olumide Okuola of IFC/World Bank disclosed this Tuesday at a stakeholders Engagement and Evaluation Workshop marking the fifth year anniversary of the clinic at Novotel Hotel in Port Harcourt.
The Tide reports that Obio Cottage Hospital is run under Obio Community Health Insurance Scheme, an initiative of Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria in the Industrial Area(IA) cluster, in partnership with four Obio communities and Rivers State Government.
Some positive impacts made by the clinic include low maternal death rate compared with European countries, live delivery of an average of 283 per month compared to 10 per month before the cottage hospital introduced health insurance scheme, 92% enrollees satisfied with services, financial sustainability, prevention of 156 babies from HIV/AIDS through Live with Hope Support Group and full immunization of 21,365 in 2014, amongst others.
Okunola said the customer satisfaction and impressive performance level recorded in the clinic marks it out as the way to go and much sought model for Nigeria and the world, and linked the success of the hospital to sustainable private, Public Partnership performance based on mechanism.
He urged that the initiative should be replicated as a brake away from the common practice of viewing health as mainly government business or public service with abysmally low performance record common in Nigeria and Africa.
The Regional Community Health Manager, Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC), Dr Babatunde Fakunle, said the initiative was the first of its kind in the Niger Delta which aimed at developing a sustainable funding model that could eliminate out-of-pocket expenses, expressing worry that about 70% of the healthcare expenditure were out of pocket by those who could ill-afford them in Nigeria.
Other targets, according to Fakunle, were to move from fee-for-service healthcare to a community risk sharing model, exclude poverty as barrier to receiving healthcare, equitable access to quality- assured healthcare systems and infrastructures, amongst others.
He said, with SPDC serving as project catalyst, and using the GMoU platform as launch pad, the IA Cluster Community Development Board (CDB0, comprising four communities engaged the services of a specialised Health Maintenance Organisation (HMO), Healthcare International, to run the programme. The recently upgraded SPDC-supported Obio Cottage Hospital serves as health service provider.
Chris Oluoh
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