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Medical Tourism: NMA, Archbishop Blast Nigerians
The Archbishop and Primate of Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), Archbishop Nicholas Okoh, has called for an urgent intervention in the health sector to stem the tide of Nigerians seeking medical help in India.
Okoh made the call in his sermon at St. Matthews Church in Maitama, Abuja, during the thanksgiving service of the Nigeria Christian Pilgrims Commission (NCPC), yesterday.
“Are we going to become subjects of India like the British colonialists? “Those in charge of the nation’s health sector should make a mark this year; we have suffered too many adversities in our health sector for so long,” he said.
The Primate recounted that in recent times, several Nigerians had sought medical treatment abroad because of the parlous state of the country’s health sector.
Okoh noted that the corpses of some of the patients flown abroad only returned to the country.
He, therefore, urged the government to strive to reduce the high traffic of Nigerians to India for medical help.
The Primate said that the world was in dire need of peace in areas such as Central African Republic, Syria and the Middle East, and criticised the UN for its inaction in Syria, where thousands of people had been killed in the raging civil war.
In his remarks, the Executive Secretary of NCPC, Mr John Kennedy Opara, said that the commission was grateful to God for the success of the 2012 pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
Opara recalled that the transportation of pilgrims for the pilgrimage, which commenced on Oct. 25, 2012, recorded 120 flights without any unpleasant incident.
Opara announced that the commission would launch an Easter pilgrimage package on Jan. 28 and encouraged individuals to undertake the 11-day pilgrimage, which would cost N460,000.
In a related development, the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) is unhappy that Nigerians shun facilities and manpower at home for medical treatment abroad and is set to address the issue of medical tourism.
Its president, Dr Osahon Enabulele, said yesterday in Abuja that the NMA was determined to change Nigeria from a country whose citizens looked outward for Medicare into a place that attracted medical tourists.
He said the first step towards that goal was the meeting of minds at the first ever NMA National Health Summit to be held in Asaba between Jan. 20 and Jan. 27
.Enabulele stated that the summit was an opportunity to drive very proactive, purposeful and progressive proposals that would impact positively on the lives of Nigerians.
He said, “It’s aimed at driving very strategic proposals to reposition the medical profession and of course the health care system in our country Nigeria. “We have had to gather resource persons, professionals, stakeholders and indeed Nigerians, home and abroad to congregate in Asaba to discuss the issues that affect the health care system.
Enabulele said that the NMA did not want the summit to end with talks, but with action, and explained that other countries with thriving health care systems made progress as a result of developing synergy between the public and the private sectors.
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