Nigeria: Buhari's Vacation – the Hurdles to Curbing Medical Tourism
By Martins Ifijeh
While President
Muhammadu Buhari’s government has tried to curb medical tourism by
discouraging its officials from accessing healthcare abroad, his own
trip to London for medical reasons has undermined Nigeria’s healthcare
system.
When President
Muhammadu Buhari-led government last year declared that it would
discourage medical tourism through revatilising the country’s healthcare
system and putting stringent measures in place for government officials
to travel for medical treatment abroad, except extremely needful, there
were mixed feelings from Nigerians.
For some, the
declaration was not new, as previous administrations had made same
statements without following them to the letter. The government of
ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo and that of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan made
same pronouncements. But no desired outcome. Medical tourism even soared
higher during the latter.
For others, it was
an opportunity for President Buhari to write his name in gold in the
healthcare sector of the country, as it was believed that curbing
medical tourism would mean the government would have to place priority
on revamping the healthcare system to a world class status, and in
return mean that the supposed money spent in other countries by
Nigerians for medical treatment will be spent in Nigeria, thereby
positively impacting the economy.
But like the 28th
President of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, who told Americans
during his campaign that the country would not be involved in World War
1, because he reasoned that voters wanted the United States to remain
out of the conflict, then quickly made a volt face immediately after
winning the election. He went ahead to Congress to get an approval of
declaration of war with Germany and its allies.
Like Wilson, Buhari
has directly broken his declaration of discouraging government
officials to access healthcare outside Nigeria, thereby laying bare
reasons why other Nigerians, especially government officials must not
take his pronouncement seriously, even though experts believed Nigerian
doctors can compete anywhere in the world if the right facilities and
enabling environment are provided.
No wonder the Vice
President, Commonwealth Medical Association, Dr. Osahon Enabulele,
described as a ‘national shame of immense proportion’ President Buhari’s
decision during his first medical trip to the United kingdom when he
became President to treat Ear Nose and Throat (ENT) infection, even
though, according to him, there exist over 250 ENT specialists and
professors in Nigeria, well as a National Ear Centre located in Kaduna
State that could tackle even the most complicated ENT cases.
He said he was very
“constrained to state that the President’s foreign medical trip flies
in the face of the federal government’s earlier declaration of her
resolve to halt the embarrassing phenomenon of outward medical tourism,
which as at the end of the year 2013 had led to a humongous capital
flight of about $1billion dollars, particularly from expenses incurred
by political and public office holders (and their accompanying aides),
whose foreign medical trips (most of which are unnecessary) were
financed with tax payers’ resources.
He believed
President Buhari would have showed leadership by insisting that all his
medical treatments and that of his Executive Council members would be
done within the country, as this could have given him the opportunity to
curb medical tourism in the country.
“Mr. President has
lost a golden opportunity to assert his change mantra through a clear
demonstration of leadership by example, by staying back to receive
medical treatment in Nigeria and thereby inspiring confidence in
Nigeria’s health sector which currently boasts of medical experts who
favourably compare with medical experts anywhere in the world, if not
even better,” he said.
Enabulele, who
argued during the President’s first medical trip last year, said what he
would have done since he had said he was poised to curbing medical
tourism, was to had urgently invited a consortium of Nigerian trained
ENT specialists to Abuja to re- evaluate and treat him, or on the
alternative, “if it is determined that the medical expertise is not
available in Nigeria (and I doubt this), any identified Nigerian trained
ENT specialist practicing anywhere in the world should have been
invited to Abuja, for the sole purpose of re-evaluating and treating
him.”
He added that if
the first two options were not realisable enough due to unavailability
of health facilities/equipments, then the President would have used his
current medical situation, though unfortunate, to commence the federal
government’s plan to re-equip Nigerian hospitals with modern
state-of-the art health facilities, by ordering for the needed medical
equipment to enable the locally available Nigerian trained ENT
specialists attend to him, and thereafter use same facilities to attend
to other Nigerians with similar conditions.
Enabulele had
advised that if the President receives treatment within Nigeria, it
would be a win-win situation for the country, “as Mr. President will not
only get managed with the imported medical facilities and expertise (if
indeed needed); he would save Nigeria (currently going through a
socio-economic turmoil) the capital flight that would result from his
foreign medical trip. It will also help to improve the state of
healthcare facilities and medical practice in Nigeria (particularly
through technology transfer).”
Apart from
President Buhari’s treatment for ENT infection in the UK last year, he
has since gone back for another medical vacation since January 19th,
where he had earlier revealed he would be staying for 10 days within
which he would have a medical checkup. Upon the exhaustion of the 10
days, he further wrote to the National Assembly for extension, as he
needed time to perfect his medical diagnosis.
His Special
Adviser, Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said the extension was
necessary to allow the President complete the series of medical tests
recommended by his doctors and get the results before heading back to
Nigeria.
However, his recent
trip has again called for question over his government’s efforts
towards prioritising healthcare in the country and making the sector a
world class. This is even as reports suggest over N1.3 trillion was
being spent on medical tourism abroad last year, where as the country’s
entire health allocation in the 2017 budgetary allocation remains a
paltry N304 billion, prompting analysts to say if truly the government
invest in healthcare and provide all necessary funds, there would be no
need for the President or any other Nigerian to travel abroad for
medical treatment.
No wonder the
Senator representing Abia North senatorial district in the National
Assembly, Senator Mao Ohuabunwa, during a debate last week on the 2017
annual budget by the lawmakers, said the treatment of the President
abroad was detrimental to the development of the health sector in the
country.
Ohuabunwa argued
that rather than embark on medical tourism to foreign countries, the
federal government should budget more funds for the health sector, such
that him and other Nigerians would not have to travel abroad for
treatments the country has expertise and facilities for.
Ohuabunwa advised:
“A lot is being expected of us as Senators. We are leaving our country
to go on medical vacation. These countries we go to have spent so much
to put their health sector in place. Unfortunately, what we have for the
health sector is a far cry from what it should be.
“It is not about
allocation alone. What about implementation? What was the level of
implementation of the 2016 budget? We need to emphasise the issue of
budget implementation before we approve the 2017 budget. The government
should be talking about creating entrepreneurship centres in all the 774
local government areas in the country if we want to create jobs,” the
senator added.
With the country’s
health allocation placed at N304 billion for over 180 million Nigerians,
it would mean the government would spend just N1,688 on the health of
each citizens for 2017, an amount stakeholders say would not be enough
to tackle even 25 per cent of the healthcare needs of an average
Nigerian for the year.
Meanwhile, the
World Health Organisation has stated that Nigeria needs to spend at
least N6,000 per Nigerian this year if it must make strides in the
health sector.
It also believed
for Nigeria to attain its goal of being a medical hub for its citizens
and neighbouring countries, the health sector must be well funded to
achieving it.
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