Nigerian doctors shouldn’t be on strike during COVID-19 pandemic: Mamora

The Minister of State for health, Olorunnimbe Mamora, says it is wrong timing for Nigerian doctors to be on strike during a pandemic.
Mr Mamora stated this at the quarterly meeting of the Nigeria Health Commissioners Forum, on Thursday, in Abuja.
On the protracted strike by the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), the minister stated, “This is a period where almost the whole world is on its knees. Therefore, it is not a time to start straining the health system. Even in a war situation, you still come back to a roundtable.”
The forum tagged ‘Building a stronger health sector in Nigeria through collaboration and strategic partnership’ was convened primarily to discuss how to strengthen the health system at sub-national levels, with an overall objective of achieving Universal Health Coverage (UHC).
Mr Mamora also admitted that inadequate funding was also hindering the development of the sector and the industrial dispute in the health sector.
“Whether you are talking of health infrastructure, equipment in the hospitals and human resources for health, the underlying factor is funding,” the minister explained. “Even if you have enough human resources in the health sector, you need to take care of emoluments, incentives. Therefore, you need funding, period. That is why we need to find ways of increasing the funding for the health sector.”
He suggested that legal commodities but harmful to human health should be taxed to generate more funds to support the sector.
“We need to begin to tax commodities like alcohol, cigarettes, which cause a lot of damage to the human body,” Mr Mamora further explained. “The whole thing will end in the health sector, therefore, increasing the spending in the sector.”
He added, ”That is why we are saying that if people take these things, let us find a way to put some tax on it so that we can get some money to fund the health sector, in addition to the existing funding structures.”
(NAN)
More from Peoples Gazette

Politics
Kaduna Election: Police restrict movement from Friday midnight
The police command in Kaduna has ordered restriction of human and vehicular movement in the state from Friday midnight to Saturday 6:00 p.m.

Anti-Corruption
CCB to access CAC database to catch corporate criminals
The Corporate Affairs Commission has begun moves to grant the Code of Conduct Bureau access to its database to probe fraudulent companies.

Opinion
Quest for federalism and its many ironies
Legislative lists of the 1999 Constitution set the roles of the different tiers of government with a lopsided and irresponsible tilt in favour of the Federal Government.

World
One killed, six injured in New Zealand supermarket terrorist attack
One person was killed and six people injured in what authorities have described as a “terrorist attack” at a New Zealand supermarket.

States
110 people killed, 198 injured in Kaduna road crashes: FRSC
One hundred and ten people have been killed in Kaduna and 198 injured, the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) reveals.

Anti-Corruption
Offa poly student jailed for cybercrime
The Ilorin Division of the Kwara State High Court has convicted a student of the Federal Polytechnic, Offa, for Internet fraud.