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Home»Society & Style»Education»Nigeria has an ambitious plan for its health workforce, but can it afford it?
Education

Nigeria has an ambitious plan for its health workforce, but can it afford it?

King JajaBy King JajaOctober 23, 2024No Comments0 Views
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Nigeria has an ambitious plan for its health workforce, but can it afford it?
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In August 2024, Nigeria’s Ministry of Health released its National Policy on Health Workforce Migration. The policy aims to strengthen the nation’s flailing health workforce. It particularly it lays out plans to use incentives to retain existing staff and attract others in the diaspora to return to Nigeria.

The incentives include:

  • Programs for motivating and recognising health workers
  • Tax holidays
  • Health insurance
  • Mortgage facilities
  • Provision of healthcare supplies and facilities

The policy is a first step in the right direction. Nigeria’s health workforce is experiencing an unprecedented wave of migration to the Global North. According to the Registrar of the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria, 42,000 nurses have left Nigeria in the last three years. The Ministry of Health also reports that 16,000 doctors have emigrated, leaving behind 55,000 licensed doctors for a population of 220 million.

This migration has left Nigeria with a health workforce ratio below the median: 49 per 10,000. Nigeria is on the World Health Organisation workforce safeguard list along with 55 other countries. This health workforce shortage has hindered the achievement of the health-related sustainable development goals in Nigeria.

The Ministry’s recognition of the problem and willingness to use incentives to tackle it is encouraging.

Apart from staff retention, the policy outlines measures to:

  • Monitor the inflow and outflow of human resources for health
  • Expand the capacity of existing training institutions
  • Improve existing health infrastructure
  • Provide career support and training pathways to existing health workers
  • Provide support to health workers in rural and underserved areas
  • Form bilateral trade agreements with destination countries
  • Utilise data for health systems research and innovation

 

The goals of the policy are laudable. But how will it be funded? In December 2023, President Bola Tinubu launched the Health Sector Renewal Investment Initiative, which aims to invest £717 million into the health system from 2024 to 2026. A press release from the State House described the program as a collaboration between the Federal government, State governments, and development partners. Saying is one thing, doing is another.

Nigeria is yet to allocate the 15 per cent of its annual budget to healthcare that it promised in the Abuja declaration of 2001. In 2024, the allocation was only 4.6 per cent. The highest it has been was 5.75 per cent in 2023. This comes in the midst of Nigeria’s current economic climate, which casts a shadow of doubt on the feasibility of generating any promised funds.

Bola Tinubu Health healthcare hospitals migration national policy on health workforce migration Nigeria nuses politics public policy registrar of the nursing and midwifery council of nigeria who
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