Category: Health

  • Cross River Communities Unite Against HIV/AIDS Challenges in Carnival Season

    Cross River Communities Unite Against HIV/AIDS Challenges in Carnival Season

    The kick-off of the 2023 Carnival in Cross River state not only marked the beginning of the month-long festivities but also symbolized a united front in addressing the challenges posed by HIV/AIDS. Eyoanwan Otu, the Wife of the Governor of Cross River state, and Dr Egbe Ayuk, the state’s Commissioner for Health, delivered impactful messages during the HIV/AIDS walk, emphasizing community involvement and targeted efforts in specific localities.

    In her address to the community, Eyoanwan Otu expressed gratitude and hope as the state observed World AIDS Day 2023. She underscored the theme of the year, “Community’s Leadership to End AIDS by 2030,” emphasizing the pivotal role of communities in combating AIDS. Otu, dedicated to leveraging resources and influence, urged citizens to stand together in creating an AIDS-free generation within Cross River state.

    “As the wife of the governor of Cross River state, I am committed to leveraging our resources and influence to intensify the fight against AIDS. Let us be the leaders our communities need,” declared Otu.

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    Dr Egbe Ayuk, the Commissioner for Health, shed light on challenges faced by specific local governments, including Yala, Obanliku, and the Calabar area. Despite the state not being among the top 6 states with high prevalence, Ayuk stressed the need to refocus attention and resources on these community-centric areas.

    “We need to ensure communities in these 3 or 4 LGs are at the forefront of efforts to regulate population transmigration,” Ayuk emphasized.

    These statements were made during The HIV/AIDS walk, signifying the commencement of the 32 days of non-stop activities for the 2023 Carnival, themed “Season of Sweetness.”

  • Anambra govt declares war against quackery in health sector

    Anambra govt declares war against quackery in health sector

    By Ovat Abeng

    Anambra State Government has warned the public to stop promoting quackery across the state.

    The State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Afam Ben Obidike, who lay down the warning at a one-day capacity training of the Task-Force Team on hospital monitoring in Awka, on Wednesday, appealed to residents and the public at large to report any such sharp practices to the government.

    The Commissioner emphasized that the training is geared toward improving healthcare and service delivery both in Public and Private Healthcare facilities across the 21 local government areas of the state.

    According to Obidike, supervision is a way of ensuring and improving health workers competence and effectiveness through careful observation, discussion, guidance and support.

    “What we are doing is not witch hunting but rather we want to ensure people receive quality of care as well as have trust in the healthcare system of the state.

    Read Also: Soludo condemns burning of houses, vehicles in Iyowa community by hoodlums

    “Why we make this appeal is because the public knows those practicing quackery and their illegal hospitals so ours is to fish them out so as to save the lives of our people especially those in the rural areas.

    “Report them to us, we promise not to reveal the identity of the person just like we have done in the past few months.

    “It will interest you to know that we have sealed up many hospitals with quack which we don’t tolerate in the state because of the threat to lives.

    “Majority of them are not medical personnel while some are secondary school dropouts, so we are intensifying our effort with this capacity training of people that will go out there to monitor activities in hospitals.’’

    He said there will be continuous monitoring, strategic means of identifying quack and fake hospitals by next year and also leverage on the public reporting to us.

    He said that next year the state will establish Anambra State Health Facility Monitoring Accreditation Unit where hospitals must have been given accreditation to operate.

    “We must protect the health of people, so that they will not be victim when they are seeking for health care services.’’

    Dr. Obidike explained that the healthcare system in Anambra has improved significantly under the good leadership of the State Governor, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo

    “This is not just said by mouth, it is data driven, the attendance in hospitals has improved even four months ago, attendance in delivery services as of August this year was less than six hundred, this month we are getting one thousand, two hundred.

    “Last two years when we did maternal review, there were some deaths but this year, since 3 months it was started, there is no maternal death recorded.

    “With this, people should be more aware of their health, engage in exercises, currently we are partnering with the Healthy Living Initiative, a non-Governmental Organisation founded by the wife of the governor, Mrs Nonye Soludo, many years ago.

    “Our reason for partnering with them is that they advocate for healthy lifestyles and natural foods which one can eat to stay healthy.

    “So, generally accessibility to healthcare system has improved and quality of service delivery has also improved.’’

    The facilitators, Dr. Charles Okafor and Dr. Geroge Ikpe lectured the participants on best practices as it relates to taskforce and inspection of hospitals.

    It was gathered that the training organised by the Anambra State Government in collaboration with the National Agency for the Control of AIDS under Resilient and Sustainable System for Health has participants from the State Chapter of Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Civil Society Organisation, Association of Private Medical Practitioners, Association of Optometrists and Health Workers, among others.

  • Scientists Admit People Who Wore Masks Got COVID More Often

    People who wore face masks during the pandemic were more likely to contract COVID-19 than those who didn’t, according to an official new study.

    The peer-reviewed study, published in the journal Epidemiology and Infection on Nov. 13, analyzed mask wearing among 3,209 people from Norway. Researchers followed them for 17 days, and then asked the participants about their use of masks. The team found that there was a higher incidence of testing positive for COVID-19 among people who used masks more frequently.

    Zerohedge reports: Among individuals who “never or almost never” wore masks, 8.6 percent tested positive. That rose to 15 percent among participants who “sometimes” used masks, and to 15.1 percent among those who “almost always or always” wore them.

    Adjusting for factors such as vaccination status, the study determined that individuals who sometimes or often wore masks had a 33 percent higher incidence of COVID-19, compared to those who never or almost never wore masks. This jumped to 40 percent among people who almost always or always wore them.

    However, adjusting for “differences in baseline risk over time,” the risk of wearing masks turned out to be “less pronounced,” with only a 4 percent higher incidence of infection among mask-wearers.

    “The results contradict earlier randomized and non-randomized studies of the effectiveness of mask-wearing on the risk of infection,” the researchers wrote.

    Most of these studies reported that wearing a face mask reduces the risk of COVID-19 infection. Some observational studies have reported manyfold reductions while one community-based randomized trial failed to demonstrate a statistically significant reduction in infection risk and one cluster randomized community trial found only a modest reduction.”

    The researchers pointed out a major limitation of their study: Individuals who used masks may have done so to protect others from their own infection. This could explain the “positive association between risk of infection and mask usage.”

    Behavioral differences and the fact that the survey was based on self-reporting could also contribute to bias, it stated.

    There’s also a possibility that mask wearers felt safe while wearing masks and thus didn’t follow other regulations such as social distancing, which raised their risk of contracting COVID-19, the study said.

    Our findings suggest that wearing a face mask may be associated with an increased risk of infection. However, it is important to note that this association may be due to unobservable and non-adjustable differences between those wearing and not wearing a mask,” the researchers stated.

    Therefore, caution is imperative when interpreting the results from this and other observational studies on the relationship between mask-wearing and infection risk. Recommendations to wear face masks in the community are largely informed by low certainty evidence from observational studies.”

    Researchers called for more trials and studies to gain a better understanding of the effectiveness of wearing masks against transmission of respiratory pathogens.

    The study was fully funded by the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. It reported no conflicts of interest.

    Masking Mandates

    The new study comes at a time when some regions in North America are reinstating mask mandates amid a reported increase in COVID-19 cases.

    At the beginning of November, many regions in the Bay Area issued masking rules in health care settings ahead of the respiratory disease season, when infections such as COVID-19, the flu, and respiratory syncytial virus are expected to spread.

    In the state of California, San Francisco, Alameda, Santa Clara, San Mateo, Marin, Contra Costa, Napa, Sonoma, and Solano issued masking mandates, with the rules remaining in effect until next March or April.

    While in some places only staff and workers of a health care facility are required to wear masks, others require patients and visitors to wear masks as well.

    Rosemary Hills School in Maryland announced in September that it distributed KN95 masks to students and teachers while mandating masking for at least 10 days after three students from a classroom tested positive for COVID-19.

    A month earlier, school officials with the Kinterbish Junior High School in Cuba, Alabama, asked students, employees, and visitors to wear masks “due to the slow rise of COVID cases in the area.”

    Seven hospitals in Canada reinstated mask mandates last month to “help prevent transmission of COVID-19.”

    In British Columbia, Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry announced that health care workers, volunteers, and visitors would be required to wear “medical” masks in all public health care facilities starting on Oct. 3.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends wearing masks to counter COVID-19. “Masking is a critical public health tool and it is important to remember that any mask is better than no mask,” it said in an August 2021 update.

    Certain states have already made it clear that mask mandates wouldn’t be allowed. In August, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said in an X post that there would be “NO mask mandates in Texas.”

    Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo highlighted the issue of the ineffectiveness of masking policies.

    “What do you call re-imposing mask policies that have been proven ineffective or restarting lockdowns that are known to cause harm? You don’t call it sanity,” he said in a post on X. “These terrible policies only work with your cooperation. How about refusing to participate.”

    Several studies have questioned the use of masks to prevent viral transmission. A review published in late January at the Cochrane Library that analyzed 78 randomized controlled trials found that they didn’t show “a clear reduction in respiratory viral infection with the use of medical/surgical masks.”

    In an interview with the Brownstone Institute in February, Tom Jefferson, a senior associate tutor at the University of Oxford and lead author of the study, pointed out that there hasn’t been a “proper trial” of masks whereby a huge, randomized study was done to check their effectiveness. Instead, some experts overnight began to perpetuate a “fear-demic.”

    Source

  • Australians Urged To Wear Masks & Get Boosted Ahead Of Christmas

    ABC’s ‘medical expert’ Dr Norman Swan wants to see the return of face masks and more jabs as the arrival of an eight covid wave is declared.

    Swan told The Project that a ‘Covid Christmas’ was about to begin and that everybody should make sure they are up to date with their vaccinations, avoid crowded spaces and mask up, even indoors.

    Warning that “This is not a mild virus and the death rates are going back up again” Swan said: “Stay outdoors, don’t go indoors to stuffy environments, wear masks to protect yourselves, and if you’ve got symptoms like a runny nose or a cough stay away from your relatives”

    He added: “For those of you that have not had a jab in 2023; Really, another jab? I mean you haven’t had a jab for quite a while [so] put on your big boy pants or your big girl pants and go out and get one”.

    The Mail Online reports: Dr Swan said those who have yet to get their Covid jab in 2023 they are better off waiting for the next version of the jab that will be released on December 11.

    The new version of the vaccine is designed to specifically fight off the most common version of the virus as emergency rooms struggle to keep up with cases.

    It targets the new XBB variant that was first discovered in late December 2022 and has quickly become the dominant strain in the country.

    Covid case numbers have increased in all states and territories leading medical experts to declare it the ‘eighth wave’.

    Vaccine fatigue has become a major problem as public sentiment is keen to move on from the days of lockdowns and mask mandates, but ERs are still under the pump.

    As much as 35 per cent of people are admitted into hospitals carry the virus which can lead to deadly outbreaks in those vulnerable communities.

  • Moderna Halts mRNA Vaccine Trial For Young People Due To Suspected Heart Damage

    …Moderna has been forced to halt an early-stage clinical trial for its mRNA Epstein-Barr virus vaccine in adolescents.

    Investigators stopped the trial after one of the participants developed a suspected case of myocarditis.

    According to Unreported Truths: The case “necessitates an immediate suspension of all dosing for ALL adolescents,” an investigator at the company that is supervising the trial for Moderna wrote, adding, “Please confirm understanding and receipt of this urgent communication.”

    The trial subjects should continue to be monitored for safety, the investigator wrote. About 150 adolescents are in the trial, along with 272 people aged 18-30.

    A person not employed by Moderna, which makes the Spikevax Covid vaccine, provided the email to Unreported Truths.

    Moderna did not disclose the trial halt, which occurred before stock markets opened for trading Thursday, to investors. Moderna stock is down about 85 percent from its highs in 2021, as sales of Spikevax lag, but it remains among the most valuable biotechnology companies, with a $30 billion market value.

    (All Dosing Must Pause Immediately! A partial subject line from the email sent halting the trial. Note the email time stamp – before Moderna stock opened for trading on Thursday.)

    The Epstein-Barr virus, which causes mononucleosis, is one of Moderna’s leading candidates for new vaccines. The company has told investors it could reach billions of dollars in sales a year.

    But the trial halt raises questions for Moderna and mRNA jabs that go far beyond the Epstein-Barr vaccine – officially called mRNA-1189 – alone.

    The vaccine uses essentially the same design as Moderna’s Covid shot. Both jabs include a strand of modified mRNA surrounded by a tiny fat globule called a “lipid nanoparticle,” or LNP.

    Source

  • Nigeria can’t fight diabetes with 6% budgetary allocation for health – Endocrinologist

    Nigeria can’t fight diabetes with 6% budgetary allocation for health – Endocrinologist

    By Christian Njoku

    Dr. Ofem Enang, a Consultant Endocrinologist with the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital, (UCTH) has said Nigeria cannot fight diabetes prevalence with just six per cent budgetary allocation for health.

    Enang disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Calabar.

    The consultant who called on the Federal Government of Nigeria to improve funding for health to at least 15 per cent of the nation’s budgetary allocation as approved globally, said Nigeria had never done more than six per cent.

    According to him, around the world access to medicine has become a right but this is challenged by the unequal distribution of wealth across the nations.

    Read Also: About 1.2 million Nigerians are suffering from diabetic retinopathy – Ophthalmologist

    He said care for diabetic patients was expensive but imperative even in the less developed or poorer nations and must start with basic diabetic education so that they can help themselves.

    “It is important for diabetics to have access to their medicines and kits, however, this can only be possible if universal health coverage is accessible.

    “Universal health coverage is very important, this is why governments in every nation must continue to do everything in their power to make their people access care.

    “Health Insurance instead of out of pocket expenses is the way to go for people especially diabetes patients to access care,” he said.

    He commended the Federal Government for enacting the National Health Insurance Authority, (NHIA) act which was an improvement for more people to be able to access healthcare.

    He said doing this would help the nation capture most of the persons who ordinarily would not be able to access care if they were to pay out of pocket.

  • About 1.2 million Nigerians are suffering from diabetic retinopathy – Ophthalmologist

    About 1.2 million Nigerians are suffering from diabetic retinopathy – Ophthalmologist

    By Christian Njoku

    Dr. Besong Akotanchi, an ophthalmologist with the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital has disclosed that about 1.2 million Nigerians are suffering from diabetic retinopathy.

    Akotanchi made the remark on Thursday in Calabar during a commemoration of World Diabetes Day organised by the Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism Unit of UCTH in partnership with Lions Club, District 404A.

    The event which also had the Diabetes Association of Nigeria, Cross River chapter as partner had the theme: “access to diabetes care” and a sub-theme: “empowering global health.”

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that diabetic retinopathy is a diabetic complication that affects the eye, caused by damage to the blood vessels in the tissue at the back of the eye (retina), due to poorly controlled blood sugar.

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    According to the ophthalmologist, while about 5.2 million Nigerians are diabetic, those that do not handle the condition well may start noticing the effects on there eyes.

    “Diabetic retinopathy which affects people between the ages of 20 to 70 years is the last stage of eye problem caused by diabetes.

    “People keep collecting glasses but it is not the solution, as a patient, when you go to a diabetic centre and you are given drugs, be compliant because a lot of diabetic come down with blindness as a result of negligence,” he said.

    On his part, Mr Benard Enya, Chairman, Diabetes Association of Nigeria, Cross River chapter said it was a sad thing that Cross River lacked data of people living with diabetes and those that had died of the disease.

    Enya said while they knew that there was an increase in the prevalence following more and more people showing up in health facilities in the state with the condition, the number of care givers are dwindling.

    “The whole of Cross River does not have up to five endocrinologist and they are all based in Calabar in UCTH, in other Local Government Areas, we have doctors who have little knowledge of diabetes and are not specialised.

    So, people travel for eight to nine hours from the other LGAs to Calabar, spend three days just to access care and go back.

    “It is time for the state government through the State Ministry of Health to take the lead in diabetes care, this is because any success recorded in the state as it concerns health is credited to them,” he said.

    He used the opportunity to appeal to Gov. Bassey Otu through the ministry of health to look into the issue of appointing a diabetes desk officer in the state that would interface with the federal and ensure that government policies get to the grassroots.

    (NAN)

  • Polio vaccination is free in Anambra, Health Commissioner announces

    Polio vaccination is free in Anambra, Health Commissioner announces

    By Ovat Abeng

    Anambra State Government will on Friday, flagged off its second phase of oral polio vaccination campaign as well as the outbreak response, targeting over 2.6 million children under the age of 0-59 months across the 21 LGAs of the state.

    The State Commissioner for Health, Dr Afam Ben Obidike, while addressing a press conference at his office to commenced the exercise, informed the public that the vaccination is free of charge.

    The Commissioner called on nursing mothers and guardians to make their children and wards available for the free gesture at any Primary Healthcare facility nearest to them.

    Obidike said: “We are responding to the outbreak of Polio Virus in a neighbouring town, Nkanu West in Enugu state.

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    “We have not recorded any case in Anambra but the natural thing to do is to increase our vaccination to prevent the spread to the state.

    “Again, we want to encourage mothers and guardians to ensure their children and wards are vaccinated. It is a free, safe and effective oral vaccine; and there is nothing to worry about.

    “We have put in place quality assurance team in case of any complications and it will be handled appropriately.

    “We have also mobilised 660 fixed posts across the state and we hope to reach and vaccinate about 2.64 million children to reduce the risk of polio spread in the state.”

    We will go all out to Churches, Mosques, schools and the nook and crannies of the state to look for children and get them vaccinated.

    We also want to appeal to the media to help us informed the public about the exercise and other health achievements we have recorded so far in less than two years administration of governor Chukwuma Charles Soludo in the state.

    “He reiterated that the state government is doing this for free of charge.

    In her remarks, Mrs Chisom Uchem, Executive Secretary, Anambra State Primary Health Care Development Agency (ASPHCDA), said that the vaccination would start on Friday November. 10 and end on November 14  in all the local government areas of the state.

    According to ASPHCDA boss, the campaign will be monitored by Enhanced independent monitors and LQAS surveyors to ensure quality and coverage.”

    “The campaign was implemented by the Anambra State Primary Health Care Development Agency (ASPHCDA) in partnership with United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund, the World Health Organisation (WHO) and SYDANI Initiative for International Development.

    Also speaking, Dr Adamu Abdul-Nasir, State Coordinator, WHO, appreciated the state government for its political will and proactive measures in preventing the polio virus from spreading to the state

    It was gathered that the programme themed: “KEEP POLIO AT ZERO,” will be officially flags off at Primary Health Centre (PHC) Umueze-Anam in Anambra West Local Government Area of Anambra State.

  • Protect your mental health, Calabar Mums advise women

    Protect your mental health, Calabar Mums advise women

    By Christian Njoku

    A group known as Calabar Mums have called on all women to protect their mental health as they engaged in their day to day activities.

    This was emphasised by the Founder of the group, Mrs Victoria Ekpo on Thursday during their annual Big Meet in Calabar.

    Ekpo said women did a lot everyday as a routine in ensuring that the children, family and home in general are in order in addition to working or engaging in a business.

    According to the founder of the group, this can be mentally taxing for women and affect their mental health.

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    She said the annual Big Meet event was a gathering to get the women relaxed, unwind, learn and go home with impactful lessons that would make them healthier, stronger and their families better organised.

    “Today the women are out here to relax, away from their daily routine of taking care of everyone in the home and even working to boost the income in their homes.

    “We also use this opportunity to carryout social responsibilities like we did last year Dec. when he packaged food items like rice garri, yam and condiments for over 200 women in Calabar Municipality and Calabar South who were engaged by the state government to sweep the roads.

    “This year, we are making it bigger to reach more women and support them; these women do so much to ensure our roads are clean but are not well paid, so we want to support them,” she said.

    Similarly, Mrs Enobong UnoAsuquo, a legal practitioner and member of Calabar mums said they support women because a mentally healthy and strong woman produces a stable family.

    UnoAsuquo said and when the family is stable, stronger homes are built which transcends to the communities and nation at large.

    “When women get support, families, marriages, homes and communities get support, so, as a group, we teach women to be intentional about their mental health which helps them to be stable especially in decision making.

    On her part, Mrs Irene Bangwell, co-founder of the knosk N100-a-day School said while it was important for women to take care of their mental health, it was also important for women to start providing their children with sex education.

    She said mums spend more time with the children, they should equip them with the skill to protect themselves from sexual exploitation.

    Bangwell also used the opportunity to call on more experts to take up the mentoring of the boy child, if gender and sexual violence must reduce in the society.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the event which featured lectures, debate and panel discussion to encouraged women entrepreneurs also featured games to help women relax.

  • Cancer Care: NAMP tasks President Tinubu, legislators on Medical Physics Bill

    Cancer Care: NAMP tasks President Tinubu, legislators on Medical Physics Bill

    By Christian Njoku

    The Nigerian Association of Medical Physicists (NAMP) has called on President Bola Tinubu and legislators in the upper and lower Chambers to support the passage of the Medical Physics Regulatory Council (Establishment) Bill, 2022.

    This was disclosed by Prof. Fatai Balogun, President of NAMP on Tuesday in Calabar during the association’s 2023 Annual Scientific Conference and Workshop.

    The theme of the five day conference which runs from Monday, Nov. 6 to Friday, Nov. 10 is “Medical Physics: creating innovation for safe radiation medicine practice.”

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Medical Physicists are healthcare professionals with specialised training in the medical applications of physics to solve health challenges.

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    Balogun said the bill was set to produce a college of medical physicists and a regulatory body to check the activities of academic and clinical, medical physicists.

    According to him, if the bill is passed, it will enable the nation train those who want to go directly to clinical studies while encouraging people to take the field of Medical Physics as a viable option.

    “Medical Physicists are so important in healthcare provision, in fact, without them you cannot set up an oncology centre because without medical physicists there would be no oncologists.

    “Currently, our members are just over 100 with very few of them certified because Nigeria does not have a regulatory body necessary for certification,” he said.

    Similarly, Ms Olusola Osunsami, Chairperson of NAMP Clinical Training and Certification Board said in order for Medical Physicists to be recognised as a healthcare profession, they needed legislative backing.

    She emphasized that Medical Physicists play vital roles in the way patients are treated because they ensure science and technology are used for effective and safe medical practice.

    On her part, Dr Nwamaka Lasebikan, President Association of Radiation and Clinical Oncologists (ARCON) commended NAMP for its 2023 conference.

    Represented by Dr. Ololade Kehinde, Secretary General of ARCON, she called for investments by government, individuals and financial institutions while appealing for a reduction of bottlenecks that hinder the establishment of cancer centres.

    According to her, while such move will improve healthcare provision in the nation and curb brain drain, it will also reduce capital flight which is witnessed whenever Nigerians travel abroad for their healthcare needs.

    Dr. Samuel Otene, Chairman Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), National Cancer Committee, said the relationship between Clinical Oncologists and Medical Physicists was so strong as they could not do without each other.

    Otene said while an oncologist could say give the patient this dose of radiation, they needed a Medical Physicist to give them every idea of how safe the amount of radiation was to the body of the patient.

    He said while cancer care was a multi-disciplinary endeavor, its challenge still remained its high cost of treatment all over the world.

    “If we can find a way to incorporate cancer care into the health insurance scheme for people to access care in our hospitals, it will go a long way in reducing the rate of cancer mortality in Nigeria

    “We need to sensitize and support Nigerians who are cancer patients to reduce the mortality in this part of the world.”

    NAN also reports that the Medical Physics Regulatory Council (Establishment) Bill, 2022 was formerly Medical Physics College and Medical Physics Regulatory Council of Nigeria, Bill 2017.