Wednesday 23 October 2013

Doctors’ strike take toll on LUTH patients

Patients at the Lagos University Teaching
Hospital (LUTH), Idi-Araba, Lagos, are counting
their ordeals as resident doctors’ indefinite strike
enters the fourth week. Reporters who visited the hospital on Wednesday
reports that only few consultants were seen
attending to many patients. The National Association of Resident Doctors
(NARD) had on Oct.1 directed its members
nationwide to embark on an indefinite strike.


stranded patients at a hospital

The NARD President, Dr Jibril Abdullahi, said that
the strike was to protest poor funding of
residency training. The other categories of health workers –
consultants, nurses, pharmacists, laboratory
technicians and cleaners – were seen attending to
patients. One of the patients, Mrs Dolapo Afolabi, told NAN
that the strike was taking worsening the
conditions of patients. She regretted that strike by health workers had
become incessant. Afolabi urged that strike by health workers should
be avoided in the interest of patients. “Strike is taking place too often in our hospitals;
this is very dangerous because people’s lives are
involved,’’ she said. Another patient, Alhaji Ibrahim Amodu, told NAN
that he came from Ikorodu to keep an
appointment with a specialist. Amodu appealed to the striking doctors and the
Federal Government to reach an agreement. Miss Nkiruka Eloho said that she was used to the
services of the teaching hospital because they
were cheap. Eloho regretted that she had been unable to see
her doctor since last week because of long
queues of patients waiting for few consultants. “I came here very early this morning but yet to see
a doctor. Consultants are attending to those with
critical conditions. “It is likely that I will not see a doctor today again. “I do not like to visit private hospitals where I may
not get a specialist. Also, their services are
expensive. ”The strike is depriving us access to doctors to
look after our health,” she said. Mr Femi Samuel told NAN: “I spent the whole
Tuesday without seeing a doctor because only
few senior doctors were working. “I decided to come early today, hoping that I
would see a doctor to attend to me in time, but it
is still the same story.” The President of the LUTH chapter of NARD, Dr
Emeka Ugwu, said that the strike was still on. “During the emergency NEC meeting of NARD held
on Oct.7, members were dissatisfied with the
Federal Government’s position on our demands. “As a result, we have to continue with the
nationwide strike,” he said. (NAN)

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