In her keynote address on ‘The Role of Technology in Improving Mother and Child Healthcare in Nigeria - Raising Quality Standards For Health Care, Putting People First” Mrs Saraki called for more widespread use and digitization of Personal Health Records (PHR), commenting:
“Digital technology can, at its best, ensure quality and standards of care are improved and maintained – the ability to track, trigger actions and provide accountability empowers midwives and other health workers to lead the way with quality care, adapting to their own situational awareness.”
“Without a public centralised health database for many families to rely upon and keep them informed of the necessary health processes in a child’s first thousand days of life, the WBFA’s Personal Health Record came as an innovation that placed this knowledge directly into the mother’s hands, and empowered her to provide, analyse and follow-up on her own data – to be in control of her own situational analysis. The digitisation of the PHR to inform similar nationwide efforts by qualified midwives would place Nigeria at the forefront of improving maternal and infant health outcomes. It would be fitting to achieve that here in Nigeria, where the idea for a home-based record was developed and has since been successfully deployed in countries like the UK and Japan.”
Mrs Saraki highlighted the video training deployed by the WBFA at Gwagalada School of Nursing and Midwifery in Abuja as an example of technology transforming healthcare development in Nigeria, and cited the WBFA’s training partnership with Johnson & Johnson and the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine as the global standard of ‘hands-on” teaching which is saving lives and helping mothers and infants to thrive. Mrs Saraki drew attention to the challenging condition of mother and infant health outcomes in Nigeria, stating: “Around 20,000 babies will be born in Nigeria today – each one of them a blessing.
Today, however, we will also lose about 2,300 under-five year olds and 145 women of child-bearing age. UNICEF rightly points out that although the rate of newborn deaths has improved, to 37 per 1000 births, this national average hides the differences between our 36 states and the slow progress in some of them. Whilst these figures are already startling and should constitute a national emergency, Nigeria’s growth rate of 3.2 percent annually means that our nation will, according to USAID, reach a population of 440 million people by 2040. As a nation which is currently unable to keep its mothers and children safe and healthy, we must urgently seek solutions to the scale of the challenge we are about to face.” Nigeria’s Minister of State for Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, was interviewed following Mrs Saraki’s keynote speech, and commented:
"Nigeria loses up to $1bn every year to medical tourism, as a result of the loss of faith in our medical system, at various levels. We must foster an enabling environment where knowledge reparation in health is promoted and Nigerian Health workers in diaspora can return home.
"Nigeria loses up to $1bn every year to medical tourism, as a result of the loss of faith in our medical system, at various levels. We must foster an enabling environment where knowledge reparation in health is promoted and Nigerian Health workers in diaspora can return home.
This wkman carries herself like a 'first lady' she's so elegant and grounded
ReplyDeleteNice one ma'am, more grace.
ReplyDeleteOge stella