
A Consultant Urologist Surgeon at the Jos University Teaching
Hospital (JUTH), Prof. Nuhu Dakum has said that brain drain in the
medical sector is detrimental to the development of the sector.
He stressed that medical brain drain had created loss of skilled
manpower to train incoming doctors and other health care workers in the
sector.
Dakum stated this while delivering a paper at the opening ceremony of
the Medical and Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria (MDCAN) 2021
National Executive Council meeting in Jos.
The programme is entitled “Brain Drain and its effect on Medical Education in Nigeria.“
Dakum said that brain drain in the medical sector was getting worse and detrimental to medical education.
He said the development had created a generational gap in the sector.
“A generational gap has been created as the top is heavy and the
bottom light. This means that we have more consultants and fewer
resident doctors who are the main workforce.
“Brain drain has also created an inefficient health care system due
to insufficient manpower resulting in poor health care outcome,” he
said.
Dakum said that the factors responsible for brain drain in the sector
should be addressed urgently to avoid a total collapse of the medical
system in the country,
He also called for increased funding in the sector.
Also speaking, a Consultant Public Health Physician at the Jos
University Teaching Hospital (JUTH), Prof. Ayuba Zoakah, said that the
country’s healthcare system was optimal.
Zoakah who was the guest lecturer, in a paper on “Healthcare Delivery
in the Face of Emerging and Re-emerging Infectious Diseases”,
maintained that the healthcare system should be strengthened in the era
of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases.
Zoakah attributed the rise to emerging and re-emerging diseases to
possible factors such as the human demography changes, increased
susceptibility to infection due to immunosuppression, stress/lifestyle
and nutritional changes.
He called for improvement of funding in the sector and health care service delivery.
Earlier, the President of MDCAN, Prof. Kenneth Ozoilo, in his welcome
address said that the COVID-19 pandemic brought to the fore the
deficiencies in the Nigerian health sector as a result of underfunding
and years of neglect.
Ozoilo added that the NEC meeting would provide an avenue to chart a
path forward for the medical profession and the health sector.