President Bola Tinubu has approved a subsidy on kidney
dialysis for Nigerians, reducing the cost for Nigerians from N50,000 to
N12,000.
The subsidy is being implemented across the six geopolitical
zones at some federal medical institutions.
Participating institutions include the Federal Medical
Centre (FMC) Ebute-Metta Lagos, the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) Jabi, Abuja,
the University College Hospital (UCH) Ibadan, the Federal Medical Centre (FMC)
Owerri, and the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) Maiduguri.
Others are the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) Abeokuta, Lagos
State University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) Lagos, the Federal Medical Centre
(FMC) Azare, University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) Benin, and University
of Calabar Teaching (UCTH) Calabar.
The subsidy was launched in January at the Abubakar Tafawa
Balewa University Teaching Hospital in Bauchi.
According to Hammatu Haruna, the manager-in-charge of the
renal centre at the teaching hospital, patients are happy about the subsidy.
“They are paying only N12,000, and our patients are very
happy with this initiative, and we have seen improvement, remarkably in
patients’ condition,” she said.
“Patients used to find it difficult to afford it; even if
you tell them the amount, they have to go back and sell something before they
can afford to come for dialysis. Some even prefer to stay at home since they
cannot afford it.”
She said 35 patients have benefitted from the scheme since
it was launched on January 8 this year, adding that the federal ministry of
health has provided adequate resources to ensure the success of the programme.
“We appreciate the federal government of Nigeria; they gave
us one dialysis machine; they gave us over 900 dialysers. We have almost
everything at hand.
Several cases of kidney failure have recently been reported
in the news.
In February, the Yobe government said it had deployed 50
health experts to investigate the root causes of the spike in kidney failure
cases in some parts of the state.
Mahmud Maina, director of the Biomedical Science Research
and Training Centre at the Yobe State University, said the team comprises 50
experts, which include neurology consultants, laboratory scientists,
nephrologists, geologists, chemists, echo toxicologists, and collaborators from
the UK, US, and Ghana.
Maina said the team would conduct interviews with 2,000
people in Bade and Damaturu LGAs to determine whether the causes are
environmental, lifestyle-related, or genetic.