NASS, resident doctors to meet Friday over strike

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Dr. Emeka Orji, the President of the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors has announced on Thursday that the association has been invited to to a meeting with the National Assembly on Friday (tomorrow).

On Wednesday, resident doctors from 79 tertiary healthcare facilities began a five-day warning strike to make their demands clear.

The Consolidated Medical Salary Structure must be immediately increased by 200 percent of the existing gross physician salary, according to the doctors.

The doctors demand the immediate removal of the bill that would require medical and dental graduates to perform five years of mandatory service in Nigeria before receiving full licences to practise and the immediate large recruitment of clinical staff in the hospitals.

They also want the immediate implementation of CONMESS, domestication of the Medical Residency Training Act, and review of hazard allowance by all the state governments as well as private tertiary health institutions where any form of residency training is done; among others.

NARD said work would resume on Monday, May 22, 2022, by 8 am.

Speaking during a programme on Arise Television, Dr Orji said the Federal Government had invited the doctors for a meeting.

He said, “All we are hearing on the media is that the government is negotiating with us but nobody has called us for any negotiation except they are negotiating with other associations but not NARD.

“It was only this afternoon, a few minutes ago that I was informed of a meeting convened by the National Assembly tomorrow (May 19, 2023); just this afternoon, I saw the invitation but outside that, there has not been any negotiation since Monday, May 15, 2023, that our National Executive Council had an extraordinary session and declared the five-day strike that commenced yesterday.”

On replacing the striking doctors with ad hoc staff, the NARD President said he wishes the government good luck.

“Part of the major demands we have in our notice of strike is for the Federal Government to quickly replace the clinical staff that has left the system. We have been saying that we have a massive manpower shortage in our hospitals and we do not have enough numbers to contain the influx of patients in the hospitals across the country.

“So, if the government who has refused to do that is now waking up to employ ad hoc staff as a way for resolving this issue, I wish them good luck, but just like I have been saying, as long as they do not negotiate with good fate, the crisis in the health sector will continue, our members are watching.”

He also warned that threats from the government will escalate the crisis in the health sector.

“All they have heard so far from the government are just threats and those threats they are issuing will be what will escalate the crisis we have already.

“So, I want to call on them again to do the right thing. Our demands are clear, they are specific, they are achievable and these are things they can achieve in a matter of days, all they need to do is to show good faith and commitment to achieving them and leave all these threats. It is not going to help anybody,” he added.

Since the doctors’ five-day warning strike began, medical services in government hospitals across the nation have been completely shut down.

In order to lessen the impact of the strike, hospitals were only providing minimal services.

According to hospital officials, the nurses, other healthcare professionals, and medical and dental consultants who are not participating in the strike were overburdened.