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This article provides an overview of Nigeria's history, political situation, economy, and major health problems. It discusses the country's first inhabitants, slave trade, independence, ethnic conflicts, dominant ethnic groups, religions, oil production, agriculture, and political leaders. It also covers the challenges faced in healthcare, including access to vaccinations, recurring polio, low life expectancy, and the top causes of death such as malaria, pneumonia, HIV, and diarrhea. The article explores various programs and initiatives aimed at addressing these health issues.
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Nigeria Group 2: Erica DeHaro, Oshmina Flores, Jennifer Sandoval, Kaci Nishimura, Cristina Alarcon HSC 420 T/Th 12:30pm October 9, 2014
History • First inhabitants were the Nok People (500 BC-AD 200) • Nigerian slave trade • Oct 1, 1960 Nigeria gained its Independence • Severe ethnic conflicts led to a civil war • 250 ethnic groups but 3 largest dominant ethnic groups are Hausu, Yorubu, and Igbo • Christianity and Islam are the two main religions
History (cont.) • One of the most developed economies • Leading member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries • World’s 5th largest oil producer • More than 50% of Nigeria’s population works in agriculture
Political Situation • Civilian rule as of 1999 • Leader: Goodluck Jonathan • Militants from religious and ethnic groups are pursuing demands through violence • political power is unstable
Economy • Africa’s leading oil producer • Corruption and mismanagement of oil has halted progress in government boosting country’s economy
Wealth • Poverty in the North • Oil-rich Southeast
Health • Southern residents have better access to healthcare • Access to vaccinations for polio, TB, Tetanus, & Diphtheria
Health (cont.) • Some Northern states have boycotted immunization programs in the past, claiming they are a Western plot to make Muslim women infertile • Recurrence of polio • Vaccinations have now resumed
Health Status • Ranked 187 of 191 in the world health report 2000 • 30 yrs of attempted health reform was unsuccessful • Life expectancy • 52 years from birth in Nigeria • 78 yrs from birth in USA • Mortality rate under 5 yrs old • 117 deaths per 1000 children born In Nigeria • 7 deaths per 1000 children born in the USA
Major Health Problems • Top 5 Causes of Death in Nigeria: • Malaria • Low Respiratory Infection (Pneumonia) • HIV • Diarrhea Disease • Road Injuries
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Malaria (20%) • “In Nigeria, the disease is responsible for 60% outpatient visits to health facilities, 30% childhood death, 25% of death in children under one year and 11% maternal death. The financial loss due to malaria annually is estimated to be about by 132 billion Naira in form of treatment costs, prevention, loss of man-hours etc; yet, it is a treatable and completely evitable disease”
There are organizations in Africa made to help stop the spread of Malaria such as the National Malaria Control Programme in Nigeria Malaria Control Booster Project. • These programs have succeeded in “the development and adoption of national policies and guideline development of training manuals, sensitization and training of health workers and stakeholders on all interventions”.
Roll Back Malaria Partnership The World Health Organization, the World Bank, UNICEF and UNDP founded the partnership in October 1998. • It mobilizes for action and resources and forges consensus among partners. The Partnership is comprised of more than 500 partners, including malaria endemic countries, their bilateral and multilateral development partners, the private sector, nongovernmental and community-based organizations, foundations, and research and academic institutions • They encourage and promote malaria research which hopefully will result in new medicines, vaccines and other tools which will improve the chances of reducing malaria-related deaths and suffering.
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Low Respiratory Infection (Pneumonia) (19%) • Estimated 56 million episodes of lung infections among Nigerian children every year • The World Health Organization states pneumonia kills nearly 1.6 million children under five worldwide; Nigeria bears the highest burden • The Advance Market Commitment (AMC) found a new way to fund vaccines to low income countries.
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Low Respiratory Infection (Pneumonia) (cont.) • The Nigerian government is striving to include HiB and pneumococcal vaccines into the national immunization program. • Estimated 1 of every 5 children with pneumonia receives appropriate antibiotics • Gavi Vaccine Alliance is working hard to provide HiB vaccine for Nigerian children
Major Health Problems (cont.) • HIV (9%) • July 2012: 3.5 mil. people living with AIDS • Deaths due to AIDS: 210,000 (2013) • Orphans due to AIDS: 2 mil. (2013) • Nigeria HIV/AIDS Program Development Project II • Project approved in June 2009, open until November 2015 • Total project cost: $230 mil.
Major Health Problems (cont.) • HIV (cont.) • Nigeria HIV/AIDS Program Development Project II • implemented by National Action Committee on HIV/AIDS • 2000 beginning of National Action Committee on AIDS • 2001-2009 saw 40% reduction in young people infected with HIV
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Diarrhea (5%) • An estimated 194,000 children under five die every year in Nigeria • Lack of toilets remains one of the leading causes of diarrhea • An estimated 34 million Nigerians practice open defecation • One of five countries with largest number of people defecating in the open
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Diarrhea (cont.) • Preventable with improvements in water, sanitation, and hygiene • Community Led Total Sanitation • empowering communities • help take charge of ending open defecation • focus on social behaviour • affordable technologies
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Road Injuries (5%) • Road traffic accidents are responsible for the majority of deaths in emergency room visits • 4 million may be injured, 200,000 potentially killed due to road traffic crashes annually • Accidents are multi-factorial • Driver factors, vehicle factors, and roadway factors, and emergency response factors
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Driver Factors: • Driver behavior • Visual and auditory acuity • Decision making ability • Reaction speed • Drug and alcohol use while driving • Speeding and going too slow
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Vehicle Factors: • Design and maintenance • Seatbelts and airbags • Brakes and tires • Suspension adjusted (more control of vehicle)
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Roadway factors: • Nigerian highways are some of the worst and most dangerous in the world
Major Health Problems (cont.) • Emergency response factors: • Inadequate emergency medical service response and pre-hospital trauma systems result in delayed access to emergency care • Results in preventable deaths each year • Few paramedics have been properly trained, therefore not certified
Major Health Problems (cont.) Prevention of Road Injuries: • Control of driver factors: speeding, not drinking and driving, wearing seatbelts and helmets, not using cell phones or multi-tasking, obeying traffic rules • Enforcing traffic rules • Better road conditions, design, and maintenance • Hiring, training, and funding of more emergency medical services
Health System • Health expenditure: 6.1% • Health system approach: decentralized into a three-tier structure • Federal level (Federal Ministry of Health), State level, and local government level • 88 % private expenditure and 31.1% public expenditure • An estimated 90-180 min. wait • Patient/doctor ratio 1:3500
Health System (cont.) • Pros (improvements) • strong support from high level policymakers • federal budget line for immunizations • Cons • confusion of roles and responsibilities • no accountability from state and local government • rich and poor pay the same • long wait times/ little time with doctor
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