Tag: partners

  • NGO partners LASUTH on vein malformation treatment

    NGO partners LASUTH on vein malformation treatment

    By Agency

    A faith-based British international charity, Muslim Aid, has partnered with the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, to assist 70 indigent patients living with vascular anomalies.

    Dr Shamsudeen Fagbo, Coordinator, Muslim Aid Vascular Anomalies Intervention Mission, said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria on Wednesday in Lagos.

    According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, vascular anomalies are abnormalities or disorders of the vascular system, either in veins or arteries. Vascular anomalies are classified as either a vascular tumour or a vascular malformation.

    Fagbo said that vascular anomalies or malformations are common and often misdiagnosed, noting its prevalence among children born at full term or premature was estimated at five per cent globally.

    “However, in a country like Nigeria, where it is most likely under-recognised at the primary health care level, the disease is neglected and thus the true prevalence remains unknown.

    “And because it affects mainly poor patients, who mostly cannot afford treatment and have lost hope, Muslim Aid is making this effort to provide them an opportunity through this free mission,” he said.

    Fagbo noted that around 90 per cent of these anomalies are present at birth and never disappear, adding that interventions (surgical or medical) are usually required.

    He noted that vascular anomalies constitute a huge burden to families and the health sector, stressing the importance of early detection prior to school age in order to avoid stigmatisation of affected children.

    Fagbo emphasised that the mission’s goal was to launch an awareness programme that these patients could be treated.

    According to him, it will also enable updated knowledge and skill transfer to local medical, nursing and physiotherapy staff in the management of these anomalies.

    “It will establish a nucleus for a functional vascular anomaly programme in Nigeria,” he said.

    Fagbo said that the intervention, which would start on Nov. 16 to Nov. 23, would involve a team of medical professionals including dermatologist, pediatrician, interventional radiologist.

    Others are vascular surgeon, plastic surgeon, maxillo-facial surgeon, clinical pharmacist, anaesthetist, orthopedic surgeon, ENT surgeon, urologist, neurosurgeon and general surgeon.

    He said the mission would provide free high-quality medical or surgical intervention for indigent patients affected by vascular anomalies to relieve the pain associated with these anomalies.

    “It will also help the families taking care of these patients by providing some of the supplies the patients need like walking sticks, crutches, wheelchairs, medical stockings, garments,” he said.

    Fagbo stressed that the treatment was accessible and free to all indigent residents of Nigeria, irrespective of tribe or creed.

    The  Muslim Aid provides assistance to people who are victims of natural disasters, conflict, suffering from poverty, hunger, disease, homelessness, injustice, deprivation or lack of skills and economic opportunities.

    NAN

     

  • Lagos partners Netherlands to tackle coastal erosion

    Lagos partners Netherlands to tackle coastal erosion

    Samuel Bolaji

    The Lagos State Government says it is partnering with The Netherlands through the Public-Private Partnership investment model to check the erosion ravaging coastal areas in the state.

    The Commissioner for Waterfront Infrastructure Development, Ekundayo Alebiosu, disclosed this at the weekend while receiving a trade delegation led by the Consular General of The Netherlands in Lagos, Michel Deleen, which visited to express their readiness to invest in Makoko, Okunde, Okun Ajah, and other Lagos coastal areas.

    Alebiosu noted that coastal erosion was a serious issue that could lead to loss of lives and property. He also stated that The Netherlands had been dealing with such issues for a long time, given that their land is below sea level.

    He said, “Over the years, our coastal communities have been challenged and devastated by ocean surge, especially the Okunde and Okun Ajah areas in Lekki, with several houses destroyed, and communities going to extinction.

    “The depletion of these communities has also continued unabated due to ocean surge triggered by several activities along the coastline. But the Dutch have embraced numerous modern techniques to keep water at bay against the sea.”

    He expressed optimism that the investment would assist the government in checking the surging erosion in Okunde, Lekki, Okun Ajah and other areas in the state from going to extinction.

    The commissioner also assured the Dutch trade delegation that his team was working on a robust masterplan, which would improve the current Waterfront Masterplan.

    Speaking earlier, the Dutch Consular General said they visited to see how they could partner with Lagos in checking coastal erosion, especially around Makoko and the Atlantic Ocean. He expressed his concerns about the sea surge causing environmental crises in Lagos.

  • U.S. Foundation partners NGO on drug abuse prevention, treatment

    U.S. Foundation partners NGO on drug abuse prevention, treatment

    A United States-based foundation, Annmom Foundation, has partnered Re-Orientation Advocates of Nigeria, a non-governmental Organisation on advocacy against drug abuse prevention and treatment to create awareness in schools and religious centres nationwide.

    The Founder of the foundation, Mrs. Ann Ehigiator, made this known at a media roundtable held in Abuja on Friday to mark the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding with the Executive Director of the NGO, Mr. Charles Folayan,

    Ehigiator, who is also an Emergency Medical Records Consultant, said drug abuse had become a menace in Nigeria and must be addressed using internationally proven strategies.

    She explained that drug use lies at the foundation of a long list of social deviances, truancy, restiveness, crime and criminality.

    Ehigiator explained that its debilitating effects echo across multiple fronts, stretching from the family through the community, to the educational sector, and other social frontiers.

    This, she said, often leaves a dark cloud of catastrophic health challenges for not only the victims and their families, but the immediate communities and the nation at large.

    She commended the National Assembly for declaring war against drug abuse in their June 2, resolution

    Ehigiator also commended the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency for its effort at stemming the tide of increasing drug abuse by curtailing measures and rolling out programmes and activities geared towards curbing the menace.

    “However, the situation requires a multi-sectorial robust, expansive, and all-inclusive strategic effort by every well-meaning individual and institution,” she added.

    Folayan, the RAN Executive Director, on his part, said the social intervention and advocacy initiative focused on growing the largest network of advocates on drug abuse prevention, treatment, and care in the country.

    He said it would also provide expedited rehabilitation for victims of drug abuse.

    Folayan said the Drug Prevention, Treatment, and Care Advocates programme was a five-pronged multidimensional and multi-sectorial intervention.

    This, he said was to disabuse the mind of young people from drug abuse through re-orientation, whilst working on the causative factors, challenges, and solutions.

    (NAN)

     

  • UNICEF, NPC, partners NYSC to digitally register 12. 7m birth

    UNICEF, NPC, partners NYSC to digitally register 12. 7m birth

    Nathaniel Shaibu

    The United Nations Children’s Fund and the National Population Commission have partnered with the National Youth Service Corps, for the registration of 12.7 million births in 2023.

    The partnership will also include the issuance of birth certificates that provides the names and nationality of every child in Nigeria that is under the age of 5, in 21 States, 456 LGAs and 4,978 wards across the country.

    UNICEF Chief of Child Protection, Dr. Ibrahim Sesay, made this known while leading a team of officials of the agency and the NPC, to sign a Memorandum of Understanding with the NYSC at the National Directorate Headquarters in Abuja.

    In a statement issued by the NYSC, Dr. Sesay said, “800 Corps Members would be enlisted for the exercise, and would work alongside the National Population Commission officials”.

    He stated further that the registration of births and birth certificates are legal identities of every Nigerian, and that the data of every child would be stored in the digital birth registration system in custody of the National Population Commission.

    He also expressed optimism towards the success of the tripartite collaboration.

    Meanwhile, the NYSC Director of Corps Welfare and Health Services, Mr. Omotade Ayodele disclosed that the MoU between the NYSC, UNICEF/NPC, would have UNICEF as the lead agency, but added that “the Scheme is willing to partner with organisations that are prepared to contribute to national development”.

    The NYSC Director-General, Brigadier General Yusha’u Ahmed, represented by the Director, Community Development Service and Special Projects, Mrs. Zainab Isah, while commending the initiative, appealed for adequate security and proper remuneration for the Corps Members that would be engaged in the exercise.

    Also, the DG, NPC, Dr. Tellson Osifo, expressed the readiness of the commission for the collaboration.

     

    All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from Reportr Door.

    Contact: [email protected]

     

  • WHO partners FG to Immunise 930,000 children yearly

    WHO partners FG to Immunise 930,000 children yearly

    The World Health Organisation said it is partnering with the Federal Government to immunise 930,000 children every year to improve the uptake of routine immunisation in the country.

    WHO Team Lead, Vaccine Preventable Diseases and Polio Eradication, Dr Kofi Boateng, at an engagement programme organised by the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency with other development partners on optimised outreach in Abuja.

    Boateng said the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in an estimated 33 million African children not being immunised from 2019 to 2021.

    He said, “The fact that these children had not received any vaccine is the reason why we are seeing a lot of outbreaks like measles, diphtheria, yellow fever and so on. As part of preparation for the African vaccination week celebration, which is riding on the theme ‘the big catch up’, this meeting is to support Nigeria to prepare to catch up to about 6.2 million Nigerian children that did not receive any vaccine from 2019 to 2021 in Nigeria.”

    He noted that the Federal Government and other development partners are reviewing strategies that the states were going to adopt to make sure that all health facilities intensify the outreaches to catch up on the unimmunised children.

    Boateng stated that the most effective strategy realised was the need to take the vaccination to the people through fixed sessions, outreach sessions and mobile sessions for specific groups of populations based on their proximity to the health facility.

    “What we have noticed in Nigeria for the outreach sessions that are supposed to go to the communities, we are not seeing the number of yield in terms of the number of children vaccinated over a longer period.

    “We are discussing the issue of partners supporting the state in terms of resourcing, engaging the state authorities to make sure the funds are released to support this plan. In the WHO, we have presence in all the 36 states and we also have staff in almost every ward supporting polio eradication and other PHC services. So we will leverage that to support the government to make sure all plans at those levels are of high quality.

    “WHO supports strategic policy, we also monitor what is happening. We have the teams in the fields that would be supporting the state in terms of coordination, planning and implementation.

    “In terms of implementation, we are going to participate in the training of health workers. We are going to monitor the progress of the process. We’re also going to assess the quality of services as a result of the outreach in terms of data on the actual number of children that are going to be vaccinated.

    “We are hoping that by the end we have as partners with the government we have agreed that every year we’ll reduce the burden of zero dose by 15 per cent. We hope that by the end of this we’ll reduce that dose by that percentage,” Boateng said.

    On his part, the Executive Director of NPHCDA, Dr Faisal Shuaib, disclosed that plans for special logistics had been made to take routine immunisation to hard to reach areas.

    He noted that there is a need for a paradigm shift, for parents to make their children available to receive vaccines and for healthcare workers to optimise every available opportunity to reach children most especially in hard to reach communities.

    Also, the Director Disease Control and Immunization, NPHCDA, Dr Bassey Okposen, noted that most states were not conducting outreaches as expected.

    “We therefore drew up optimised strategies on how to make the outreaches better, sharing with them the optimised outreach strategy approach so they can do better.

    “We’re also using the opportunity to talk to the states about the HPV vaccine,” he said.

    The engagement programme was organised for representatives from the Federal Capital Territory and the 36 states in the country.

  • Finding Love: How deaf Nigerians overcome rejection, find life partners with sign language

    Finding Love: How deaf Nigerians overcome rejection, find life partners with sign language

    Hearing-impaired Nigerians have resorted to marrying themselves following the stigma and discrimination they face from the hearing population. This is amid fears nursed by their families that they could end up having children with profound hearing loss.

    In this enthralling report by ANGELA ONWUZOO, some deaf couples shared their experiences and frustration in the search for love and lifelong desire to start a family.

     

    52-year-old, Saheed Ajakore, the firstborn in a family of three, is hearing impaired.

    The Ogun State indigene and shoe cobbler is not the only one in the family that is deaf, as one of his younger sisters and last in the family, Aina, was also born with profound hearing loss.

    However, his other sister, Mrs. Yemisi Abere, was lucky, as she was born without the impairment.

    Our correspondent learnt that Saheed and Aina, are usually withdrawn from people due to communication challenges.

    Their efforts to get life partners within the hearing community have always been frustrated by communication barriers, leaving them with no choice but to settle with their kind.

    While Saheed is unhappy with his second marriage to Sade, a hearing-impaired woman, his sister, Aina, is presently a single mother with two children.

    She was impregnated by two different men from the deaf community, who later abandoned her and remarried.

    Discrimination 

    Communicating with the hearing-impaired siblings was a difficult one and had to be done through their sister, Abere, who became a sign language interpreter out of necessity.

    She told our correspondent that for her siblings, going into marriage had always been a risky venture, as they always suffer rejection and discrimination, even among their kind.

    “But the discrimination comes more from those within the hearing community,” she lamented.

    The light-complexioned woman, who is a civil servant, said her siblings were at various times rejected or abandoned in the middle of relationships they went into, adding that this compounded the pain of dejection they felt.

    Eager to share his frustration with Reportr Door Healthwise, especially how he has been in pursuit of love and happiness, within which time he always got his heart shattered, Saheed said life had been unfair to him.

    In his one-room apartment at No. 13, Ogo Oluwa Street, Bariga, Lagos, which also doubles as the manufacturing place for his shoes, our correspondent observed that his finished products were bought mainly by people in the hearing community, but yet, he was not considered worthy of love and being loved by them.

    The cobbler, our correspondent noticed, communicates with his customers through sign language and illustrations made inside a big notebook.

    He recounted, “I have always wanted to be happy and not allow my condition to deny me any good thing in life. Getting a woman that will love, cherish and give me children has been tough.

    “But I am determined to have my own family and so, I looked for a woman of my kind to marry. That was how I met Yinka, a sister to one of my customers.

    “After 14 months of courtship, we got married and I was looking forward to a bright future with her. Our families were in support of the marriage, but little did I know that Yinka was only after my money and never loved me. She later left me.” 

    Hearing impaired and emotions

    Experts say the deaf also have emotional challenges among their kind and that most times, they have shallow knowledge about marriage and childrearing.

    A Professor of Hearing, Speech-Language Education/Rehabilitation, Department of Education, University of Ibadan, Julius Ademokoya, told Reportr Door Healthwise in an exclusive interview that deaf people are usually more aggressive than the hearing population.

    The professor, who is President of the Speech Pathologists and Audiologists Association in Nigeria, said, “Ordinarily, deaf people love to marry from those that have no hearing impairment but then, they face the challenge of not being able to find those who are interested and ready to love them the way they are. They don’t have any choice but to look for their kind to marry.”

     False pregnancy

    With a pained expression, the cobbler recalled his ordeal with Yinka, noting that six months after they got married, she told him about being pregnant for him.

    “I was very excited about the prospect of becoming a father,” he told our correspondent through his interpreter.

    But the pregnancy turned out to be a hoax, as Saheed later discovered that it was all a ploy to fleece him and run away.

    He said, “I didn’t know that she never loved me and never wanted to be with me from the beginning. She used the false pregnancy to siphon my money, claiming she was attending antenatal care.

    “It was a nurse in the hospital where she claimed to have registered for antenatal that told me and my sisters about her game plan. The woman said she wasn’t happy with the way Yinka was extorting me. That was how the marriage ended.

    “The trauma was much for me, but with support from family members, I was able to pull through and move on with my life”

    Hearing impairment, a devastating disability

    According to the Journal of the American Medical Association, profound congenital deafness is one of the most devastating disabilities that afflict man.

    “Not only is the deaf person isolated from his fellow man by an invisible, nearly insurmountable barrier of silence, but he is frequently thought to be mentally retarded and treated as such.

    “He does not respond to verbal communication, and his attempts at speech are painfully awkward. Speech, being an imitative function, is almost impossible to learn for the profound, congenitally deaf person”, it stated.

    Giving love another chance

    In 2018, Saheed decided to give love and marriage another shot and got married to Sade, who also has profound hearing loss.

    Sade, who Reportr Door Healthwise learnt became deaf in her childhood, is a petty trader and displays her wares in front of her husband’s shop cum apartment.

    For over five years now that they have been living together, the couple, our correspondent gathered from neighbours has been a reference point in the area, with many wondering how they can cohabit happily.

    However, further interaction with the couple showed that all was not well with the union.

    The sad looks on their faces and the anger exhibited when they speak to each other raised concerns.

    Denied sex

    Poised to get to the root of the hostility being subtly displayed by the couple towards each other, our correspondent, in a voice filled with concern asked Saheed why he was unhappy with his wife.

    “Sade is threatening to leave me,” he said in a voice laden with emotion.

    “I have been doing everything to make her happy, all to no avail. For over two years now, she has been denying me sex. She doesn’t want to have sex with me anymore. We don’t have a child yet. If we don’t come together, how are we going to have children?

    “Both families have spoken to her and she has refused to change. What she does every night is to leave the room and sleep elsewhere, only to return in the morning. I am tired of the rejection. I am sad.”

    Responding to Saheed’s allegation, Sade told our correspondent through an interpreter that she was ready to stay with her husband but was not interested in having sex.

    When our correspondent asked Sade why she took the decision, she became agitated and started signing angrily.

    She said, “I am not interested. I told him that I am not interested. He should leave me alone. I cook for him, wash his clothes and take good care of him. He should stop complaining.”

    Repeated rejection 

    Aina, Saheed’s sister with a hearing impairment, told our correspondent through the interpreter that she was exploited by the two men she was married to.

    According to her, “In 2004, one came from Ogun State to marry me. He is also deaf. After I got pregnant, he abandoned me and went to marry another woman. He also abandoned the baby we had together. It was my family that paid the bills when I gave birth.

    “A similar episode happened in 2017. That one agreed to marry me and I became pregnant. When I put to birth, we held a naming ceremony.

    “He later told me that he was no longer interested in the relationship and that his family wanted him to marry someone without hearing problems to avoid having babies with the condition.

    “After several pleas, he still abandoned me and my baby to do his family’s wish. But he ended up marrying a deaf person because the hearing community rejected him.

    “My two children are normal and they are with my relatives because I can’t take care of them. I don’t have the means to take care of them because I am jobless”, Aina said.

    Aina’s sister, Abere, told Reportr Door Healthwise that when their late mother discovered that her siblings had hearing impairment, she took them to different hospitals and prayer houses for healing, but their condition defiled both medical and spiritual solutions.

    Not to marry their kind

    Speaking on why inter-marriage is sometimes opposed among those in the deaf community, Mr. Adewale Adeyanju, who is also hearing-impaired, said his family initially opposed his decision to marry a beautiful woman with the same condition for fear that they would be burdened with deaf grandchildren.

    Adeyanju, who is the Public Relations Officer, Joint National Association of Persons with Disabilities, Lagos chapter, said the problem of rejection comes mainly from the family.

    Healthy children

    Speaking with Reportr Door Health via WhatsApp, he said, “The problem usually comes from relatives and family members of the woman in question.

    “They always fear for their future and have this mindset that a deaf man cannot provide for his family or that they would have children that are deaf.

    “Some deaf ladies are so beautiful. Unfortunately, when those without hearing impairment marry them, they exploit their deafness. This explains why many of them feel secure with the deaf

    “Many families oppose having their deaf children marry their kind, but God’s way is wonderful because sometimes, none of their children is born deaf. I am such. I married a deaf lady and we have children that don’t have the condition.

    “Many people think that if a deaf man marries a deaf woman, they will produce deaf children, it’s a fallacy. Some hearing couples have been known to produce four deaf children at a go.”

    Adeyanju blamed the misunderstanding among deaf couples on communication gap.

    “When they have issues, many don’t know how to sit down and communicate. The problem is they may have been hiding their misunderstanding without telling elders and their pastor”, he added.

    Vow to be with the deaf 

    Mrs. Kudiratu Ighetsemhe, 35, is also hearing impaired and happily married to Peter, who also has profound hearing loss.

    Their union, Reportr Door Healthwise learnt, is blessed with three kids.

    Before she got married to Peter in 2010, a man with no hearing disability asked for her hand in marriage.

    Kudiratu, who said she lost the ability to hear at the age of two, after being struck with measles, said she was ready to marry him, but her mother opposed the decision, insisting that she must marry her kind.

    “Both men from the deaf and hearing community came to ask for my hand in marriage but my mother didn’t accept the family of the hearing suitor. She said I would be badly treated by them. I am happy to have married Peter. We quarrel and settle it within ourselves. We have three children, two boys, and a girl. They can all hear.

    Her mother, Mrs. Omowunmi Nofiru, told Reportr Door Healthwise that she insisted that her only child must marry among her kind because she had seen those with hearing impairment being abused.

    She said, “I have seen some ladies with hearing impairments that got married to those that can hear being treated like animals. I don’t want anyone to maltreat my daughter. She was born normal. It was after she had measles as a child that she lost her ability to hear.”

    Our correspondent gathered that two out of Kudiratu’s three children are being taken care of by her mother, while her husband’s parents are with one.

    Her firstborn, Emmanuel, told our correspondent that his siblings usually communicate with their parents through a sign language app on their phones.

    Mrs. Fausat Idris, who also has profound hearing impairment, shared a similar experience about being discriminated against when she wanted to get married and urged the Lagos State government to support them.

    Over 8.5m Nigerians suffering from hearing impairment

    Meanwhile, experts who spoke with our correspondent suggested ways to address the challenges faced by those with hearing impairment.

    Prof. Ademokoya said one major behavioural issue with the deaf is that they are more aggressive than those without the condition.

    “Aggression is a big challenge among deaf people. It is either because the disability affects them or because of stigma and discrimination they might have suffered.”

    “So, the tendency to have anger or aggression exhibited among the deaf is very high.

    “Of course, in marriage, a lot of things happen. If you can’t tolerate your spouse, exercise patience and understanding, then there will be friction all the time.

    “So, that also tells you why even among themselves, they have misunderstandings and get divorced.

    “But that doesn’t mean you don’t have couples who are quite very happy”, he said.

    The professor said no fewer than 8.5 million Nigerians are suffering from hearing impairments.

    Misunderstanding

    Giving insight into why people with hearing impairment marry among themselves, the speech therapist said, “As you have observed, they marry more often among themselves due to two factors.

    “First, there is a bond because they see themselves as being of the same kind and realise they have a problem.

    “So, they feel more comfortable among themselves. But mind you, that feeling is not that they wouldn’t have loved to marry those that can hear. But they have this mindset that they will not be accepted wholeheartedly. That mistrust is based on the attitude exhibited by those that can hear when relating with them.

    Continuing, he said, “Most times, the understanding that deaf people have about marriage is so low. So, family members must always come around to assist them to navigate. They usually need assistance from people around them.

    “Also, a lot of them have financial problems. They need money to take care of their children. The financial issue is a major problem in their marriage.”

    Treatment options

    An Ear, Nose & Throat Consultant at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Dr. Enema Amodu, said that hearing loss in childhood could be treated depending on the cause.

    According to him, some of the causes of hearing loss are congenital while some are acquired.

    Dr. Amodu who is a past Chairman of, the Nigeria Medical Association, FCT Chapter, said, “The ones we classify as congenital are those that they are born with. The ones they are born with could be due to developmental abnormalities.

    He said, “This is when there is an arrest in the progression of development. Either in the development of the skull, nerves for hearing, or that the child has other conditions, which we call syndromic child or children.

    “When they are now born with these developmental abnormalities, it can affect their hearing level. So, they will be born without the ability to hear any sound.

    “But some other causes can also be acquired, like wax impaction. The cause of hearing loss in children can also be due to infection.”

    Early intervention can reduce hearing loss severity

    The ENT expert, however, pointed out that early intervention could help reduce the severity and impact of hearing loss.

    “The discovery of the hearing loss on time helps to arrest the situation.

    Putting the child in a normal school can delay early intervention and puts the child at a disadvantage.

    “Parents should accept the reality of their child’s condition and seek early intervention rather than living in denial.

    “Identifying it early and trying to properly school the child by putting him or her in a proper facility to learn sign language can help. Start your child in a special school”, he said.

    Dr. Amodu stressed that there is nothing wrong with normal people marrying from the deaf community, adding that hearing loss is common and hereditary.

    He said hearing loss does not have any link with sexual desires.

    On Sade’s attitude, the physician said, “I think rejection is just what is playing out. Maybe she is not convinced the man loves her or she could be in love with another person. Hearing loss does not affect female and male sexual organs.”

    More causes of deafness in children

    A Senior Lecturer at the Department of Paediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Lagos, Dr. Beatrice Ezenwa, said children with brain abnormalities might be able unable to hear.

    The Consultant Neonatologist and Paediatrician with the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, said apart from congenital abnormalities that affect the brain, the most common causes of hearing impairment in children are asphyxia (a child that did not cry at birth), measles, jaundice, infection, and meningitis.

    “That is why mothers should take their babies for immunization to prevent infections that might lead to hearing loss”, she advised.

    On his part, a Lagos-based Speech Therapist, Mr. Sunday Iheakolam,

    said the easiest way to communicate with those with hearing impairment is through sign language, which according to him, they must start learning from childhood.

    He said, “Most people in Nigeria find it difficult to communicate and interact with the deaf due to the language barrier. Many of them don’t understand sign language. In speech therapy, early intervention is key and people with hearing loss learn better when they start from childhood.”

    Counselling for deaf couples

    Prof. Ademokoya suggested that deaf couples should go for marriage counselling, adding that it will help to address some of the challenges they face.

    He also enjoined them to improve on their self-development, and read books about marriage and psychology.

    For Dr. Amodu, people should learn to be a bit more tolerant with those with hearing impairment.

    Hearing impairment statistics to rise – WHO

    Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation says an estimated 135 million people have hearing impairments in Africa, with the figure likely to rise to over 338 million by 2050.

    According to WHO, the burden of ear and hearing problems reflects significant inequalities disproportionately impacting marginalised populations

    It noted that over 60 per cent of common ear diseases and hearing loss could be detected and managed at the primary level of care, but that in most places, access to care continues to be limited to highly specialized centres and clinics.

     

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    All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from Reportr Door.

     

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  • Sokoto govt commends partners’ efforts, seek to advance quality of family planning services

    Sokoto govt commends partners’ efforts, seek to advance quality of family planning services

    The Sokoto State Government has lauded the efforts of its partners on family planning and other healthcare interventions and also reiterated its commitment to sustain efforts.

    The Commissioner for Health, Alhaji Lema Abubakar, made the commendation during the Sokoto State Stakeholders’ Inception meeting of IntegratE 2.0 Project on Friday.

    The event was organised by the Sokoto State Government in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Health, Pharmacists Council of Nigeria and Society for Family Health.

    IntegratE 2.0, a four-year project co-funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Merck for Mothers, seeks to advance the quality of Family Planning services provided by Community Pharmacists, and Patent and Proprietary Medicine Vendors in 11 states.

    It also seeks to increase women and girls’ access to modern Family Planning methods and Primary Health Care by improving the quality of services provided by CPs and PPMVs across the 11 focal states from 2024 –2026.

    Lema said the state government was determined to sustain efforts to ensure proper utilisation of the projects provided by development partners working in the state.

    The commissioner gave an assurance that the state would consolidate remarkable successes recorded in the health sector through partnerships with donor partners at all levels.

    He described the contributions of development partners in Sokoto State as worthy of commendation, saying it helped to improve the healthcare system and delivery in the state.

    The Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Mr. Almustapha Ali, described the meeting as timely and crucial as it would go a long way to improve the activities of service providers.

    He also gave an assurance that the state government would look forward in terms of partnership with stakeholders to enhance healthcare services to the people of the state.

    The Project Coordinator, Dr. Dayyabu Yusuf, said the project was aimed at training registered PPMVs and CPs along with primary healthcare workers in the intervention states.

    He explained that the engagement entails study sponsorship in the requisite health institutions, certification, accreditation and licence issuance to personnel under PCN watch.

    Dr. Yusuf observed that although 60 per cent of Nigerians sought healthcare from CPs and PPMVs, the government focused mainly on public healthcare providers – who account for only 40 per cent of access to care.

    He said CPs and PPMVs were authorised by Nigerian laws to provide FP and PHC services, hence would be trained and supervised to aid in the reduction of disease burden.

    In their separate remarks, the Director, Pharmaceutical Services, Sokoto State Ministry of Health, Musa Hamisu, Dr. Sani Mustafa from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the District Head of Gagi, Alhaji Sani Umar-Jabbi, spoke about the importance and benefits of the project.

    (NAN)

     

  • UNICEF partners Bayelsa govt, media on child nutrition

    The United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) has partnered with the Bayelsa State Ministry of Health and the media on increased and reportage on child nutrition and breastfeeding in the state….

  • Stars & Legends partners PMAN, others

    The owners of a new reality TV show, Stars & Legend, have announced their partnership with the Performing Musicians Employers  Association of Nigeria (PMAN), Society for the Performing Arts in…

  • AfDB, partners earmark $618m for Nigeria’s creative enterprises

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) and some partners have officially launched a new Investment in  Digital and Creative Enterprises (iDICE) programme, with investments worth a total of $618 million. The…