Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts

News: Ebola in DRC

North Kivu Goma Congo DRC

HEALTH CRISES: In case you do not know, there is an outbreak of Ebola in North Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). 


A suspected case in Goma (the capital of North Kivu province in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo) has tested negative for the virus. There is one newly confirmed case, however in Mabalaka, as well as two new fatalities in probable cases in Beni.

Meanwhile,  the outbreak totals now stand at 115 cases, 85 of them confirmed, 30 probable. This is  according to an update from the DRC ministry of health. 77 people have died. One person has recovered from his or her illness.

READ: Ebola patients attended church with 50 people before dying.

Currently, 10 cases remain under investigation, but one of two suspected cases announced yesterday in Goma has been ruled out.

Goma is the capital of North Kivu province, and is near the border with Rwanda. A confirmed case there would increase the risk of the virus spreading internationally.

According to World Health Organization (WHO), 19 patients have received experimental Ebola treatments, including mAb114, ZMapp, and remdesivir.

Two of those patients have recovered and been discharged, 16 are currently receiving treatment, and 1 person has died.

This is the first outbreak in which Ebola treatments have been used.

Read the full story here

Student Nurse Threatened to Commit Suicide After Being Expelled




Student Nurse Threatened to Commit Suicide After Being Expelled
Following her expulsion from a medical school, a pretty young female second-year student allegedly threatened to commit suicide and left shocking suicide note on a Whatsapp group.

Student Nurse Threatened to Commit Suicide After Being Expelled
A 2nd-year student nurse expelled from Gweru Provincial Hospital in Zimbabwe along with three of her colleagues for a series of misdemeanours, has allegedly threatened to commit suicide, claiming she had been unfairly dismissed.

Miss Elain Madonho allegedly posted a suicide note on a WhatsApp chat group on Sunday claiming that she had been dismissed unfairly from the institution’s nursing school.

She is one of the four student nurses who include Miss Sharon Ndiva, Miss Ingrid Wombasha and Miss Shumirai Mandiga who were expelled from the hospital’s nursing school on May 26 after appearing before a board that was set up by the Provincial Medical Director Dr Simon Nyandundu.

The four student nurses were allegedly facing charges that include forging the signature of a supervisor at a clinic where they were attached, incompetence and insubordination after refusing to write a report.

Following their expulsion, Miss Madonho on Sunday took to social media to pour out her heart, saying she was taking her life.

The woman was subsequently not reachable to her friends and efforts to contact her yesterday were not successful, but hospital authorities got in touch with her mother who lives in Harare and she allegedly said her daughter was at home.

It could not be established immediately if the student was dissuaded by someone from committing suicide, had faked the planned suicide or just changed her mind.

In her post which has gone viral, Ms Madonho said the expulsion had destroyed her life, adding that the hospital’s Medical Superintendent Dr Fabian Mashingaidze failed to give her a second chance.

Ms Madonho accused the nursing school of protecting other students while expelling others for trivial crimes.
“From what I heard years before I started attending ur (your) institution, all I heard were praises. Why couldn’t you hear me if what I heard was true?? I gave u my voice and u shut ur (your) ears. Why did u let people over ride you and yet you could have decided on ur (your) own?? Where my grades not good enough to prove to you that I was serious with nursing?? 1 mistake and u have taken away my life? You allowed Christabel to continue even after falling pregnant and giving birth because she is the matron’s daughter, Mupoperi was involved in so many school fights but she has qualified,” Ms Madanho allegedly wrote.
“Exactly wat have u seen in me that u felt it fit to steal my life away. Students only complete their competencies when results are out but I wasn’t given that chance. The whole class was given 2 weeks but I hardly got 2 days. What did I do that I was not given e (the) chance to correct my mistake like e rest of e class?? Anyways I forgive u and hope u find the Lord’s mercy becaus u really need it. You can explain to my daughter where her mother is.”

Dr Mashingaidze confirmed that the four students were expelled from the nursing school last week. He said they heard that one of the students had committed suicide but when they checked with the mother, they were told that she was home.
“Yes there are four girls who were expelled from school after they were found guilty on some charges that were laid against them. It’s too early to comment on the matter because they still have two weeks to appeal against the judgment. I don’t know of any student that has committed suicide as the hospital hasn’t been availed with such information,” he said, adding that there was no room for crooks or incompetence in the medical field.


Source: informationng

NursingWorldNigeria Gets Council Approval to Run CEP

The Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria has approved for some private providers to run continuing education program for Nurses and Midwives in Nigeria.

The Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria has approved for some private providers to run continuing education program for Nurses and Midwives in Nigeria.
According to a publication on the council website http://www.nmcn.gov.ng/approvecep.html , it approved the award of 1 credit unit for the Nursingworld organized American Heart Association Basic Life Support (BLS) Program
You would recall that Each nurse or midwife is expected to participate in any recognized and accredited NMCN MCPDP to renew their practising license

Every nurse or midwife is expected to earn a minimum of 6.0 CEU which is equivalent to 60 continuing education contact hours within each three-year cycle of licensure, 3 units of these CEU i.e. 30 contact hours must mandatorily be from the Nursing and Midwifery organized MCPDP, while the remaining 3 Units must be obtained by approved CEU Providers accredited by the council.

Conference certificates from ICN, ICM, WACN-AGM/BGM and NANNM that show the credit unit earned will be recognized as stated but not more than 3 units.

Other private providers approved include: 
1. London Professional Training Centre (LPTC) Nursing Career Support Programme (2)
2. Occupational Health and Safety Managers (OHSM) Patient Centred Care (1)
3. Joanah research Initiatives Medical Negligence workshop for Nurses and Midwives (1)

NursingWorldNigeria.com

Zika: An International Emergency?

Zika



The World Health Organization (WHO) declared on Friday that the Zika virus and related neurological complications no longer constitute an international emergency







but said that it would continue to work on the outbreak through a "robust program".


The WHO's Emergency Committee, which declared an international public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) in February, said in a statement that they felt that "the Zika virus and associated consequences remain a significant enduring public health challenge requiring intense action but no longer represent a PHEIC."





"We are not downgrading the importance of Zika, by placing this as a longer program of work, we are sending the message that Zika is here to stay," Dr. Peter Salama, Executive Director of WHO's Health Emergencies Programme, told a news briefing.



foxnews

World AIDS Day To Change

World AIDS Day
World AIDS Day is celebrated every December 1, and has been for the past 28 years. But maybe it’s time for a change? No, of course we don’t mean that we should get rid of it — that would be foolish. But maybe it’s time to change the name?

Fight Against HIV/AIDS TransmissionPangaea Global AIDS is working to do just that. They’ve started a campaign to rebrand World AIDS Day as World HIV Day. After all, the way we treat HIV and AIDS has changed so much since 1988. One big change — we didn’t have PrEP then.

Ben Plumley, the CEO of Pangea Global AIDS, said “Now, more than ever, we cannot be aspiring to “the end of AIDS” when groups most affected are increasingly targets of persecution and intimidation — whether they be gay men, trans people, girls and women, people of color — and critically people who inject drugs. We cannot aspire to the ‘end of AIDS’ if funding beyond 2020 — particularly from major donors — is under fundamental threat.”

By renaming it to World HIV Day, Plumley says, it will “move attention away from the short term (that has been characterized by the use ‘AIDS’) to the realization we will be in this for the long haul.”

The site’s “About Us” section explains further: “This epidemic has never been just about a virus. We defeat HIV when we embrace social justice… With changes in governments and policies around the world — most recently in the USA — there is a real risk that HIV will be deprioritized.”

Of course, a re-branding effort doesn’t work if people aren’t on board. To that end, the World HIV Day site has a signup form for organizations to pledge that they’ll use the new term. 

Already, many big groups have signed on, including the gay social app Hornet, Project Inform, AIDS Care China and the Global Forum on MSM and HIV (MSMGF). (Full disclosure: Hornet owns Unicorn Booty, and has worked with MSMGF on its Blue Ribbon Boys project.)


We agree — it’s time to change the focus and name of World AIDS Day, and World HIV Day is exactly what we need.


unicorn booty

A Comprehensive Crisis Info on Borno Emergency - MSF

Update



The conflict in Borno State started in 2009 when Boko Haram (BH) launched attacks in northeastern Nigeria. By 2014, BH controlled large swathes of territory in Borno State and caused large-scale population displacement.
Nigeria: Crisis Info on Borno emergency - November 2016
Copyright: MSF.org
In 2015, Nigeria elected a new President who vowed to take back control of all Nigerian territory from BH. Since then, the Nigerian army escalated their operations and have been engaged in active fighting with BH across Borno, including launching airstrikes in areas under BH control. 

This has caused further mass displacement of the population, particularly towards Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State. Already a large city, the population of Maiduguri has doubled with the arrival of internally displaced people (IDPs), with over 2 million people now living in the city and its immediate surroundings.


The military has taken back some cities and towns outside Maiduguri and is controlling them, meaning that the people within them live under military control, sometimes with little or no possibility to move outside. The government has reiterated its intention to bring all the countryside of Borno under military control in the imminent future, so fighting may continue to impact large areas of the state, affecting an unknown number of people living within those areas. In border areas, the Nigerian army receives military assistance from neighbouring countries Chad, Cameroon and Niger.


As a result of the conflict, 2.6 million people are displaced and 480,000 children are suffering from severe acute malnutrition across the four countries (Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger) according to OCHA.


A total of 1.8 million people are currently displaced in northeastern Nigeria, including an estimated 1.1 million in Maiduguri alone; 4.4 million people are food insecure according to OCHA.


In Borno State, more than 40 per cent of the health facilities are known to be destroyed, many of them found to have been burned during the armed conflict (Borno State Ministry of Health).


Maiduguri

Today, more than 1.1 million IDPs are living in Maiduguri (according to the International Organization for Migration), 90 per cent of them within the host community while the other 10 per cent are accommodated in more than 10 official camps and multiple informal camps and settlements.




MSF focuses on maternal and child health in Maiduguri, running an inpatient therapeutic feeding centre (ITFC) in Gwange district and two large health centres in the districts of Maimusari and Bolori. The Maimusari health centre also includes a paediatric emergency room and inpatient facility. A mobile team runs food distributions and offers medical and nutritional care and vaccination in four informal camps.

Gwange ITFC and ATFC

In Gwange, we have an ITFC with a 110-bed capacity in the compound of the Ministry of Health-run health centre. The ITFC is under five tents, each constituting one ward: admission/triage, an intensive care unit, an isolation ward for children with infectious diseases, an acute phase ward, and a transition/rehabilitation ward. The centre only admits severely malnourished children with complications. Around 300 children are admitted per month, including children over the age of five. To compensate for the lack of food, we started in late September to give a family food ration to each family with a child released from the ITFC. The plan is to increase to 150 beds and to routinely admit children over the age of five. An ambulatory therapeutic feeding centre (ATFC) was opened early November to help with the continuity of care.


Maimusari and Bolori health centres

In Maiduguri, we run two heath centres, Maimusari and Bolori. In these centres we run paediatric outpatient departments (OPDs), ATFCs, and maternity units that provide antenatal and postnatal consultation and assist normal deliveries. In Maimusari, there is also a paediatric inpatient department (26 beds), a paediatric intensive care unit (15 beds) and an emergency room.

Patient numbers increased substantially in September and October, with over 1,000 patients per day being consulted in the OPDs, and on some days more than 700 patients in Maimusari alone (nearly 6,000 consultations per week in both facilities combined). About half of the patients are children under the age of five. People come from all over the city and are already lining up at 6am, even though the health centres do not open until 8am. Lack of free healthcare in Maiduguri is one important reason for this; people have to pay in the state health system and often report being sent away when they don´t have the financial means.


Almost half of the patients under five years of age consulted in Maimusari are malnourished. In the week from 10 to 16 October, more than nine per cent of the patients suffered from severe acute malnutrition (SAM) and an additional 31 per cent from moderate acute malnutrition (MAM). About 1,000 children are followed in the outpatient malnutrition programme (ATFC), with 200 to 300 new admissions each week. Currently, only children under 5 years of age are screened and treated for SAM, but this will be expanded to older children and those with moderate levels of malnutrition. The team is also preparing to start a distribution of food rations for families with children in the ambulatory feeding programme in Maimusari (currently 800 children enrolled).


The number of deliveries and antenatal care consultations has also been increasing. In both facilities together, pregnant women receive more than 1,000 antenatal care consultations per week. In Maimusari, about 120 women deliver their babies per week.


The camps

There are still some IDPs arriving in Maiduguri, especially to Muna Garage camp. The relocation of IDPs from Maiduguri to their towns of origin with the army’s assistance has slowed down since the fighting re-escalated at the end of October and most came back to Maiduguri because they did not find adequate living conditions outside. Yet the Nigerian government has repeatedly announced that it intends to close down all IDP camps by the end of May 2017. At the end of September, several camps in school buildings have been closed, as schools reopened after more than two years’ closure due to BH attacks against schools. The IDPs were moved to other camps inside or outside Maiduguri. In Maiduguri, MSF is conducting a health surveillance activity now covering all official camps and the two largest unofficial camps of Muna Garage and Custom House, where mortality rates, especially for children under five, remain a concern.

MSF teams are currently supporting IDPs in four informal camps: Muna Garage (around 14,500 IDPs sheltering in makeshift self-built shelters set up on private land) and Custom House (around 8,000 IDPs sheltering in unfinished buildings and makeshift shelters), both located at the eastern outskirts of Maiduguri at the road towards Dikwa, as well as Nursing Village in Maisandari district (around 2,000 IDPs) and Fariya (around 3,600 IDPs).

The mobile food distribution team started in Muna Garage and Customs House camps in September and were extended in October to smaller camps. MSF regularly distributes millet, beans and palm oil to the inhabitants of the camps, as well as ready-to-use therapeutic food for families with malnourished children. Teams arrange for referral of children requiring inpatient care to our MSF facilities, offer outpatient medical treatment, provide seasonal malaria chemoprophylaxis, and aim to vaccinate all children under five against measles and pneumococcal disease. MSF has also distributed aid kits (mosquito nets, jerry cans, soap, mats, and blankets).


At the beginning of September, MSF teams had recorded a rate of severe acute malnutrition among children under five above five per cent in Customs House camp. Following the food distributions, malnutrition mass screening showed a decreasing trend in severe malnutrition.


Monguno

In Monguno, the current estimated population is 225,000 people. An estimated 68,000 IDPs have been living in nine camps in Monguno, according to the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), with another 60,000 IDPs living among the host community. During October, new arrivals continued. There had been almost no healthcare provision for over a year in the town. Now, there are five medical organisations present, including MSF. Given the lack of secondary healthcare, MSF has set up an ITFC (around 12 admissions per week), a paediatric IPD (around 40 admissions per week) and an emergency room under tents with an overall capacity of 50 beds. Patient numbers have increased, yet the facility is not full at the moment, partly as the admission criteria were set initially for children under five and partly because of the lack of training of local health workers to recognise and refer acute paediatric illness. In September, 389 patients were treated in the emergency room, 70 per cent of them children under five. The main illnesses treated are malaria, respiratory tract infections and measles. The teams will start an OPD at the end of October.

Bama

Bama, once the second-most populated town in Borno State, is now held by the army. An IDP camp is located inside the compound of the hospital, and is under military control. Around 8,000 people are currently living in the camp, mostly women and children under the age of five. They live in makeshift shelters made out of iron sheeting taken from surrounding destroyed houses and are totally dependent on outside assistance, including for food. No one lives outside the camp; the town is otherwise empty. The catastrophic situation of the IDPs in the camp has improved with regular food distributions, including from MSF, and the provision of healthcare and nutritional services in the camp. The once extremely high malnutrition rates are now below the emergency threshold. The Governor of Borno temporarily relocated his office to Bama for several days at the end of September in a symbolic move, but the rehabilitation of houses (which were all burnt) has not yet begun.


The latest intervention of the mobile MSF team in Bama happened from 19 to 22 October. They distributed millet, beans, oil and soap to 1,800 families with children under five. A screening of 2,058 children for malnutrition now demonstrates 2.0 per cent SAM and 7.7 per cent MAM. This is about the same rate recorded in September, with the 22 new SAM cases, mainly new arrivals. The team treated the malnourished children, gave seasonal malaria prophylaxis to more than 1,000 children, and provided a second round of pneumococcal vaccination. They also dug six soak-away pits for the six boreholes and constructed two solar boreholes and water towers.

When an MSF team originally visited Bama with a military escort on 21 June, they found a population in a catastrophic situation: out of the 800 children screened, 19 per cent were suffering from SAM. Counting of the graves in the cemetery behind the camp showed more than 1,200 graves dug since the IDPs had been gathered in the hospital compound. The team returned in July, August, September and October to distribute food and provide medical and nutritional care. During the rainy season, there have been few new arrivals to the camp, and some of the population was moved to other camps (including to Banki). Bama provides a good example of the possibility of rapid stabilisation of a situation if adequate food and medical aid is provided; however, the situation could again rapidly deteriorate if access is lost due to insecurity.


Dikwa

Dikwa is an enclave controlled by the military. Most of the town is destroyed. The population is now estimated at around 70,000 IDPs, but could be higher. Around 21,000 IDPs are living in the community; 49,000 are living in about 14 camps, but only three of the camps are well-defined and organised. There is an UNICEF-supported clinic in the town and health posts in two camps. The people are almost completely dependent on ICRC food rations distributed by the Nigerian Red Cross. The town had been mainly deserted in 2014 and 2015, with only around 12,000 people remaining in a camp. Water is a big concern, both in quantity and quality. Rates of severe acute malnutrition in a recent screening done by UNICEF were very high (14 per cent).


An MSF team visited the town in mid-July (under armed escort) and at the beginning of October (by helicopter). Based on the findings, the team returned to Dikwa on 26 October for four days for a nutritional screening, distribution of therapeutic food and targeted food distributions to families with malnourished children (millet, beans, oil and sardines). They also distributed jerry cans, soap and mosquito nets and provided outpatient medical treatment and seasonal malaria chemoprophylaxis.


Damboa

In Damboa, southern Borno State, the population is currently estimated at 88,000, with many of them being displaced from the surrounding area. More than 8,600 displaced people live in three makeshift camps in public buildings and the general hospital. Half of the town is destroyed. While food availability has improved and food distributions have started, there is hope that this major concern, especially for IDPs without financial means, will be addressed. There is still insecurity in the direct surroundings and groups of displaced people continue to arrive regularly. From 12 October to 2 November, 681 newly displaced people arrived and arrivals are still being registered.


MSF currently has three clinics providing primarily healthcare and nutrition services, including an ITFC and a paediatric department (with 40 beds altogether), outpatient departments and three ATFCs for severely and moderately malnourished children under five years of age (with more than 420 children currently enrolled in the programme). The number of patients consulted is currently 2,200 per week. The majority of patients have presented with malaria, respiratory tract infections and gastrointestinal problems. Malaria remains the main cause of death in the clinics. The team has set up three community malaria points (‘fever clinics’) within the town, where people with fever can be quickly tested and receive basic treatment. MSF is also running an outreach program with 40 staff members who go through the camps and the town, screen children for malnutrition, bring sick patients to the clinics and distribute therapeutic food to families with small children. The teams vaccinated more than 21,000 children against measles in August, distributed mosquito nets, blankets, soap, buckets, potties, cups and kettles to 14,000 families, provided clean drinking water and built latrines in the camps.


Kaga LGA – Benisheikh

In Kaga local government area (LGA), located in western Borno state, MSF is currently running three ATFCs, located in Benisheikh, the capital town of the LGA, Ngamdu and Mainok.  Since the end of September, malnourished children who need to be hospitalised from these three locations are referred to a newly created ITFC in Benisheikh. Before that, all the children requiring hospitalisation were referred by MSF teams to the ITFC in Damaturu in Yobe state, also run by MSF. From April to September, a total of 418 kids were admitted to the ITFC in Damaturu; in the ATFC in Benisheikh, a total of 1,098 children were enrolled in the programme from August to September. At the same time, a paediatric ward was opened. Both facilities have 25 beds altogether and we are planning to increase the number of beds. Malaria and malnutrition cases have been increasing in recent days with 263 children treated for malaria from August to September. An additional maternity is planned. The team has recently witnessed new arrivals in Benisheikh.


Gwoza

Gwoza is an isolated, severely damaged town in eastern Borno State. Access by MSF teams is only possible by helicopter. In recent days, the number of new arrivals has already increased a bit. Around 45,000 IDPs are living in the last buildings that have not been destroyed – the school and the so-called ‘20 houses square’. There had been no food distributions for three months prior to the arrival of MSF teams. The IDPs allowed to farm only in the morning, on a specific area on the outskirts of the town.

The MSF team rehabilitated a building to be used as health facility, opened an ITFC and ATFC and are running an outpatient department together with UNICEF. In the first two weeks of activities in October, a total of 238 kids were admitted to the ATFC and 13 to the ITFC. A total of 1,042 patients with malaria were treated and more than the 50 per cent of children tested for malaria test positive. The team also plans to improve access to drinking water – there are some privately-owned boreholes in the town, but the IDPs have to pay for the water. Teams registered a high rate of malnutrition during their assessment in August.


Pulka

Pulka is a town 22 kilometres north of Gwoza, with a current population of at least 30,000 people. Access to Pulka by MSF teams is currently possible only by helicopter. On 22 October, an MSF team started activities in the town. The aim is to set up an OPD, ITFC and an ATFC. No other health actors are currently present in Pulka.


Banki

MSF teams from Cameroon have been providing emergency medical assistance and delivering food in Banki, Nigeria, since July. The town has an estimated population of over 20,000 and most of them are displaced. People are stranded in camp controlled by the military and local defence groups, making them utterly reliant on external assistance for food, water and healthcare. MSF medical teams regularly cross the Cameroon-Nigeria border to provide assistance. Fourteen per cent of the children screened by MSF on 19 July were suffering from severe acute malnutrition, and nearly one in three children was malnourished.

Since July, MSF teams have vaccinated 7,500 children under five against measles and provided preventive malaria treatment to over 7,000 children. MSF also conducted over 1,100 consultations for severely malnourished children, nearly 600 consultations for moderately malnourished children and 195 consultations for pregnant women. Seventy-five tons of therapeutic food have been distributed to malnourished children and some 2,400 families have received food rations in a general food distribution. MSF teams carried out water and sanitation activities in the camp by installing water tanks and generators, rehabilitating boreholes and constructing 32 latrines. The camp residents now have access to 15 litres of drinking water per person per day, compared to just five litres in July.

Mortality rates in Banki were very high. When MSF teams first arrived there in July, a rapid assessment found mortality rates four times the emergency threshold. Since then, the situation has somewhat improved as more assistance started to reach the population. Another survey carried out by MSF in September showed that 70 out of 2,134 children under the age of five died between 20 July and September. Of 8,396 adults, 145 died during the same period. A more recent survey from 16 September to 28 October showed that 14 out of 1,916 children under five died. While this shows that the situation is starting to improve, the mortality rates are still worrying and close to the emergency threshold.


Ngala and Gambaru

MSF teams from Cameroon also provide assistance in Ngala and Gambaru in northeast Nigeria. They managed to reach Ngala for the first time on 19 September, where they found 80,000 IDPs living in a camp in acute need of food, healthcare and clean water – surviving with less than a litre of water per person per day. A rapid nutritional screening of more than 7,000 children under the age of five found that one in ten were suffering from severe acute malnutrition and nearly one in four were malnourished. MSF improved the water supply system by drilling boreholes and rehabilitating water pumps and people now have access to eight litres of water per person per day.

In Gambaru, a town a few kilometres from Ngala, the town’s 55,000 residents lack basic food supplies and have no access to healthcare. The only health centre was burnt down, and the road is too dangerous for people to leave to seek care elsewhere.


On 12 October, MSF teams went back to Ngala and Gambaru. They vaccinated 15,000 children under five against measles and distributed food and relief items to 14,600 families. Teams also treated some 700 severely malnourished children and nearly 4,000 who were suffering from moderate malnutrition. 400 general outpatient consultations were also carried out.


source: msf.org

List of Successful Candidates for 2017 Nigerian Air Force Recruit Training.

See list of Successful candidates for 2017 Nigerian Air Force recruit training.

Batch B



Doctor Assaults Nurse at Abaji General Hospital

beating

Medical services were disrupted at the Abaji General Hospital after a medical doctor allegedly assaulted a nurse of the hospital recently. 







A source, who preferred anonymity, confirmed that the nurse, Habiba Gana, complained to the doctor about the manner he handled a woman in labour.

He said the doctor did not take the criticism lightly, as he started beating up the nurse.

“The nurse asked the doctor to be more cautious in handling the woman who was in labour pains for hours but the doctor got angry and pounced on the nurse,” he said.

The development which started at around 5a.m. before the arrival of some personnel at the hospital crippled the day’s activities leading to confusion, the source said.
It was also learnt that after the fracas, the FCT chairperson of the National Association of Nigeria Nurses and Midwives (NANNM), Deborah Yusuf, who led some executives of the association to the hospital ordered its members to down tools till justice is done to their member.

The source said the association would not tolerate ill treatment of any of its members on line of duty.

It was further gathered that the Federal Capital Territory Health Secretariat has since visited the hospital and assured the nurses that it would look into the matter.

It was gathered that the said doctor has been asked to report at the FCT health secretariat in Abuja daily, for six weeks pending the conclusion of investigation into the incident. 


When the Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the hospital, Dr. I. Kibiya was contacted, he said he was busy however he said he had written his report as regards the incident to the FCT health secretariat, adding that he was not permitted to speak to the press or grant any interview, except with permission from the FCT Health and Human Services Secretariat.

MSF Assisting Survivors of Hurricane Matthew

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is continuing to assess the needs of survivors in areas of Haiti affected by Hurricane Matthew. 

                                  Doctors without Borders


They have started to treat people in desperate need of emergency medical care and clean water.


Thanks to the unrestricted gifts they received from donors, they were able to mobilize immediately after the storm struck western Haiti on October 4:


In Jérémie, they found that the reference hospital has suffered damage and lacks water and electricity. 

There are many hurricane survivors with infected wounds. Some people are sick with cholera, a disease that can spread rapidly through untreated water or poorly prepared food and can kill within hours. MSF carried out 250 medical consultations this weekend.


In Port-à-Piment, people are drinking water from untreated sources. An MSF team brought medical supplies to the town and treated 39 cholera patients.


In Petite Rivière de Nippes, an MSF team carried out about 200 medical consultations in the last two days. 

There is a fairly high presence of foot wounds from walking in flooded areas and reports that many people are drinking river water because of the lack of clean water.



In addition, they continue to run existing hospitals and clinics in and around the capital. 

MSF teams in Port-au-Prince are performing emergency surgery, providing urgent care for women with complicated pregnancies, caring for burn patients and more.




MSF teams are working to get into more hurricane-affected areas currently cut off by damaged bridges and roads. 

In the coming days, they are planning to assess the needs in nearby mountainous areas.



Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) since 1971, help people worldwide where the need is greatest, delivering emergency medical aid to people affected by conflict, epidemics, disasters, or exclusion from health care.

More Details on the MSF website

Hurray! Mobile App For Medical World Nigeria

Medical world Nigeria, a medical website that keeps medical professionals informed about news and jobs now has an app downloadable on Google Play Store!
Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!




The app which gives users push notifications was last updated on August 31th, 2016.


Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!

The app (version 1.10.2) is in its early stages and has classic navigation features with the home icon on the top left and menu icon on the top right of the screen while a text view of “recent jobs” stands between the home and menu icon. 

Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!
(I was wondering why the menu icon was on the right)

Tapping on the menu icon, a drop list with "Home, Latest Jobs, Latest News, Job Category, News Category, and Contact Us" will be seen

Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!      Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!      Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!



Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!  Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!


It highlights recent notifications as would be seen on the website.

Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!

As at the time of writing this review, there was only a 5+ downloads of the app.
Medical world Nigeria, on Google Play Store!

I think this a wonderful development. But what I do not know is if the MWN app will serve followers and fans of its sister website Nursingworldnigeria.com

I remember chatting with Jude Cheidu of NWN telling him of the need of a mobile app.

Surfing through Google Play Store and bumping into the MWN app was really exciting.

I encourage all who haven’t downloaded the app to do so! It has a simple user interface and is not heavy to download (about 1.95 MB)


Spread the word! 

Download here







BREAKING NEWS: Cure for HIV-AIDS discovered


HIV VIRUS·        British scientists have found a cure to HIV-AIDS


·        A social worker in London has been reportedly cured of the disease


·        The researchers say it’s not over yet, as more experiments needs to be done.

Emerging reports suggest that British scientists could be one step closer towards finding a permanent cure for HIV-AIDS.

Huffington Post reports that a 44-year-old social worker in London appears to be completely free of the virus after undergoing an experimental therapy technique.

The man was first given a vaccine which helped his immune system detect infected cells, and then took Vorinostat, a drug which is normally used in experimental cancer treatment trials. 

The Vorinostat then activates dormant infected cells that would normally slip through the net allowing the body’s immune system to detect and kill every last infected cell.

In simple terms what this combination of treatments does is remove the camouflage that allows HIV to remain hidden and then shine a spotlight on it allowing the immune system to clearly identify infected cells and kill them.

The researchers have said that there’s an extremely long way to go before they start throwing parties. For starters this is just one man in a trial that involves 50 people. All 50 will need to show similar responses to the treatment, and then even if they do they’ll need to be continually tested for the next five years to make sure the virus has been completely eradicated. That said, this is promising news.

For starters this method is essentially a complex and aggressive form of drug therapy, far less invasive and complex as a technique like gene editing. HIV is a virus which attacks the immune system of the human body, making it harder for us to fight off even the mildest illnesses such as colds or coughs.

There is currently no cure for HIV, however modern treatments allow those infected with it to go on to live a long and healthy life. AIDS is the final stage of the HIV infection; it occurs when the body can no longer fight life-threatening infections.


Those who have been diagnosed with HIV early on will not go on to develop AIDS.




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