Patients across public hospitals in Ondo, Osun and Ekiti States are facing severe healthcare disruptions due to staff shortages and a lack of essential drugs.
The patients, who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria, said shortages of health workers and drugs were affecting medical services in hospitals across the three states. They appealed to their respective state governments to address severe manpower shortages and high medication costs to save more lives.
Speaking with NAN, Mr Julius Adegoroye, a patient at the Ondo State Specialist Hospital in Okitipupa, noted that the hospital is facing a severe workforce crisis, rendering patients vulnerable.
“How can a few doctors and nurses be attending to lots of patients, many of whom are in serious pain and need attention, but a shortage of health workers is affecting their services?” he said.
Mrs Iyabo Akinugba, another patient, lamented that the rising cost of medications outside hospitals is a major crisis which often leads to an increase in non-adherence, worsened health conditions, and in some tragic cases, fatalities.
“After attending to you, they ask you to buy drugs from pharmacies outside the hospital, which is very expensive, and this is really taking a toll on patients,” she said.
“This is a government hospital, and this is the place for the common man. Although nobody prays to be sick, it’s inevitable. I appeal to the government to restore this facility to its former glory for citizens to enjoy its free healthcare services.”
Similarly, in Osogbo, an elderly woman, Mrs Abibatu Igbalaye, who was at the maternity ward of the Osun State General Hospital, Asubiaro, to support her daughter after childbirth, commended the hospital for providing free healthcare services but noted that patients were required to provide delivery kits and other consumables used during treatment.
A medical practitioner, Dr Ayorinde Adewale, identified the acute shortage of health professionals in general hospitals as a major challenge in the sector. According to him, many specialist doctors, including neurosurgeons, cardiologists, and oncologists, have left the country due to poor remuneration and service conditions. He warned that the remaining doctors were overworked and underpaid, adding that the trend could discourage professionals from working in public hospitals.
Speaking in an interview with NAN, the Chief Medical Director of the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital Complex, Prof. John Okeniyi, called for improved funding to address infrastructural and operational challenges in public hospitals. Okeniyi noted that the “Japa” syndrome and industrial disputes are affecting service delivery, appealing for increased government intervention.
Meanwhile, the Chairman of the Ekiti State Hospital Management Board, Dr Austine Ibikunle, said the state government had begun construction of three new general hospitals in Awo Ekiti, Ikogosi Ekiti and Ipao Ekiti as part of broader health sector reforms. He disclosed that the government had since embarked on massive recruitment of about 100 doctors and other categories of health workers for its general hospitals and other health centres in batches.
