Nigeria, 57 Other Countries in Deficit of Health Workers

  • As UUTH Trains over 250 Community Health Officers

Okon Bassey in Uyo

In a bid to check the shortfall in the nation’s health sector, the University of Uyo Teaching Hospital (UUTH), Akwa Ibom State, has so far trained over 250 community health workers, the Chief Medical Director of the health institution, Professor Etete Peters, has said.

Peters, who addressed third convocation and 4th matriculation ceremonies of the Community Health officers of the Health Information Training School of the Teaching Hospital, raised the alarm that currently there was a very serious global shortage of human resources in the health sector.

According to him, there is an urgent need to devise strategies to address the issue, explaining that there were 57 countries including Nigeria with critical shortage of healthcare workers, with a deficit of 2.4 million.

He said the role community health workers played in increasing access to essential quality health services in the context of primary Health care and Universal Health Coverage cannot be over emphasized.

The Chief Medical Director said it was imperative developing these cadres of workers as they constitute the human resource and work force required for the effective running of primary Healthcare system in the country.

This, he declared is even more pertinent given the ongoing revitalization of primary Health care by the Federal Ministry of Health and the National Primary Health care Development Agency.

Further details later

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