Medical Negligence And The Limits Of Good Intentions By Aishat M. Abisola

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medical negligence and the limits of good intentions by aishat m abisola
Medical Negligence and the Limits of Good Intentions By Aishat M. Abisola

In 2025, the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare launched the National Health Fellows Programme, aiming to strengthen primary healthcare delivery and expand Nigerias health workforce capacity, following numerous reports of inadequate personnel at medical facilities.

Rightly, the main purpose was to address the gaps in community-level healthcare through the recruitment, training, and deployment of young professionals to serve in all of Nigerias 774 local government areas.

The first cohort for the National Health Fellows Programme, admitted in January 2025, has since been deployed nationwide with the aim of supporting community health interventions, surveillance activities, and primary healthcare strengthening at the grassroots.

According to the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Muhammad Ali Pate, the success that was achieved from the first cohort signalled the potential of Nigerian youths in making meaningful contributions to national development when given the opportunity.

As the final interview process for the second cohort is underway, Prof. Pate should also consider engaging the potential recruits in the investigation and restructuring process of public and private health sector infrastructure in order to make progress in the prevention or reduction of medical negligence in the healthcare system.

These days, there is no shortage of neglect stories caused by the current state of Nigerias healthcare system. Every so often, doctors and their organizations strike due to constant underfunding, mismanagement, and government neglect of the health sector.

These factors have led to the deaths of many patients who could have been saved. However, the continuously worsening healthcare crisis, caused by the mass departure of medical professionals seeking better opportunities abroad, has left Nigerias citizens at the mercy of a broken system. Those doctors who decide to stay are stretched thin, increasing the risk of mistakes, not necessarily due to incompetence, but fatigue.

Just recently, Aishatu Umar, a mother of five, passed away at the Abubakar Imam Urology Centre in Kano State as a result of medical negligence during a surgical procedure to remove a pair of scissors that were left in her body after a previous surgery at the same facility. A relative of the deceased reported that she had experienced months of severe abdominal pains following a surgery in September 2025.

He stated that although she had repeatedly returned to the hospital to complain of worsening pain, she was only provided with pain-relief medication and a mention of further investigation.

Across Nigeria, many citizens have told their stories of medical negligence, which has contributed to the continuous rise in concerns about patient safety, professional standards, and the lack of accountability within the healthcare syste,m as many patients who have been involved in major accidents are required to pay before receiving treatment.

The quality of care in many public hospitals is also impeded by weak regulatory oversight, inadequate funding, outdated facilities, and a lack of qualified medical personnel. Although private hospitals have a wider range of services provided, the cost that many Nigerians have to pay makes a cruel choice between treatment and daily survival. This is not to say they are exempt from reports of medical negligence, as the case of Chimamanda Adichie serves as a recent example.

To paint a more relatable picture of why this negligence continues to thrive, Nigeria has approximately one doctor for every 5,000 people, which is below the World Health Organisation's WHO recommended ratio of one doctor per 600 patients.

Also, an estimated 200,000 preventable child deaths occur annually as a result of understaffed and unevenly distributed pediatric services, with similar challenges being faced by hospital infrastructure, with an estimated 0.8 to 0.9 hospital beds per 1,000 people, which is below the global average of 2.3 beds per 1,000.

Furthermore, the incessant doctors strike in Nigeria remains a major concern, as many patients are left neglected in dire situations without proper treatment or care. Its understandable that doctors demand better remuneration and opportunities, but their duty to attend to patients should remain sacrosanct.

Unfortunately, the doctors strike, regardless of its motivations, contravenes the National Health Act. Although this law was enacted to safeguard patients rights, many Nigerians remain unaware of its provisions. The Act guarantees access to emergency healthcare and basic medical services, regardless of income, status, or location. However, its enforcement is lacking, and hospitals frequently violate it with impunity.

The law aims to prevent hospitals from refusi

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