Noticias

Alarming shortage of health personnel in conflict-affected Nigeria

Midwife Hauwa Lassa (third from left) shows colleagues how to use UNFPA-supplied equipment to safely delivery babies. © Anne Wittenberg/UNFPA
  • 29 Agosto 2017

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria – Retired but not tired. This is how people describe Hauwa Lassa, a nurse and midwife who came out of retirement to care for women and girls affected by the conflict in north-eastern Nigeria.

“I have been working in the field of maternal health in this country for more than 35 years,” she told UNFPA in Maiduguri, where she works at a health facility in one of the displacement camps. “It is now with this crisis going on that the women need support. So I decided to come back to the health centre and help.”

Her skills are desperately needed.

Health workers unload reproductive health kits in Maiduguri, Nigera. The kits contain life-saving reproductive health items. © Anne Wittenberg/UNFPA

There is an alarming shortage of skilled health personnel in the region. The violence has left more than 40 per cent of health facilities either destroyed or badly damaged, and many doctors and nurses were forced to flee.

Women in Nigeria already face one of the highest maternal death rates in the world – a woman dies of pregnancy-related causes about every nine minutes.

The conflict has aggravated this dire situation, leaving around 8.5 million people in need of life-saving assistance. Millions have fled their homes, filling displacement camps and host communities in the three worst-affected states, Adamawa, Borno and Yobe.

UNFPA estimates that 1.7 million affected women are of reproductive age, meaning they will require reproductive health care and support.

Some 276,000 of these women are likely to become pregnant this year. Health personnel are critically needed to provide reproductive health services, including obstetric emergency obstetric care and treatment for survivors of sexual violence.

Training for a crisis environment

Mdapilawa Yatzubu (right) with her colleague Zeinab Saidu. They attended the four-day training on the Minimum Initial Service Package, organized by UNFPA, the Central Emergency Response Fund and the Government of Nigeria. © Anne Wittenberg/UNFPA

“Well-trained doctors, nurses and midwives, like Hauwa Lassa, are the bedrock of our mandate to save lives,” said Ada Pouye, UNFPA’s humanitarian coordinator in Nigeria.

To help these personnel work in a complex humanitarian environment, UNFPA is training them in the Minimum Initial Service Package – a series of actions required to meet reproductive health needs in a crisis setting. These actions include coordinating with humanitarian partners, providing clinical care to survivors of sexual violence, preventing HIV through condom distribution and other measures, and facilitating access to emergency obstetric care.

“This, together with equipping the health facilities and hospitals with supplies for safe deliveries, access to family planning, and equipment to respond to sexual and gender-based violence is one of the cornerstones of UNFPA’s work here,” said Ms. Pouye.

Ms. Lassa was one of more than 300 health providers in Borno State to participate in the training.

“I learned a lot in this training which I can use in my daily work,” she told UNFPA. “I did not like to give family planning to single ladies before, but now after the training I know that I can give it to everyone who needs it. It’s to protect people from sexual transmitted infections like HIV, and I learned it’s important to give it to everyone who wants to delay pregnancy. I will inform people about female and male condoms because giving choices is important.”

Caring for those most in need

Mdapilawa Yatzubu also participated in the UNFPA training. She works in a health centre in the local government area of Biu. There, she and her colleagues manage an average of 150 deliveries per month. They also provide antenatal care, family planning services and immunizations for newborns.

“We have a special way of making women come back for the second immunization shot for their baby after 40 days,” said Ms. Yatzubu. “We give them a small gift, mostly soap. They all come back to collect the soap and have their health checked and the baby immunized with the second dose. This is how we follow up on them.”

She sees her share of pregnancy complications, most of it involving bleeding, hypertension and sepsis – potential fatal conditions.

“If the women have complications that we cannot manage, we refer them to the general hospital,” she said. Establishing a referral system for emergency care is one of the requirements of the Minimum Initial Service Package.

So far, the efforts are working. “Right now, we have had zero maternal deaths in our health facility,” Ms. Yatzubu said. And she is determined to keep it this way.

– Anne Wittenberg

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