8 research outputs found

    COVID-19 and its impacts: the situation in Niger republic

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    COVID-19 being a public health emergency of international concern has emerged in most African countries including Niger. Niger, a landlocked country, is tasked with controlling the pandemic. However, of the big challenges the country faced is the fragility of healthcare system which posed limitations to the fight against the virus. The virus overwhelmed the fragile healthcare system which led to inaccessibility of quality healthcare to the citizens coupled with issues of flooding and economic recession that happened during the pandemic. The healthcare sectored has further been crippled by exposure and infection of the already insufficient healthcare workers. In addition to this, there was the burden of NTDs and other communicable and non-communicable diseases that subverted the country in the depths of difficulties. As per the predictions of World Bank, the poverty curve is likely to escalate due to the outrageous impacts of COVID-19. Adding on to this, the occurrence of natural disasters such as flooding has further stretched the country. It's no coincidence that the country would confront plethora of challenges amidst the second wave. Therefore, timely decision and necessary interventions are needed to strengthen the country's fight against the pandemic. However, this is only feasible when Nigerien government, international allies and other wealthy nations work closely to ensure that the challenges faced by the healthcare system are tackled

    Experience of medical doctors in Imo state, Nigeria on the Pattern of presentation and management of alleged rape

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    BACKGROUND: Rape is one of the most dehumanizing crimes against women and females of all age groups are at risk. Rape is聽defined as forced vaginal penetration of a woman by a male sexual assailant. It is a gender specific term unlike sexual assault.OBJECTIVE: To determine the experience of medical doctors in Imo-State Nigeria on the pattern of presentation and management聽of alleged rape cases.MATERIALS AND METHODS: A descriptive cross-sectional study involving a cohort of medical doctors. The study was carried聽out between January and September, 2013 in Owerri, Imo State. A total of 150 pre-tested questionnaires were distributed. Information聽sought included sociodemographic data, cite of rape incidence, time interval between rape incidence and reporting to health facility,聽involvement of the police and appropriate rape management strategy. One hundred and five well completed questionnaires were聽analyzed using Microsoft excel.RESULT: Patient within the age range of 21-30years had the highest prevalence of alleged rape cases (32.2%). This was followed by聽respondents within the age range of 10-20years (31.4%). Children less than 10years old constituted 26.2% of the cases. The聽commonest venue was in the assailants' residence (41.9%). No incident of spousal rape was observed. About 62.1% of the cases were聽poorly managed. Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) were the commonest complication recorded amongst the victims. Majority聽of the alleged rape cases (68.8%) were neither reported to the police nor referred to the forensic pathologists.CONCLUSION: Appropriate referrals of rape cases to the forensic pathologists and the police are key factors in the management of聽alleged cases of rape.KEY WORDS: Experience, Management, Presentation , Rape, Imo Stat

    Quality and outcomes of maternal and perinatal care for 76,563 pregnancies reported in a nationwide network of Nigerian referral-level hospitals.

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    Background: The WHO in collaboration with the Nigeria Federal Ministry of Health, established a nationwide electronic data platform across referral-level hospitals. We report the burden of maternal, foetal and neonatal complications and quality and outcomes of care during the first year. Methods: Data were analysed from 76,563 women who were admitted for delivery or on account of complications within 42 days of delivery or termination of pregnancy from September 2019 to August 2020 across the 54 hospitals included in the Maternal and Perinatal Database for Quality, Equity and Dignity programme. Findings: Participating hospitals reported 69,055 live births, 4,498 stillbirths and 1,090 early neonatal deaths. 44,614 women (58路3%) had at least one pregnancy complication, out of which 6,618 women (8路6%) met our criteria for potentially life-threatening complications, and 940 women (1路2%) died. Leading causes of maternal death were eclampsia (n聽=聽187,20路6%), postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) (n聽=聽103,11路4%), and sepsis (n聽=聽99,10路8%). Antepartum hypoxia (n聽=聽1455,31路1%) and acute intrapartum events (n聽=聽913,19路6%) were the leading causes of perinatal death. Predictors of maternal and perinatal death were similar: low maternal education, lack of antenatal care, referral from other facility, previous caesarean section, latent-phase labour admission, operative vaginal birth, non-use of a labour monitoring tool, no labour companion, and non-use of uterotonic for PPH prevention. Interpretation: This nationwide programme for routine data aggregation shows that maternal and perinatal mortality reduction strategies in Nigeria require a multisectoral approach. Several lives could be saved in the short term by addressing key predictors of death, including gaps in the coverage of internationally recommended interventions such as companionship in labour and use of labour monitoring tool. Funding: This work was funded by MSD for Mothers; and UNDP/UNFPA/ UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP), a co-sponsored programme executed by the World Health Organization (WHO)
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