Senator Natasha Seeks More Primary Healthcare Centres in Rural Areas

… Calls For Establishement of Specialized Research Centers
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Janet Samuel, Abuja

The Senator representing Kogi Central Senatorial District at the National Assembly, Senator Natasha Uduaghan, has called on the Federal Government to construct more primary healthcare centres to control the rate of infant and child mortality rate in the country.

Senator Uduaghan made the call during an interactive session by the Senate Committee on Health with the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Muhammad Pate, at the National Assembly Complex in Abuja.

The Lawmaker, who is also the Chairman, Senate Committee on Local Content explained that women in rural areas tend to procreate more and are more vulnerable, adding that it will be good to establish specialised facilities that will cater for maternal child care in rural areas across the country.

While lamenting over the shortage of medical doctors in the country, she urged the Federal Government to deploy the use of innovative telehealth and telemedicine to curb the gap.

She bemoaned the rate at which pharmaceutical industries are leaving the country and urged the federal government to consider the use of natural medicine.

“We are aware that two weeks ago, two pharmaceutical giants left the country. With inflation and other challenges, we have crisis when it comes to sourcing foreign medicine.

“I have a solution which is born out of personal experience. Early last year while I was in the State, there was a wave that made news surrounding capsulated bitter leaf, it was all about the cleansing benefits and the enzymes it contains. I was at home thinking if this is the same bitter leaf we have all around Nigeria.

“It brings me to the idea of localising our own medicine so that we can take care of our own local challenges at a reduced and more efficient cost. The solution to that is to establish specialise research centres and tech hubs all across the country,” she said.

She further stated that tech hubs in Nigeria are concentrating on ICT alone, adding that there is need to have specially built laboratories that focus on significant research that would harness ideas and create world trademark goods that could be utilised in the healthcare sector.

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