Latest Headlines
Shettima: Nigeria Ready to Address Challenges Facing Primary Healthcare Finance System
* Gates Foundation votes $7bn interventions for Africa in next four years
Deji Elumoye in Abuja
Nigeria has expressed its readiness to address the concerns surrounding the financing of primary healthcare system in the country.
Vice-President Kashim Shettima gave the assurance on Thursday at a meeting with the Chairman of Dangote Foundation, Alhaji Aliko Dangote; Co-Chair of Bill Gates Foundation, Bill Gates and some governors under the auspices of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, at the Banquet Hall of the State House, Abuja.
Shettima, who noted that polio is one of the major primary healthcare challenges in the country, disclosed that: “The proposal is to provide timely domestic financing for the procurement of vaccines, which couldn’t have come sooner, to boosting our industrial capacity to produce vaccines.”
While acknowledging the threats facing Nigeria in the area of polio, he stated that Nigeria’s three-dose pentavalent vaccine coverage has improved from 33% in 2016 to 57% in 2021.
According to him, “The variant polio virus has declined in Nigeria by 84% from 2021, falling to fewer than 200 cases in 2022.”
He therefore commended the states that have achieved high category immunization coverage, “which is between 60% and 80% of the target demography and the number of states has expanded from 12 to 21 in five years”.
Giving further assurance, the vice-president said: “The federal government and our respective state governments are going to set in place a transparent process and structure to undo the reality of the country as one with one of the highest proportions of non-immunized infants in the world over the last decade.”
Shettima stressed that the federal government is “committed to eradicating variant poliovirus by the end of the year ensuring that every Nigerian child is covered in the routine immunization campaigns”.
On the issue of production of vaccines for immunization of children, he assured Nigerians that: “We are going to work together to ensure that these vaccines are made available even to zero-dose children, of which ours, at 2 million, are the highest in the world after India.”
The vice-president then expressed the appreciation of the federal government to partners such as the Aliko Dangote Foundation and Bill Gates Foundation, whose empathy shone through that uncertain period in Nigeria’s history.
Earlier in his remarks at the interactive session, Gates disclosed that his foundation has the intention to commit $7 billion to Africa in the next four years; to support routine immunization in Nigeria, and the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in Northern Nigeria.
Also speaking, Alhaji Aliko Dangote stated that Gates and himself have been partnering with both the federal and state governments for several years, supporting the efforts in eradicating polio and improving routine immunization, nutrition and primary healthcare in the country.
“We genuinely believe that the National Economic Council and the decisions that you will make over the next four years will determine whether Nigeria has sound economic growth, keep its citizens happy and achieving the sustainable development goals,” he added.
In separate remarks, the Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, Alhaji AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, and some governors, who spoke at the parley, lauded the philanthropic interventions of the Dangote and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundations in critical areas including healthcare, education, agriculture and human capital development.
The governors expressed the readiness to further collaborate with the Dangote and Gates Foundations in the coming years.
Shettima: Nigeria Ready to Address Challenges Facing Primary Healthcare Finance System
* Gates Foundation votes $7bn interventions for Africa in next four years
Deji Elumoye in Abuja
Nigeria has expressed its readiness to address the concerns surrounding the financing of primary healthcare system in the country.
Vice-President Kashim Shettima gave the assurance on Thursday at a meeting with the Chairman of Dangote Foundation, Alhaji Aliko Dangote; Co-Chair of Bill Gates Foundation, Bill Gates and some governors under the auspices of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, at the Banquet Hall of the State House, Abuja.
Shettima, who noted that polio is one of the major primary healthcare challenges in the country, disclosed that: “The proposal is to provide timely domestic financing for the procurement of vaccines, which couldn’t have come sooner, to boosting our industrial capacity to produce vaccines.”
While acknowledging the threats facing Nigeria in the area of polio, he stated that Nigeria’s three-dose pentavalent vaccine coverage has improved from 33% in 2016 to 57% in 2021.
According to him, “The variant polio virus has declined in Nigeria by 84% from 2021, falling to fewer than 200 cases in 2022.”
He therefore commended the states that have achieved high category immunization coverage, “which is between 60% and 80% of the target demography and the number of states has expanded from 12 to 21 in five years”.
Giving further assurance, the vice-president said: “The federal government and our respective state governments are going to set in place a transparent process and structure to undo the reality of the country as one with one of the highest proportions of non-immunized infants in the world over the last decade.”
Shettima stressed that the federal government is “committed to eradicating variant poliovirus by the end of the year ensuring that every Nigerian child is covered in the routine immunization campaigns”.
On the issue of production of vaccines for immunization of children, he assured Nigerians that: “We are going to work together to ensure that these vaccines are made available even to zero-dose children, of which ours, at 2 million, are the highest in the world after India.”
The vice-president then expressed the appreciation of the federal government to partners such as the Aliko Dangote Foundation and Bill Gates Foundation, whose empathy shone through that uncertain period in Nigeria’s history.
Earlier in his remarks at the interactive session, Gates disclosed that his foundation has the intention to commit $7 billion to Africa in the next four years; to support routine immunization in Nigeria, and the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in Northern Nigeria.
Also speaking, Alhaji Aliko Dangote stated that Gates and himself have been partnering with both the federal and state governments for several years, supporting the efforts in eradicating polio and improving routine immunization, nutrition and primary healthcare in the country.
“We genuinely believe that the National Economic Council and the decisions that you will make over the next four years will determine whether Nigeria has sound economic growth, keep its citizens happy and achieving the sustainable development goals,” he added.
In separate remarks, the Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, Alhaji AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, and some governors, who spoke at the parley, lauded the philanthropic interventions of the Dangote and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundations in critical areas including healthcare, education, agriculture and human capital development.
The governors expressed the readiness to further collaborate with the Dangote and Gates Foundations in the coming years.