Dr. Raymond Ijabla: The Doctors are fighting the wrong fight
I know that Nigerian doctors work under very challenging circumstances. Actually, this is true for every healthcare worker in Nigeria. Many of you are unsung heroes and heroines. I respect all of you for working so hard and making massive sacrifices in the face of deplorable working conditions.
In writing this, I am breaking a promise
to self and my family to keep quiet about the ongoing strike by doctors.
I feel compelled to write this because of the number of abusive emails I
have received since publicly sharing my thoughts on the strike.
A few things need clarification:
1. I am not anti-NMA or anti-doctors. I am a doctor myself. But I
do not believe that we should place tribal sentiments above simple
logic, truth and fairness.
2. The NMA has made it abundantly clear that the issues of
non-medical consultants & headship of hospitals are sacrosanct, and
NOT OPEN to negotiations. This means that without the government
granting its demands on these issues, it will never call off the strike.
These are not my words but the NMA’s.
3. Point number 2 above is exactly why the NMA has lost public
sympathy. The public perception is that
doctors are on strike for their egos, and not for better working conditions or improvement in hospitals and patient care. The public and the government do not perceive the issues covered in point 2 above to be good enough (or legitimate) reasons for a strike. Unfortunately, the NMA has not attempted to change this perception. Or may be it has, but the attempt has been lackluster or the demands are simply unrealistic. Doctors are now seen as a group of people who will go on strike for no other reason than to stop the professional development of their non-medical colleagues.
doctors are on strike for their egos, and not for better working conditions or improvement in hospitals and patient care. The public and the government do not perceive the issues covered in point 2 above to be good enough (or legitimate) reasons for a strike. Unfortunately, the NMA has not attempted to change this perception. Or may be it has, but the attempt has been lackluster or the demands are simply unrealistic. Doctors are now seen as a group of people who will go on strike for no other reason than to stop the professional development of their non-medical colleagues.
When NMA representatives have come out to speak, they have
squandered the opportunity by appearing ill prepared, not knowledgeable
enough or using emotions rather than logic to justify their actions
e.g.. I think his example about air-hostess flying a plane is
unfortunate.
4. As I have said pointed out previously, the NMA has
chosen a wrong battle and has not been advised well. For these demands
(point 2 above) to pull through, the NMA needs to demonstrate how the
creation of non-medical consultant posts and non-medical heads of
hospitals will adversely affect patient care. The NMA has failed to do
so in nearly 7 weeks since it began its strike on 1/7/14.
5. It’s no use playing the victim now, and blaming the public for
not its apathy towards the strike. We need to introspect and ask
ourselves why the public supported the strike by tanker drivers and not
the strike by doctors. Has this anything to do with perceptions and the
legitimacy of our demands as I mentioned earlier? I think the answer is
most probably “yes”.
6. The argument from the overwhelming majority of doctors
who comment on this subject is emotional. But the truth is that
emotional arguments do not win cases for you in courts. You have to
present evidences that are logical. I believe that my articles have been
balanced but I am shocked by the amount of abusive private emails that I
have received rather than coherent arguments and productive
engagements.
7. I do not need to be in Nigeria to be able to contribute to
national discussions. This strike affects me too – my family and friends
still live in Nigeria. Immigration will never end as long as humans
exist, and we must learn to accept this fact. There will always be
Nigerians working and living abroad, and we cannot all be expected to
return home. We do not all need to live in Nigeria before we can
contribute to its development. As a matter of fact, we should encourage
greater participation from our brothers living abroad because they are
often well resourced and we should harness their knowledge and skills
for the good of the motherland. It appears that only Africans see this
as a problem (I am sorry for generalizing).
8. I know that Nigerian doctors work under very challenging
circumstances. Actually, this is true for every healthcare worker in
Nigeria. Many of you are unsung heroes and heroines. I respect all of
you for working so hard and making massive sacrifices in the face of
deplorable working conditions.
9. The only way out of the current crisis is for the government,
NMA & JOHESU sit together. If we work together, we can force the
government to improve areas of shared interests e.g. hazard allowance,
funding for laboratories, radiology, research, post-graduate training
etc. The government can become a common “enemy” if we work together.
10. Although I will continue to say what I think is honest and
fair, I feel that I have said everything (or most of it) that I need to
say on this subject. It’s tedious and pointless to keep repeating
myself.
I welcome constructive criticisms and will endeavour to respond to
them. But I will not be engaging in circular and abusive arguments
because they are unproductive.
Thanks
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Op-ed pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of Kevin Djakpor's Blog.