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Experts Seek Unified Action against Cervical Cancer

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Torough David, Abuja

Stakeholders across health sectors have called for urgent, coordinated investment in prevention, equitable HPV vaccine access and harmonized health data to accelerate progress towards elimination of cervical cancer across Africa.

They made the call on Wednesday, during a panel session with the Theme ”Accelerating Cervical Cancer Elimination in Nigeria, From Policy to Practice”.

Head of Division, Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health, Africa CDC, Dr Fidele Ngabo Gaga, highlighted its efforts to harmonise and aggregate health data across all 55 African Union (AU) Member States.

“We are developing a continent-wide data-sharing agreement and centralised repository to support data upstreaming and policy development.

“The goal is to present unified data at AU Summits, helping countries make evidence-based decisions,” Gaga said:

Prof. Imran Morhason-Bello, a leading gynaecologic oncologist from the University College Hospital, Ibadan, made a compelling financial case for prioritising prevention over treatment.

“Screening just between 2023 and 2027 will cost Nigeria N351 billion.

“But treating 10,000 women with invasive cervical cancer from 2027 to 2030 could cost us N1.4 trillion. Prevention is not only more humane, it is far more cost-effective,” he said.

Morhason-Bello also addressed innovations such as self-sampling for HPV testing, already being implemented in Nigeria through implementation science.

“Women receive a self-sampling kit, return it the same day, and positive results are treated before noon.

“It is happening in markets and schools. It is not a pilot, it is real.

“We have even developed a mobile app (available in multiple languages and offline) to guide women through the self-sampling process, increasing accessibility in low-resource settings,” he said.

External Affairs Director for MSD, Sub-Saharan Africa, Vuyo Mjekula, addressed one of the most common myths around the HPV vaccine rollout.

“Let me be clear, there is no shortage of HPV vaccines. If anyone tells you otherwise, call me directly. The real issue is equity and strategic allocation,” she said.

Mjekula recalled early proposals that included boys in HPV vaccination efforts, but warned that without careful planning, some countries would be left out entirely.

She called for one national policy that ensures equitable access to vaccines and services, especially for the most vulnerable girls.

“This is not about science alone. A dose costing N125,000 may be affordable to some, but to a woman in a rural village, it is like N10 million.

“If she must choose between survival and feeding her children, the answer is obvious,” she said.

She applauded Nigeria’s progress, noting that since the national rollout, the number of vaccinated girls across the continent has more than doubled, driven primarily by Nigeria’s leadership.

Mjekula also made an appeal for multi-sectoral collaboration, urging the involvement of private sector giants, from banks to telecoms and philanthropic foundations.

“Health is not just the government’s responsibility. We need to imagine beyond the healthcare we can afford with public funds and work toward the healthcare we want as a society,” she said.

She also called for a business case for investment in HPV prevention and cancer control, saying the task force must work hand-in-hand with all stakeholders.

“Let us go far together. If you want to go quickly, go alone. But if you want to go far, go together,” she said.

The symposium concluded with a call to integrate cancer screening into primary health care services.

It also called for the deployment of cost-effective technologies like self-sampling, addressing myths around vaccine shortages, and ensuring gender-sensitive, data-informed policies.

As Nigeria and the continent advance towards achieving the WHO 90-70-90 cervical cancer elimination targets, the message from experts was clear: “Let us do big and let us do it together”.

Health

Zaria Fistula Centre Repairs over 2,000 Cases, Flags Rising Medical Quackery

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The Hajiya Gambo Sawaba General Hospital (HGSGH) Fistula Centre, Zaria, has successfully repaired over 2,000 obstetric fistula cases since its establishment in 1999.

Chief Surgeon of the centre, Dr. Mohammed-Ado Zakari, disclosed this on Saturday during the 2026 commemoration of the International Day to End Fistula held at the hospital in Zaria.

According to Zakari, the centre currently performs an average of 150 repairs annually, with a success rate of over 70 percent.

The chief surgeon said five doctors and several nurses had also been trained at the centre under the mentorship of Dutch Fistula Surgeon, Dr.

Kees Waaldijk.

He said the centre was established through collaborative efforts of the Kaduna State Government, Rotary International, and Waaldijk to address the growing burden of obstetric fistula in northern Nigeria.

Zakari described obstetric fistula as an abnormal opening between the vagina and the bladder or rectum, caused mainly by prolonged obstructed labour, resulting in continuous leakage of urine or stool.

He said the condition remains a major public health and social problem, particularly among rural women with poor access to quality maternal healthcare.

The surgeon revealed that globally, more than two million women “are living with untreated obstetric fistula, while between 50,000 and 100,000 new cases occur annually.”

He added that Nigeria alone may have between 100,000 and one million women living with untreated fistula.

Zakari identified early marriage, home delivery, shortage of skilled birth attendants, poverty, and prolonged obstructed labour as major causes of the condition.

He also raised concerns over increasing cases linked to medical quackery and poor surgical practices.

According to him, over 60 percent of private clinics in Zaria do not have qualified medical personnel to handle maternal healthcare needs.

“We currently have patients who are victims of such unqualified medical personnel undergoing fistula repairs at the centre.

“I am retired and own a private hospital, but I know that the priority of some private clinics is money, not patient-centred services,” he said.

The surgeon, however, commended the Federal Government for interventions through the Basic Health Care Provision Fund (BHCPF) and the Comprehensive Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care (CEmONC) initiatives.

The 2026 theme for the International Day to End Fistula is: “Her Health is a Right: Invest in Ending Fistula and Childbirth Injury”.

The centre used the occasion to hold a special session for traditional and religious leaders.

The session urged participants to leverage the state health insurance scheme and other federal government’s interventions to improve access to quality, subsidized medical care.

Medical Director of the hospital, Dr. Hassan Adamu, reiterated the hospital’s commitment to providing robust health services to VVF patients.

He called for increased investment by governments, development partners, and philanthropists to strengthen maternal healthcare services and eliminate fistula and childbirth injuries.

In his remarks, Alhaji Sambo Shehu-Idris, District Head of Zaria and Kewaye, commended the centre for the event.

Idris, represented by Alhaji Ibrahim Sarki, Ward Head of Madarkaci, lamented that traditional leaders were closest to the communities and often reported the presence of quack centres.

He, however, said the lack of action by relevant authorities had made them targets of illegal operators.

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Health

Kano Expands Health Insurance to Inmates, HIV, Hypertensive Patients – KSCHMA

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The Kano State Contributory Healthcare Management Agency (KSCHMA) said it has enrolled vulnerable groups, including hypertensive and HIV patients and inmates in correctional centres, into the state’s healthcare insurance scheme.

The Executive Secretary of the agency, Dr.

Rahila Aliyu-Mukhtar, disclosed this in an interview on Friday in Kano.

Aliyu-Mukhtar said the agency had enrolled more than 6,000 vulnerable hypertensive patients across the state to help them access medications and investigations they ordinarily could not afford.

According to her, the intervention has contributed to reducing complications arising from hypertension in the state.

“We received a nationally generated report indicating that Kano State has reduced complications arising from hypertension.

“This can be attributed to the hypertensive patients we enrolled under the scheme,” she said.

The executive secretary added that more than 6,000 people living with HIV have also been enrolled in the programme.

She explained that although antiretroviral drugs were provided through donor support, beneficiaries still require healthcare support for other illnesses such as malaria, typhoid, diabetes, and hypertension.

Aliyu-Mukhtar further disclosed that the agency had concluded plans to enroll 6,000 tuberculosis patients under its vulnerable group programme.

“We realised that TB patients also need support beyond their TB medications because secondary health conditions may arise,” she said.

She also said the agency had enrolled all inmates in correctional centres across the state, describing it as the first initiative of its kind in the country.

Aliyu-Mukhtar noted that the initiative earned the Kano State Government commendation from the Controller-General of Corrections.

According to her, other states have contacted the agency to understudy the implementation model adopted by Kano State.

She said the agency remained committed to reducing out-of-pocket healthcare spending and improving access to healthcare services for vulnerable residents.

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Health

Many Youths Unaware of Drug Abuse Consequences – NDLEA

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The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) said the dangers of drug use are often underestimated among young people, with many unaware of the long-term consequences of their actions.

NDLEA representative for the Kwara Command, Galleys Oyedepo said this at a seminar organised by the Federation of Muslim Women Association of Nigeria (FOMWAN) in Ilorin on Friday.

The seminar was organised in collaboration with NDLEA to sensitise secondary and tertiary school students against indulging in drug abuse.

Oyedepo expressed concern that drug and substance abuse is becoming prevalent among youth on campuses of tertiary institutions.

“Drug abuse is increasingly prevalent among young people, particularly on university campuses, where many students turn to substances in response to academic pressure, social expectations, and emotional challenges,” she said.

According to her, what begins as curiosity, peer influence, or a coping mechanism can quickly develop into dependency, trapping students in cycles of addiction.

Oyedepo identified commonly abused substances to include cannabis, codeine-based syrups, tramadol, and synthetic drugs.

She cited findings from the 2018 National Drug Use and Health Survey, which put Nigeria’s drug use prevalence at 14.4 per cent, nearly three times the global average.

The NDLEA representative noted that recent enforcement data further underscored the severity of the problem.

She further disclosed that more than 60 per cent of over 77,000 drug offenders arrested by the agency in the past five years were youths.

“Some are as young as 15, and most individuals currently undergoing treatment and counselling in NDLEA facilities are also young people.

“The trend is partly attributed to a culture that increasingly normalises drug use among youths, with many perceiving it as harmless or fashionable,” she said.

Oyedepo warned that the consequences of drug abuse include poor academic performance, mental health disorders, broken relationships, and increased exposure to crime and violence.

According to her, youth must understand that drug abuse comes with serious and lasting consequences, and that it is not a solution to stress or academic challenges.

FOMWAN Amirah, Hajia Biliqis Oladimeji, said the programme was organised under the Health Committee of the Association to educate young people on the dangers of drug abuse in the state.

Oladimeji lamented the rise in cases of drug abuse among youth in Kwara, saying the association would not fold its arms and watch the nation’s future destroyed by the menace.

She, therefore, appealed to parents and guardians to monitor their wards so that they do not fall victim to drug abuse.

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