Health
Psychiatrist Decries High Cost of Mental Illness Treatment, Seeks Interventions
A Consultant Psychiatrist, Prof. Taiwo Obindo has decried the cost of care and drugs for individuals undergoing treatment for various mental health conditions, calling for interventions to reverse the trend.
Obindo, also the immediate past President, Association of Psychiatrists of Nigeria (APN), made the call in an interview at the weekend in Lagos.
He said that those accessing care, especially mental healthcare services, were finding it difficult to keep up with the cost of treatment.
The psychiatrist frowned that the cost of healthcare in Nigeria generally had gone up, attributing the development to inflation, economic downturn and closure of some pharmaceutical companies.
He lamented that most of the pharmaceutical companies that produced some of the drugs had either downsized or relocated to other countries, leading to high cost of drugs/medications.
“The cost of healthcare in Nigeria generally has become so high, making it difficult for an average person to access the needed care.
“Most of the company’s manufacturing the drugs are not in the country and some of those here have either downsized or relocated to other countries – this has resulted in a quadruple of the price of drugs compared to the price before.
“Similarly, the rise in the prices of goods and services caused by the fuel subsidy removal and economic downturn in the country has continually resulted in an astronomical rise in the prices of drugs and hospital care.
“Individuals undergoing treatment for various mental health conditions, particularly those with substance use disorder are finding it difficult to keep up with the cost of treatment.
“This to a great extent affects the treatment outcomes, because many of the patients hardly adhere to medication and prescriptions due to financial incapability,” he said.
Speaking on the implications of the high cost of medication, particularly for mental health conditions, Obindo decried that the situation was taking a toll on the average patient.
He said that most of the patients, after seeing a doctor, end up not buying the prescribed drugs or buy what they could afford, leading to under-dose of the medication.
He explained that the situation could not only lead to relapse, but could make the patient come down with more complicated symptoms.
“Failure to adhere to prescriptions or under-dosing medication can have a lot of implications on the patient, his family and the economy at large.
“Apart from resulting in relapse, it can make the patient perpetually ill or even come down with more severe symptoms.
“Family relationships may be affected and productivity of the individuals may drop, affecting economic growth and development,” he said.
On measures to salvage the situation and ensure citizens had easy access to the needed healthcare, Obindo called for restructuring and expansion of the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) to at least cover 80 per cent of the population.
He added that the scheme’s formularies should be reviewed and expanded to accommodate most mental healthcare medications, so that patients could access drugs when prescribed.
The psychiatrist also underscored the need for the government to not only subsidise importation of the drugs, but also support the pharmaceutical companies with incentives to aid their operations.
“It is the sole responsibility of the government to ensure that the citizens are in good health.
“Considering the cost of transportation, the fact that people in the rural areas will have to travel to urban cities to access mental healthcare adds to their cost of treatment. Some may resort to alternative medicine.
“This is where integrating mental healthcare fully into Primary Health Care becomes necessary, so that people can have access to care anywhere they are,” Obindo said.
Health
When Corruption Diagnoses Genotype: The Hidden Driver of Nigeria’s Sickle Cell Crisis
By Obi Light Ogbonnia
“Can an SS father and an AA mother give birth to a child with sickle cell disease?”
That was the question a curious student asked during one of our recent school awareness campaigns.
It is the kind of question every Nigerian should know the answer to because it lies at the heart of preventing sickle cell disease.The answer is simple: No.
Science teaches us that an individual with genotype SS carries two sickle haemoglobin genes and can only pass the S gene to each child.
Likewise, an individual with genotype AA carries two normal haemoglobin genes and can only pass the A gene. Every child from such a union will inherit the AS genotype, making them carriers of the sickle cell trait but not sufferers of sickle cell disease.If this scientific principle is so clear, why do we occasionally hear heartbreaking stories of couples who insist they were told they were SS and AA, yet they gave birth to a child with SS?
In most cases, the explanation is not a failure of genetics but a failure of our healthcare system. Wrong genotype results remain a silent public health crisis. Poor laboratory practices, expired or counterfeit reagents, poorly calibrated equipment, sample mix-ups, inadequate quality control, and, in some instances, corruption and the falsification of laboratory reports have combined to create a dangerous environment where life-changing decisions are made using unreliable medical information.
The consequences are profound. Young people proceed into marriage believing they are genetically compatible, only to discover years later that both are carriers of the sickle cell gene. Families are thrown into emotional distress. Trust is broken. Parents struggle with the lifelong financial and psychological burden of caring for children living with sickle cell disease. What should have been prevented becomes another painful statistic.
To be clear, medicine recognizes a few exceptionally rare situations, such as unusual haemoglobin variants or the need for advanced molecular testing, where routine tests may require confirmation.
However, these rare exceptions do not alter the established law of inheritance: SS × AA produces AS offspring.
Nigeria accounts for one of the largest numbers of babies born with sickle cell disease every year. We cannot win this battle if the very tests designed to prevent the disease cannot be trusted. Every inaccurate genotype result represents a potential family tragedy waiting to unfold.
The Federal Ministry of Health, regulatory agencies, and professional bodies must intensify oversight of diagnostic laboratories, eliminate counterfeit laboratory reagents, enforce external quality assurance programmes, and sanction facilities and individuals found guilty of malpractice. Laboratory diagnosis must become a matter of public trust, not public doubt.
Equally, Nigerians should avoid relying on a single genotype test, especially when the result will influence marriage or childbearing decisions. Confirmatory testing in accredited laboratories should become the standard practice.
The fight against sickle cell disease does not begin in the hospital ward; it begins in the laboratory. When corruption enters the laboratory, science is compromised, prevention fails, and innocent children bear the consequences. Protecting the integrity of genotype testing is not merely a professional obligation, it is a moral responsibility and a national priority.
If we truly desire a Nigeria with fewer children born with sickle cell disease, then we must first ensure that every genotype result tells the truth.
About the Author
Obi Light Ogbonnia is the Founder and President of the Obi Ogbonnia Sickle Cell Foundation (OOSCF), a sickle cell survivor, public health advocate, and international speaker. He has dedicated his life to promoting genotype awareness, patient support, policy advocacy, and equitable access to quality healthcare. Through education and community engagement, he continues to champion efforts aimed at reducing the burden of sickle cell disease in Nigeria and across Africa. His guiding message remains: “It’s Sickle Cell, Not Sickle Life.”
Health
Fresh Lassa Fever Outbreak Kills Medical Doctor in Benue
From Attah Ede, Makurdi
Fresh Lassa Fever outbreak has claimed the life of a senior medical doctor working with APIN Foundation in Konshisha local government area of Benue State.
The State Commissioner for Health and Human Service, Dr.
Paul Ejeh-Ogwuche, who confirmed the new case to journalists in Makurdi on Monday, disclosed that the ministry has embarked on case and contact tracings.Ogwuche stated that the victim succumbed to the disease after struggling within himself for over two weeks, saying the State is on the verge of declaring the outbreak over before the new case was recorded a few days ago.
According to him, emergency response measures have been activated to contain the spread of the viral disease and protect residents.
He maintained that with this fresh outbreak, the ministry has heightened its campaign again and reactivated its awareness campaign by going back to the communities even though they have been doing this all these while.
“There is a fresh case of Lassa Fever in the State. Only one doctor had died. The victim was buried on last Saturday being 20th June, 2026. He worked with APIN Foundation in the Konshisha local government area of the State, but hailed from the Kwande local government axis.
“So far, there is no other person on admission at any hospital in the State. In fact, we wanted to declare the outbreak over before this case came up. The doctor took ill and was managing himself at home and in a private hospital.
“For over two weeks he was struggling and when there was no improvement, then another of his friends told him that his situation is suggestive of Lassa Fever and they carried out something like a casual test on him which turned positive.
“So, when we even wanted to put him on admission at the Benue State University Teaching Hospital, he said no, that we should give him drugs to take at home and injection. But we said no, it wouldn’t work like that. He was eventually taken to the teaching hospital for a test”, he said.
According to the commissioner, a baseline investigation was conducted on the victim where it was discovered that his kidney is getting affected.
“We have to refer him to Jos. So, he actually died in Jos and the corpse was brought from JUTH and buried on Saturday”.
Speaking on other measures being taken to forestall further outbreak, Dr. Ogwuche intimated that the responses to all those emergencies are similar, adding that with the recent outbreak of Ebola, NCDC has been giving them updates and also putting them on alert.
“So also we have been doing that. We checked all our facilities, heightened our surveillance and for this particular case, we have embarked on case and contact tracings too, spreading the message. We have ongoing engagement with the media for jiggles. We are thinking of bringing people to churches and mosques to train and even traditional rulers too because they are in the communities.
“Like I told you earlier, we are about to declare the outbreak over after the 42 incubation period before this case broke out. This is the only case for now. And so, we are still going to wait for another 42 days of incubation before we can think of declaring it over again. But off course, we are looking at it becoming endemic now even though it has season. We need to keep on educating people”, Ogwuche added.
Meanwhile, another medical doctor identified as Dr. Tyoor Cedric Kondom who graduated recently and is waiting for his induction into the profession in the next ten days, has died of bone marrow failure in the State.
The Benue Medical and Dental Students’ Association (BEMSA-National) announced his death in a tribute, describing him as a dedicated and hardworking graduate whose life was cut short at a crucial moment in his career.
“With deep sadness and a profound sense of loss, we join family, friends, and colleagues in mourning the passing of our beloved brother and colleague, Dr. Kondom Cedric, who passed away on Thursday, 18th June 2026,” the association stated.
According to the tribute, Cedric had successfully completed the rigorous demands of medical school and was only days away from being formally inducted as a medical doctor when he died.
The association described him as an exceptional young professional whose time in medical school was marked by determination, resilience, and commitment to the practice of medicine
Health
Fathers Lament Silent Mental Stress, Gender Bias
As Nigeria celebrates Father’s Day 2026, many fathers are battling silent, severe mental health crisis driven by crushing economic hardships and deep societal pressures.
They also decried the systemic gender bias and lack of support structures for men in Nigeria and Africa, urging immediate nationwide commitment to promoting mental health advocacy and institutional recognition for men.
Fathers also spoke on Sunday in Lagos, highlighting their expectations for stronger family bonds and a more inclusive society.
The 2026 Father’s Day is being celebrated on Sunday, June 21: it is an annual observance marked on the third Sunday of June.
Underscoring the psychological weight modern men carried, a Men’s Mental Health advocate, Halima Layeni, emphasised that a severe mental health crisis, driven by relentless societal pressures and economic challenges, was quietly ravaging Nigerian fathers.
Layeni, the Founder and Executive Director of the Life Abuse Foundation (LAAF), presented a grim overview of key issues confronting men across the country, including underemployment, financial inadequacy, and alarming rates of unreported domestic violence against men.
To cushion this crisis, Layeni advocated for the urgent establishment of a Federal Ministry of Men Affairs to ensure men received the structural protection and psychological support necessary for their well-being.
“The establishment of the Ministry of Men Affairs is of immense importance.
“The ministry will provide focused attention on men’s unique issues, improve health outcomes through targeted campaigns, and create economic opportunities that enhance stability and reduce poverty among men,” she said.
Corroborating the advocate’s position, a civil servant, Ferdinand Okoji, noted that the pressure to fulfill traditional roles as primary providers without receiving corresponding domestic appreciation induced severe psychological stress in men.
“Fathers toil day and night to ensure they put food on the table, take care of the family, provide, and make sure that everybody is happy.
“However, most women take it for granted.
“This comes with a lot of stress on men trying to meet up with daily obligations,” Okoji stated.
He added that instead of finding their homes to be peaceful sanctuaries to unwind from economic anxieties, many men faced hostile and cold environments.
“When these men come back home, instead of their wives to calm the stress level the men have gone through, they put more fire.
“It is unfortunate, and the challenge continues as the economic situation of the country continues to batter men,” he said.
Also contributing, a 60-year-old father, Papa Ejima, decried how macro-economic hardships like inflation, unemployment, terrorism, and kidnapping directly impacted paternal mental well-being, especially when children project societal failures onto their fathers.
Papa Ejima lamented that the current hardship had triggered a massive youth migration (Japa) wave, leaving aging parents, especially fathers, isolated and anxious about their future care.
According to him, the mothers would usually join their children especially when it was time for “omugwo’’.
“I have a daughter that graduated from the university two years ago and she has not been employed.
“Each day, my daughter puts the blame on me because of the hardship in the land, demanding that she wants to migrate to another country to secure a job.
“So, the challenge now is, who will take care of me at old age if all of them decide to travel out of the country or out of my base in search of greener pastures?” he asked.


