Health
World Population Day: AHBN Tasks FG on Family Planning Targets

The Africa Health Budget Network (AHBN) has urged the Federal Government to intensitfy efforts, in its determination to achieve the Family Planning (FP) 2030 commitment.
The Coordinator, AHBN, Dr Aminu Magashi, gave the advice in a statement on Monday in Abuja.
NAN reports that the Federal Government formally launched the 2030 FP commitment on March 2022.
The Family Planning 2030 commitment, with eight focus areas, states that by the end of 2030, Nigeria envisioned a country where everyone would be able to make informed choices.
It listed adolescents, young people, population affected by crisis and other vulnerable population to, aside making informed choices, have equitable and affordable access to quality family planning and participate as equals, in society’s development.
Magashi noted that with the fast growing rate of the global population which currently stood at 8 billion and Nigeria’s population, estimated to be over 200 million, the call for concerted action on the part of the government to achieve the FP 2030, was timely.
“Nigeria’s commitment to allocate one per cent of its health budget to family planning both at Federal and State levels as part of efforts to achieve the FP 2030 require concerted efforts and innovative financing.
“This is in a bid for family planning to be adequately catered for, to all those in need of it,” he said.
The coordinator expressed worries that apart from the recent launch of documents, there had been no tangible efforts by the Federal Government to ensure the FP 2030 was achieved to put the country’s population under check.
According to him, more worrisome is the fact that majority of the over 200 million people in the country, 70 per cent of them were under the age of 30.
“AHBN Meaningful Adolescent and Youth Engagement (MAYE) Working Group, therefore, calls on the governments at all levels and other critical stakeholders to put modalities in place to ensure that the youth in the country are productively engaged.
He said this could be achieved through the provision of qualitative education and skill acquisitions, to contribute to the socio-economic growth of the country.
“It is necessary to warn here that the youthful population can be an asset or burden to the country, depending on how the government tackles issues around them.
“If not properly taken care of and given the needed attention, the youthful population can be a catastrophe, leading to all manner of insecurity challenges, including kidnapping, armed robbery and many other social vices.
“We are therefore calling on the Federal Government to maximise its bulging youthful population, by improving on the quality of and access to education.”
He argued that the ongoing strike in the education sector embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) must be addressed once and for all.
Speaking further, Magashi also urged government to make family planning information, commodities and services available and accessible to all, especially those in hard-to-reach areas.
He noted that this would curb issues like teenage pregnancy significantly.
“The Federal and State Governments should take the issue of the provision of family planning commodities seriously, by ensuring its availability free of charge in all government clinics across the country.
“This can be achieved by the payment of counterpart funding and the provision of funds for logistics by all tiers of governments,” the AHBN coordinator said.(NAN)
FEATURES
Why Genotype Compatibility Matters in Preventing Sickle Cell

Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) is a genetic blood disorder that arises when both parents carry the sickle cell gene, creating a 25 per cent chance of transmitting the disease to their offspring with each pregnancy.
Globally, an estimated 400,000 babies are born annually with SCD.
Medical experts have consistently warned that genotype incompatibility remains the leading cause of new cases and should be a central consideration among intending couples.
According to them, avoiding unions between carriers, especially those with AS and SS genotypes could greatly reduce new incidences, limiting them to carriers alone.
In high-income countries, the average life expectancy for individuals living with SCD is approximately 57 years.
However, the outlook is more severe in Sub-Saharan Africa, where 50 to 80 per cent of children born with the disease die before the age of five.
In contrast, babies born with SCD in the United States have a 95 per cent chance of reaching adulthood.
Given these disparities, experts are unanimous that prevention is the most effective and affordable strategy for eliminating the disease.
Prof. Titus Ibekwe, Provost of the College of Health Sciences, University of Abuja, underscored this view during a recent public lecture in Abuja.
It was titled “The Evolving Therapeutic Landscape in Sickle Cell Disease”.
He emphasised the importance of proactive partner selection based on genotype compatibility.
“Prevention is key in the fight against sickle cell, and this costs nothing.
“It simply means paying close attention when choosing a life partner ensuring that individuals with the AS genotype do not marry another AS.
It is also that an AS does not marry an SS, or two SS individuals do not marry”.
Ibekwe explained that such unions greatly increase the risk of having children with SCD, and that sustained adherence to genotype-based partner selection could drastically reduce, if not eliminate, the disease burden.
Beyond prevention, Ibekwe noted that treatment options for individuals living with the disease have expanded, including advanced therapies such as bone marrow transplantation and gene therapy.
He explained that gene therapy aims to correct the faulty gene responsible for the disease, allowing it to function like a healthy one.
Also speaking on the burden of SCD in Nigeria is Dr Maureen Achebe, Clinical Director of Haematology at Harvard’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.
She disclosed that Nigeria bears the highest global burden of the disease.
“Every year, 300,000 babies are born with SCD in Sub-Saharan Africa, and 150,000 of them are born in Nigeria alone,” she said.
Achebe outlined this as a major public health concern and warned that, with Nigeria’s high fertility rate, the number is expected to rise greatly by 2030.
She advocated for newborn screening to detect SCD before symptoms begin, noting that babies appear normal at birth but benefit greatly from early diagnosis and care.
“Without early identification and intervention, infants will continue to die of undiagnosed anaemia, pneumococcal sepsis, or severe malaria,” she said.
Achebe noted that the sickle cell trait historically evolved as a natural protection against malaria.
According to her, individuals who carry one sickle cell gene (AS genotype) are less likely to die from severe malaria compared to those without the gene (AA genotype).
“However, those with full-blown SCD suffer from chronic complications, reduced quality of life, poor educational and professional outcomes, and premature mortality,” she said.
Additionally, she emphasised the importance of preventive strategies, urging the use of vaccinations, daily folic acid supplements, and proactive infection control.
She also recommended hydroxyurea as a proven daily treatment that improves survival rates and reduces the severity of symptoms.
While she recognised the promise of gene therapy and bone marrow transplantation, she pointed out their high costs, limited accessibility, and the fact that children under 12 tend to respond better to these treatments.
Achebe clarified that while gene therapy treats the symptoms and effects of the disease, it does not eliminate the sickle cell gene from the patient’s reproductive cells, meaning affected individuals can still pass it to their children.
She warned that the total economic toll of SCD in Sub-Saharan Africa currently stands at over $9.1 billion annually, projected to rise to $10 billion by 2030.
“Tackling SCD requires strong financial and political will to scale up newborn screening and ensure nationwide access to care,” she said.
Achebe further stressed the need for public awareness, early diagnosis, and cultural education to dispel myths surrounding the disease.
“Sickle Cell Disease is a scientifically inherited condition, not caused by witchcraft,” she affirmed.
In the same vein, Prof. Obiageli Nnodu, Director of the Centre of Excellence for Sickle Cell Disease Research and Training (CESRTA), University of Abuja, highlighted the importance of continued research and capacity building.
She explained that CESRTA, established in 2015, has made major progress in clinical and translational research to bridge treatment gaps in Nigeria and beyond.
“Our centre provides platforms for skills development and engages in strategic collaborations with local and international institutions to improve care outcomes,” she said.
Following the 5th Global Congress on Sickle Cell Disease, the centre was upgraded to the National Centre of Excellence for SCD Research.
This is a major milestone in Nigeria’s efforts to combat the disease.
As the world marks World Sickle Cell Day on June 19, experts are calling for a renewed push toward genotype awareness, partner compatibility, and universal newborn screening as critical tools in the fight to eliminate SCD. (NANFeatures)
Health
Contraceptive Pills Can’t Cause Cervical Cancer – Expert

Mrs Roseline Akinlabi, Adolescent and Youth Sexual Reproductive Health Desk Officer, Osun Primary Healthcare Board, says contraceptive pills cannot cause cancer of the cervix in women.
Akinlabi, a certified family planning trainer, said this on Monday in Osogbo during a virtual engagement programme organised by the State Public Health media team in collaboration with a non-governmental organisation, The Challenge Initiative (TCI).
She spoke on “The impacts of Family Planning Myths And Misconceptions on Spacing, Unplanned Pregnancy and Unsafe Abortion”.
The expert, also a registered public health nurse, said that the popular belief that contraceptive pills could encourage infidelity and cause permanent infertility in women was inaccurate.
According to her, contraceptive pills cannot cause cancer of the ovary and the lining of the uterus in women, as being speculated.
“Myths and misconceptions are the major challenge to uptake of family planning in the state and the country at large.
“Various myths and misconceptions about family planning methods have led to high prevalence of teenage pregnancy, high maternal, mortality and morbidity rate, among others.
“These myths and misconceptions often surround family planning methods, creating confusion and hindering access to essential care.
“They negatively impact child spacing and abortion rates by preventing the use of contraceptives, leading to unwanted pregnancies, and subsequently, more abortions.
“These false beliefs create barriers to access and utilisation of family planning methods, increasing the risks of unwanted pregnancies and risky sexual behaviour.
“There is urgent need to dispel these myths and equip individuals with accurate facts to make informed decisions about their reproductive health”, she said.
Akinlabi called for collective responsibilities to dispel rumours about contraceptives, raise awareness about the benefits of family planning, and create safer space for girls and women in the society.
According to her, family planning empowers individuals to choose the number, spacing and timing of their children, leading to improved health outcomes for the mother and the child.(NAN)
Health
Teaching Hospital Performs 2nd Kidney Transplant in Maiduguri

The University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), has successfully performed its second living-donor kidney transplant, 15 years after its first living-donor kidney transplant
The Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the UMTH, Prof. Ahmed Ahidjo, made this known at a news conference on Wednesday in Maiduguri.
“This is not the first time UMTH is doing the transplant.
The first time UMTH conducted a kidney transplant was in August 2010 and now the hospital has come back with full force to resume the excercise,” he said.Ahidjo also announced that the already 20 patients were admitted awaiting surgery on the same kidney transplant.
He appealed to donors to contribute funds to support the have not patients who needed the surgery so dearly.
The CMD said that though, the hospital provided free services being a federal government facility, adding that the patient’s dialysis had been subsidised by the government by reducing everything to N12,000 which was less than eight dollars compared with 1,000 dollars charged for same dialysis elsewhere.
Ahidjo said that the target was to make transplant one of the cheapest in West Africa, saying their facility was largest in the country with a capacity to accommodate up to 85 patients at once.
“UMTH has four fully equipped theatre rooms. All for kidney transplant which were fully equipped with modern equipment,” the CMD said.
He, however, commended TETFUND for its support to the hospital in terms of equipment and other infrastructure.
Ahidjo also commended Gov. Babagana Zulum of Borno for donating N50 million to the hospital to carry out research on causes of kidney related diseases in the North-east.
The CMD said that some of the research findings revealed that diabetics, hypertension and dehydration were linked with the kidney related diseases in the region.
“The causes of kidney issues for now are diabetics, highpertension and exact causes are not yet known but many samples were taken to laboratories and the result is awaited,” Ahidjo said. (NAN)