Healthcare services have collapsed in Borno state as doctors, nurses
and pharmacists flee for their lives from brutal violence unleashed by
Boko Haram militants.
Medical professionals say health services in
the region have largely shut down, with mortality rates and vaccination
programmes severely hit and pressure heaped on the skeleton staff that
remain.
"The whole healthcare system in northern Borno has
collapsed and healthcare delivery is nil," said Musa Babakura, a surgeon
at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH).
Babakura
said the situation was a "growing health crisis", with the sick forced
to trek vasts distances to receive medical attention and vaccination
programmes for children compromised.
Violence by Boko Haram
militants has raged since 2009, but has been particularly ferocious in
recent weeks, with some 500 people killed in suspected Islamist attacks
since the start of the year.
Worst hit by militant attacks are
villages in remote, rural areas near Borno's border with Cameroon,
despite an increased military presence in the state.
Hospitals and
clinics have not escaped raids, even after Nigeria's government imposed
emergency rule on Borno and two other northeastern states in May last
year.
Medical personnel have been kidnapped, either for ransom or
to treat wounded fighters in Boko Haram's ranks, while pharmacies --
mostly run by Christians -- have faced armed robberies and looting.
Vaccination programmes attacked
The
insecurity has forced local people to cross into neighbouring Cameroon
in search of treatment, with pregnant women and the infirm using donkeys
and auto-rickshaws to negotiate the difficult terrain.
The gruelling trek takes its toll, said Modu Faltaye, a local chief in Wulgo, on the shores of Lake Chad.
"By
the time the sick reach the hospital (in Cameroon), they are in a worse
state, which is why we lose a lot of our sick," he said.
"Naturally,
the rate of maternal and infant mortality is bound to rise in the area
as a result of complications arising from poor transportation facilities
to hospital," added Babakura.
Nigeria is one of only three
countries in the world -- along with Afghanistan and Pakistan -- where
polio is endemic but violence against immunisation workers have affected
programmes.
At least nine people were killed in February last
year, when gunmen stormed two vaccination clinics in the northern city
of Kano, hampering efforts to inoculate children against the virus.
In 2013, there were 53 recorded cases of polio in Nigeria, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative said.
Just over half were in Borno and neighbouring Yobe, which is also under emergency rule and suffering from Boko Haram attacks.
One
Borno immunisation official said childhood jabs were now only given in
the state capital, Maiduguri, because vaccinators were afraid to travel
to many parts of the state.
In Baga, a fishing village near Lake
Chad, a suspected cerebral fever has killed scores of people since
December last year but residents have been unable to seek treatment.
"People are dying like fowls," said local man Husseini Goni.
Pressure on staff
Difficulties
in delivering drugs to violence-affected areas and the closure of
pharmacies have increased costs of medication by as much as 35 percent,
local people say.
Hospital treatment in Cameroon is also more expensive than in Nigeria, according to doctors and nurses.
But
the closure of healthcare facilities in rural areas has added pressure
on those who remain, with hospitals in Maiduguri having to take the
strain, despite staff shortages.
Two of the hospital's three orthopaedic surgeons have quit, said doctor Kabiru Ibrahim.
A number of senior specialists are either on leave of absence or sabbatical pending an end to the violence, he added.
"Patients
with special ailments like HIV, diabetic and hypertensive patients need
to access drugs at regular intervals and those drugs can only be found
in Maiduguri," said Ibrahim.
"But these types of patients are
sometimes denied the chance to come and take their drugs due to Boko
Haram carrying out highway attacks."
Babakura said hospitals such
as the UMTH were now forced to provide treatment that would ordinarily
be given at primary care level.
"(Closures have) substantially
increased the patient burden on us, which makes us work longer hours
that could compromise efficiency," he added.
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