Health
IPOB to NAFDAC: Return seized goods from Onitsha drug market
The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has called on the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) to return goods seized from traders at Ogbo Ogwu Drug Market in Onitsha, Anambra State.
In a statement issued by IPOB’s Media and Publicity Secretary, Comrade Emma Powerful, the group alleged that NAFDAC officials conducted a midnight raid on the market, blocking CCTV cameras, breaking into shops, and confiscating goods under the claim of targeting fake drugs.
IPOB criticized the method of the operation, questioning the agency’s approach and transparency.
While IPOB reaffirmed its stance against the sale of counterfeit drugs, it raised concerns over the alleged seizure of traders’ goods in their absence, the blocking of surveillance cameras, and the lack of evidence proving that all confiscated products were counterfeit.
The group posed several questions to NAFDAC, including: Why was the operation conducted at midnight? Why were CCTV cameras blocked?
Where is the evidence that the confiscated drugs were fake? Why was the entire market sealed, affecting both innocent and guilty traders?
IPOB urged NAFDAC to adopt a more professional and transparent approach to combating fake drugs, suggesting that the agency establish permanent offices in drug markets to ensure proper regulation rather than conducting surprise raids.
The statement also called for collaboration between NAFDAC and the Anambra State Government to relocate the drug market to the new Oba Drug Market, ensuring that only licensed and certified dealers are allowed to operate.
Health
Euracare Hospital replies Chimamanda Adichie, Clarifying Nkanu’s Death
Chimamanda, the bereaved mother, had in a public statement, accused the hospital’s anesthesiologist to have neglected monitoring the sick child after he was given “too much propofol.”
The management of Lagos-based Euracare Multispecialist Hospital said on Saturday, ” We find it necessary, for the record, to clarify that some of the reports currently being circulated regarding the demise of Chimamanda Adichie ‘s son, contain inaccuracies.”
Chimamanda, the bereaved mother, had in a public statement, accused the hospital’s anesthesiologist to have neglected monitoring the sick child after he was given “too much propofol.”
Said Chimamanda: ” It turns out that Nkanu was NEVER monitored after being given too much propofol. The anesthesiologist had just casually carried Nkanu on his shoulder to the theater, so nobody knows when exactly Nkanu became unresponsive. How can you sedate a sick child and neglect to monitor him? Later, after the ‘central line’ procedure, the anesthesiologist casually switched off Nkanu’s oxygen and again decided to carry him on his shoulder to the ICU!The anesthesiologist was CRIMINALLY negligent. He was fatally casual and careless with the precious life of a child. No proper protocol was followed.
“The Hospital’s management, while expressing their deepest sympathies to Chimamanda and family for the loss, acknowledge that the loss of a child is beyond words, adding , ” we offer our most heartfelt condolences to his parents and the entire family.”
In the statement, the management, stated that they have commenced a detailed investigation “consistent with our clinical governance standards and best practices.”
The statement reads: ” Our facility is a reputable centre for complex medical care, led by an internationally trained and experienced clinical team.
The patient, who was critically ill, was referred to our facility for specific diagnostic procedures after receiving treatment for a period of time at two paediatric centres.
Upon arrival, our medical team immediately provided care in line with established clinical protocols and internationally accepted medical standards, including the administration of sedation where clinically indicated.In the course of his care, we worked collaboratively with external medical teams as recommended by his family and ensured that all necessary clinical support was provided.
Despite these concerted efforts, the patient sadly passed away less than 24 hours after presenting at our facility.
We remain committed to engaging transparently and responsibly with all clinical and regulatory processes.
We recognise that the family is grieving an irreplaceable loss and we shall continue to support them in any way that may bring comfort during this devastating period.As medical professionals, we carry the weight of this loss deeply.
Our priority remains compassion, patient safety, and the responsible handling of this matter, while respecting the family’s privacy and allowing due process to take its course. We continue to hold the family in our thoughts and prayers.”
Health
WHO Names Nigeria’s Professor Martins Emeje Co-Chair of Traditional Medicine Advisory Group
The appointment of Professor Emeje reflects the WHO’s commitment to inclusive, balanced, and scientifically rigorous leadership in advancing traditional, complementary, and integrative medicine worldwide.
As the Director-General of NNMDA, Professor Emeje has played a pivotal role in promoting research, development, regulation, and commercialization of natural medicines in Nigeria.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has named Professor Martins Emeje, Director-General of the Nigeria Natural Medicine Development Agency (NNMDA, as Co-Chair of its newly established Strategic and Technical Advisory Group on Traditional, Complementary and Integrative Medicine (STAG-TM).
Professor Emeje was appointed alongside Dr Susan Wieland, Director at Cochrane Complementary Medicine, following the formal unveiling of the Strategic and Technical Advisory Group.
The establishment of STAG-TM marks a significant milestone in the implementation of the WHO Traditional Medicine Strategy, aimed at strengthening global health systems through evidence-based traditional and integrative medicine.
The appointment of Professor Emeje reflects the WHO’s commitment to inclusive, balanced, and scientifically rigorous leadership in advancing traditional, complementary, and integrative medicine worldwide.
Both Co-Chairs bring extensive expertise in research, innovation, and policy development, particularly in natural products and evidence-based medicine.
As the Director-General of NNMDA, Professor Emeje has played a pivotal role in promoting research, development, regulation, and commercialization of natural medicines in Nigeria.
His selection highlights Nigeria’s growing contribution to global health governance and innovation in traditional medicine.
The Strategic and Technical Advisory Group on Traditional, Complementary and Integrative Medicine will provide expert guidance to the WHO on policy frameworks, research priorities, and best practices to ensure the safe, effective, and quality integration of traditional medicine into national healthcare systems.
The W.H.O while announcing the creation of the 19 member Group emphasized that the move is part of its global Traditional Medicine Strategy 2025 describing it as a decisive step in applying a scientific response to traditional medicine.
At the inaugural meeting of the Group, held alongside the second W. H.O Global Traditional Medicine Summit held in New Delhi, India, the W.H.O’s Assistant Director General for Health System,Access and Data, Dr Yukiko Nakatani says it is a pivotal moment for Traditional Medicine as it embodies cultural heritage, national health identities and a vital component of policy healthcare strategies.
The situation whereby the rapid growth of traditional medicine has not been matched by strong evidence, standards, regulatory frameworks or sustainable governance, W.H.O’s Chief Scientist , Dr Sylvie Briand emphasized, underscores the urgency of the initiative.
Health
Music eases surgery and speeds recovery, Indian study finds
To understand why the researchers turned to music, it helps to decode the modern practice of anaesthesia.
• A patient with headphones playing music during surgery in a hospital in Delhi.
Under the harsh lights of an operating theatre in the Indian capital, Delhi, a woman lies motionless as surgeons prepare to remove her gallbladder.
She is under general anaesthesia: unconscious, insensate and rendered completely still by a blend of drugs that induce deep sleep, block memory, blunt pain and temporarily paralyse her muscles.
Yet, amid the hum of monitors and the steady rhythm of the surgical team, a gentle stream of flute music plays through the headphones placed over her ears.
Even as the drugs silence much of her brain, its auditory pathway remains partly active.
When she wakes up, she will regain consciousness more quickly and clearly because she required lower doses of anaesthetic drugs such as propofol and opioid painkillers than patients who heard no music.
That, at least, is what a new peer-reviewed study from Delhi’s Maulana Azad Medical College and Lok Nayak Hospital suggests.
The research, published in the journal Music and Medicine, offers some of the strongest evidence yet that music played during general anaesthesia can modestly but meaningfully reduce drug requirements and improve recovery.
The study focuses on patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy, the standard keyhole operation to remove the gallbladder.
The procedure is short – usually under an hour – and demands a particularly swift, “clear-headed” recovery.
To understand why the researchers turned to music, it helps to decode the modern practice of anaesthesia.
“Our aim is early discharge after surgery,” says Dr Farah Husain, senior specialist in anaesthesia and certified music therapist for the study.
“Patients need to wake up clear-headed, alert and oriented, and ideally pain-free. With better pain management, the stress response is curtailed.”
Achieving that requires a carefully balanced mix of five or six drugs that together keep the patient asleep, block pain, prevent memory of the surgery and relax the muscles…
(From BBC)
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