Brain-drain: Save Nigeria from losing trained doctors, Osibogun tells FG – Newstrends
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Brain-drain: Save Nigeria from losing trained doctors, Osibogun tells FG

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– Says it cost N457.6m to train one doctor in the USA

– NPMCN, NMA call for holistic approach to reverse trend

The new President of  the   National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria, Professor Akinsanya Osibogun has expressed worry over increasing cases of doctors and other healthcare workers leaving the country for greener pasture.

Osibogun, a professor of public health urged government at all levels  to put in place a mechanism that will discourage manpower for healthcare delivery from going abroad.

Speaking during his investiture as the 22nd President of the College, Osibogun noted  that it cost roughly $1.1 million (N457,600,000) to train a doctor in the United States of America which gives a rough idea of what medical teachers in Nigeria are contributing by producing over 3,000 doctors annually in Nigeria.

“Unfortunately, about a third of these doctors is now emigrating annually due to push and pulls factors.”

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Those spraying perfume in armpit, private parts risk cancer – Shehu Sani

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Former Kaduna Central Senator, Shehu Sani

Those spraying perfume in armpit, private parts risk cancer – Shehu Sani

Former senator and human rights activist, Shehu Sani, has issued a cautionary note to the public against spraying perfume directly on sensitive areas of the body such as the armpits and private parts.

In a Facebook post on Sunday, the former lawmaker from Kaduna Central recounted the tragic story of a young man named Salisu, who reportedly developed cancer after regularly applying perfume to those areas.

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“Don’t spray perfume in your armpit or private parts. If you are in the habit of doing that, learn from this,” Sani wrote. “A young man called Salisu used to do so, and suddenly it triggered a strange form of cancer in those areas. The spots got rotten and his health deteriorated. He is now dead.”

While noting that he had no scientific explanation for the incident, Sani said he was simply sharing the story as a word of caution.
“Just a piece of advice,” he added.

 

Those spraying perfume in armpit, private parts risk cancer – Shehu Sani

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Nigeria confirms 660 lassa fever cases, 122 die

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Nigeria confirms 660 lassa fever cases, 122 die

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) has identified Ondo, Bauchi and Edo states as the epicentres of the Lassa fever outbreak in the country.

Director-General of the NCDC, Dr Jide Idris, during a media briefing, yesterday, in Abuja, said that those states accounted for over 70 per cent of confirmed lassa fever cases reported so far in 2025.

Idris said that the three states contributed 71 per cent of the 660 confirmed Lassa fever cases recorded between January and the end of March 2025, with Ondo accounting for 30 per cent, Bauchi, 25 per cent, and Edo, 16 per cent.

The director general said that the NCDC had intensified a nationwide multi-sectoral response through its activated incident management system at the national level to coordinate the public health emergency across affected states.

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He said, “As the cases surge in these epicentre states, our response is focused on early detection, case management, risk communication, and community engagement. The transmission remains active in multiple local councils, with 28 states and 125 councils affected this year.”

Idris also said that 122 deaths had so far been recorded, resulting in a case fatality rate of 18.5 per cent—higher than the 17.5 per cent recorded during the same period in 2024.

He said that to combat the spread, the NCDC had deployed national rapid response teams to hotspot areas, trained healthcare workers on infection prevention and control, and scaled up community sensitisation.

The DG, therefore, stressed the importance of early presentation to health facilities to reduce fatalities.

Idris, who disclosed ongoing collaborations with key partners, including the World Health Organisation (WHO), Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), and the African Field Epidemiology Network (AFENET), to support surveillance, clinical care, and public awareness, said that the agency was also supporting research efforts to improve outbreak preparedness and response.

Nigeria confirms 660 lassa fever cases, 122 die

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Poisonous fluorides in toothpaste: Pharmacists counter televangelist’s claims

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Poisonous fluorides in toothpaste: Pharmacists counter televangelist’s claims

Pharmacists have refuted recent claims made by a popular pastor that fluorides in food, toothpaste, and pharmaceutical products are poisonous and carcinogenic.

While acknowledging the pastor’s spiritual influence, the pharmacists provided crucial scientific clarity, asserting that fluoride, when used in approved quantities by regulatory bodies, is safe and beneficial for public health.

The pharmacists, on the platform of the Association of Community Pharmacists of Nigeria, ACPN, made the clarifications, weekend.

Their intervention comes in response to trending videos where the religious leader vehemently condemned the pharmaceutical industry over the inclusion of fluorides in various consumer products.

Scientific facts

In a statement by the National Chairman, Ambrose Ezeh, and Secretary, Omokhafe Ashore, the pharmacists said: “We at ACPN will not attempt to tackle the pastor’s anointing in God’s word.

“But (we) will clarify with some scientific insight and background that the pastor’s exposition on fluorides was not totally in alignment with scientific facts.

“The ‘Use of Fluorides in Pharmaceutical Preparations and Foods’ declared: ‘Fluorides used in approved quantities by the relevant and appropriate food and drug regulatory agencies are safe’.

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“In strictly public health interest, the ACPN wishes to posit as follows: Fluoride used in approved quantities by the relevant and appropriate Food and Drug regulatory agencies are safe.

“While some researchers have indeed linked Fluoride with some cancers, oftentimes such incidences have been proven to be in instances where excessive amounts beyond the approved limits were used.”

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