Managers of the National Health Insurance Scheme have been called upon to enhance the participation of optometrists in the scheme in order to avail Nigerians of some vital eye care services that are unique to the optometric profession but are not currently covered by the scheme. This was contained in a goodwill message by the Nigerian Optometric Association (NOA) presented at the Health Care Providers Association of Nigeria (HCPAN) s 8th mid-year capacity building meeting held recently at NECA Hall, Alausa Ikeja, in Lagos.
Speaking at the event, the NOA national president, Dr Damian Echendu, while commending the NHIS for involving the ODORBN and the NOA during the formulation of the 2012 NHIS operational guidelines, and for incorporating Optometry in the scheme, called for further consultation with the Nigerian optometric community to enhance her participation in the scheme. He noted that certain eye care services, unique to optometrists and beneficial to Nigerians, were not currently provided for, promising to submit a memorandum to this effect ahead of a review of the NHIS operational guidelines.
Dr Echendu, who was represented at the event by the national publicity secretary, Dr Raymond Aguboshim, earlier thanked the HCPAN for providing such a veritable platform, noting that HCPAN has a strategic role in the future of efficient health care delivery in Nigeria.
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In attendance also was a high-powered representation from the Nigerian optometric community, with the NOA Lagos chapter Chair, Dr Ogechi Nwokedi, FNCO,Drs Raymond Aguboshim (NOA national publicity secretary), Adedayo Olympio (former NOA vice president, west), and Ngozi Akpokene, CEO, Flomat Eye Clinic among a fourteen (14) man delegation. An optometrist, Dr Priscilia Imade, national assistant secretary of HCPAN and a member of the organising committee, was also on hand to receive her professional colleagues.
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Chairman of the occasion, Olorugun (Dr) Isaac Akpoveta, commended HCPAN for the great work it has been doing since her rebirth in 2014, recalling (as a former president of the association)how the organization was formed in 2003 and held her first AGM in 2004 at the Airport Hotel, Ikeja. For governments current effort in the health system to be robust from its base to its pyramid, Olorugun Akpoveta charged the government to ensure that its planned public-private-partnership model is followed to the letter, urging that care should be taken to avoid the man-made pitfalls that hindered previous well-conceived programmes.
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NHIS general manager, ICT, Prince Nasiru Ikharo, who stood in for the NHIS executive secretary, presented a lecture on the conference theme, giving a historical and operational overview of the NHIS. Highlighting the key priniciples of the scheme as Social Inclusiveness, Equity, Efficiency, and Quality, Prince Nasiru also provided details on some of the pressing challenges being encountered in the scheme, and current efforts being employed to mitigate these. Making numerous references to the Delta state example, Prince Ikharo charged states to give the Informal Sector Health Insurance Scheme the needed impetus to succeed saying it hold a win-win potential for all stakeholders.
An interactive session availed attendees the opportunity of getting satisfactory answers to some of the questions directed at the NHIS.
Source: NOA Public Relations and Publicity Centre
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