Concerned health practitioners committed to improving health outcomes beyond the clinical area for patients, have urged medical practitioners to diversify into other areas of interest that could ultimately promote public health.
 
The practitioners who met during the 2018 Nigeria Global Health Trials Conference which took place in in Lagos recently, discussed the conduct of health research and health practice in Nigeria with a view to improving health outcomes for patients generally.
 
The conference was tagged, “Collaborations, Networks and Partnership for Conduct of Health Research in Nigeria.”
 
Speaking on the Implications of Global Health and Health Practice in Nigeria, the Chief Pathologist and and Associate Professor at the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Stellenbosch, Cape Town, South Africa, Akin Abayomi specifically emphasised the place of policy making on environmental health.
 
He declared that there were many loopholes in certain environmental policies that do not support good health in the country and therefore called on the government to review such policies. Citing some examples, Abayomi noted that the existing traffic laws in the country do not prohibit smoking vehicles from plying the roads; this, in turn, would be inhaled by pedestrians and other motorists, which would pose a threat to their well-being.
 
“In Britain, if you light a fire on the  street, fire brigade would come and somebody would be arrested, but in Nigeria, you would not see such things. “Here in Nigeria, there is fire everywhere. The environmental laws in Nigeria do not condemn some things.”
 
He, however directed his colleagues in the medical profession to look beyond their duty posts- clinics and wards, to outside constituencies, which allow for broader option for influencing policies that border on health challenges in the country.
 
Abayomi, believes that diversification of interest by practitioners would make their impact felt in the society at large as this would enable them to be part of policy makers on issues bordering on health. He identified research areas, which would help health practitioners to  re-direct their focus on issues that are of local and global significance.
 
These include the psychology of leadership, environment, advocacy, policy, globalisation, social science and anthropology.
 The associate professor further pointed out five biological catastrophes, which should be a source of concern to practitioners among which are deforestation, disruption of ecosystem balance, increased human encroachment, and power shortage.
 
These, according to him have devastating implications, a typical one being the current era of zoonotic infections such as Ebola, Lassa fever, Monkeypox, among others. “These diseases came from improper maintenance of the ecosystem. We need to rise up and do something to save our ecosystem,” he said.