Reps Kills Bill Restricting Public Officials from Foreign Medical Trips
The House of
Representatives voted out a bill seeking to regulate medical trips being
embarked upon by public officials.
The proposed
law was killed at the third reading during the plenary on Tuesday.
The report
on the ‘Bill for an Act to Amend the National Health Act 2014 to Regulate
International Trips for Medical Treatment by Public Officers to Strengthen the
Health Institutions for Efficient Service Delivery’ was considered by the
Committee of the Whole.
While
debating the report, several lawmakers claimed that the legislation would
breach the right of public officials.
The bill
sought to amend Section 46 of the National Health Act thus: “(1) A public
officer of the Federal Government shall not embark on medical trip abroad
without approval; or be sponsored for medical check-up, investigation; or
treatment abroad at public expenses except in exceptional cases on the
recommendation and referral by the medical board and which recommendation or
referral shall be duly approved by the Minister or Commissioner as the case may
be; or embark on medical trip abroad unless he satisfactorily proves to the
office where the officer is working, that such ailment cannot be treated in
Nigeria.”
The Deputy
Speaker, Mr Lasun Yusuf, however, said the bill would discriminate against
elected officials.
“This bill
is against my fundamental human right. There are two fundamental wrongs in this
bill, it is against human right and it is discriminatory. Do not let us do a
debate on this bill,” he said.
Another
lawmaker, Mr Razak Atunwa, from Kwara State, alleged that the bill was targeted
at public officials over the mismanagement of the health care sector.
He said in
parts, “The fact that I am public servant does not mean I have given up my
right. If the government has failed in providing hospitals, we cannot punish
someone for it. The intention is right, but better funding for training of
doctors, better funding for hospitals is the right way to go.”
The Deputy
Majority Leader, Mr Mohammed Wase, from Plateau State, urged the House to
“throw away” the bill.
He said, “I
was in hospital in Nigeria for check-up and they said I was fine. Friends
encouraged me to travel for check-up and I did, only to discover that I was not
okay. I spent three months there. Now you are telling me to get approval.
Please, this bill should be thrown out. Instead of banning people from
travelling, we should create an enabling environment for people to invest in
the healthcare sector.”
The House
had similarly rejected a bill sponsored by Mr Sergius Ogun, seeking to regulate
sponsorship of children of public servants in foreign schools.
FROM punchng.com
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