Aso Rock Clinic Gulps N9.17bn In 4 Years
Despite top Presidency officials routinely flying out of the country
The
The State House Medical Centre is a facility that provides healthcare for President Muhammadu Buhari, the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, their families and other employees of the Presidency.
New Telegraph’s analysis
Further analysis of the details of the proposed spending on the facility for this year, which were obtained from the 2019 Appropriation Bill submitted to the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari last month, indicate that the proposed expenditure of N823.44 million for the Clinic is made up of N331.73 million total recurrent and N491.71 million total capital expenditure.
A breakdown of the figures also shows that the government is proposing to spend N208.35 million on the purchase of drugs and medical supplies for the facility while N14.26 million will be spent to buy uniforms and other clothing.
Similarly, the data shows that the maintenance of
IT/office equipment for the medical centre will gulp N91.19 million
while local training for personnel will cost the government N6.43
million this year.
In addition, the government is planning to spend N11.52 million on local travel and transport expenses for staff of the centre.
Interestingly,
apart from the budgetary allocation for the Aso Rock Clinic, the
Federal Government’s 2019 budget proposal also has N51.82 million as
“medical expenses.”
Although the Aso Rock Clinic was established to provide health care for only the President, the Vice President, their families and other employees of the Presidency, analysts point out that what the facility receives in terms of budgetary allocations annually is a lot more than what is allocated to each of the 16 major teaching hospitals across the country which take care of heath needs of millions of Nigerians, train medical doctors and other health professionals for the nation.
Indeed, findings show that in 2016, the Federal Government spent more on capital projects at the State House Medical Centre than it did in the 16 teaching hospitals. Specifically, in that year, Aso Rock Clinic’s budgetary allocation of N3.87 billion was N500 million higher than the N3.33 billion appropriated for all the teaching hospitals.
Despite the huge allocations it receives, the Clinic has come under strong criticism in recent years from Nigerians including the First Lady, Mrs. Aisha Buhari, for its poor services, with the President’s wife blaming inadequate facilities at the facility for her husband’s frequent medical trips to the United Kingdom.
For instance, at the opening of a stakeholders’ meeting on Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, Child, Adolescent Health and Nutrition (RMNCAH+N) organised by her pet project, Future Assured, in October 2017, the First Lady slammed the management of the Aso Rock Clinic over its alleged poor services, asking the authorities to give account of the huge budgetary allocation to the hospital.
“If the budget is N100 million, we need to know how the budget is spent,” she said.
In
the wake of the criticisms, the Permanent Secretary, State House, Mr.
Jalal Arabi, had said at the time that there were plans to commercialise
the State House Medical Centre to boost its revenue and ensure better
health delivery system.
According to him, the commercialization of the clinic will enable it to offer better services to Nigerians.
He
said at the time, the Aso Rock clinic was “The only health centre in
Abuja where patients are not required to pay any dime before
consultation. In other government hospitals in Abuja, patients are
required to pay for consultation, treatment, laboratory tests and
others, but that has not been the case with the State House Medical
Centre.
“The centre offers free services, nobody pays a kobo for hospital card, consultations or prescriptions and this has taken a toll on the subvention the centre receives from the government.”
Continuing, he said: “We have some of the best equipment in the country. For instance, to maintain the MRI and other scan machines, we spend close to N2 million monthly. Yet we do not charge a dime for those who require MRI scans in the clinic.”