Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, Director-General, National Agency for Food, Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC)
Nigeria's
National Agency for Food, Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has
appreciated Madagascar over its COVID-19 efforts.
Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, Director-General, National Agency for Food,
Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC), has commended Madagascar’s
initiative that ensured its herbal remedy for the Coronavirus pandemic.
“We are proud of them (Madagascar). They appreciate what they have. We do not.
“All the herbs they have and are using, we have them. But we do not use them the way they are doing.
“They appreciate their brains and use them. We must do same here if we want to develop as a nation,” she told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), on Thursday in Abuja.
She regretted that Nigeria had consistently depended on what others
were bringing to it, and emphasised the need to look inward for
solutions to our concerns.
Adeyeye said that the novel Coronavirus had jolted the country, and
challenged those in authority to make the health sector a major
priority.
“COVID-19 has slapped us in the face. It has kicked us back and front. We are now facing the stark realities of being insecure.
“There is drug insecurity, medical devices insecurity, test
kits insecurity; we have always depended on other nations for
everything.
“India, for instance, is not supplying medicals to us again because they are thinking about their own people.
“We have been using Dogonyaro (Neem tree) for ages. Some other African countries have developed their herbal remedies.
“Which one can we claim to have developed in Nigeria? What we are looking for in Madagascar, we may have it in our backyard,’’ the director general said.
Adeyeye said that Nigeria had been a slave to China and India in
terms of drug reliance, adding that the challenge posed by the pandemic
would make the country to look inward.
According to her, it is time for Nigerians to make use of their talents by looking inward and coming up with something.
She said that the coronavirus pandemic had created opportunity for
Nigerians to start making good use of their talent and attempt to create
something on their own.
Adeyeye, however, called for a policy that would ban importation of
drugs and compel Nigerians to look inward and start the development of
home made drugs.
“Madagascar has done it. They have looked inward and came up with herbs; Nigeria has over relied on the white for everything,
“Some of us claim to love this country, but we do not. We have
good weather, good environment, natural resources, but we are not making
good use of them,” she said.
“We must take the health sector serious by showing all sense of responsibility and we must work to stop importation of drugs,’’ the director general said.
The director general also called for investment in research, adding
that without it, Nigeria would not move forward in the quest to develop
herbal medicine.
“Research is an important ingredient that can create confidentiality agreement between herbal practitioners and NAFDAC.
“Research is important to help us know the content of the herbal mixture we even need to take
“Before COVID-19, we had inaugurated Nigerian Herbal Medicine
Product Committee, precisely in March 2019. We have wasted a lot of
money and opportunity to develop our herbal medicine and cannot continue
that way,” she said.
The director general also called for mutual trust among the herbal practitioners to facilitate inventions in the medical sector.
-NAN
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