Monday, September 29, 2025 - The Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors has given the Federal Government a fresh 30-day ultimatum to address outstanding welfare and policy issues affecting its members, including unpaid salary arrears, promotion entitlements, and the reinstatement of sacked doctors.
The ultimatum was contained in a communiqué signed on Sunday
by NARD President, Dr Mohammad Suleiman; Secretary-General, Dr Shuaibu Ibrahim;
and Publicity and Social Secretary, Dr Abdulmajid Ibrahim, at the close of the
association’s 45th Annual General Meeting and Scientific Conference, held in
Katsina State between September 21 and 26.
The meeting, themed “Mitigating Health Worker Migration
through Extra-Remuneration Incentives: A Strategy for Sustainable Development”,
also marked a leadership transition, with Dr Suleiman elected as president to
succeed Dr Tope Osundara.
Earlier this month, NARD embarked on a five-day warning
strike, which it suspended after two days following the release of funds for
the Medical Residency Training Fund and to allow the government two weeks to
address other demands.
At the AGM, members expressed concern over unresolved issues
undermining doctors’ welfare and the health system.
They cited excessive and unsafe call-duty hours, the stalled
review of the Consolidated Medical Salary Structure for more than 16 years,
persistent non-payment of corrected professional allowances, and months of
unpaid promotion arrears.
The association also condemned the casualisation of doctors,
the dismissal of five doctors at the Federal Teaching Hospital, Lokoja, and
repeated delays in implementing the Medical Residency Training Act.
NARD decried worsening brain drain, the exclusion of house
officers from the Civil Service Scheme, decaying hospital infrastructure, and
failure to implement agreed pension benefits. It also rejected the creation of
consultant cadres for non-medical doctors and the downgrading of postgraduate
membership recognition.
Effective October 1, 2025, NARD directed its members to stop
engaging in more than 24 consecutive hours of call duty, in line with
international best practices.
The communiqué stated, “The AGM calls on the Federal
Ministry of Health and Social Welfare to develop and implement clear, healthy
call-duty working hours for doctors. In the interim, members should desist from
engaging in more than 24 hours of continuous call duty.
“The AGM calls on the Federal Government to expedite action
on the Collective Bargaining Agreement and complete the long-overdue review of
CONMESS. The AGM demands the immediate release of corrected professional
allowance tables, payment of accumulated promotion arrears within 30 days, and
a one-for-one replacement policy to ease excessive workload.
“The AGM also gives the Federal Ministry of Health and the
management of FTH Lokoja 30 days to reinstate the five sacked doctors. The AGM
demands prompt settlement of arrears from the 25/35 per cent CONMESS review,
2024 accoutrement allowance, and other outstanding salary arrears within 30
days.”
It further urged the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria
to restore full recognition of West African postgraduate membership
certificates, and called on the National Postgraduate Medical College of
Nigeria to immediately issue membership certificates to eligible candidates.
The association demanded a decentralised process for
promotions and training, the immediate commencement of specialist allowance
payments, and inclusion of house officers in the Civil Service Scheme with
prompt salary payments and payslips.
It also urged Oyo State Governor, Seyi Makinde, to urgently
address the welfare of resident doctors at LAUTECH Teaching Hospital,
Ogbomosho.
NARD called for the full implementation of CONMESS circulars
across all federal, state, and private health institutions, including medical
schools and regulatory bodies.
On policy, the AGM resolved to intensify engagement with the
National Assembly to secure adequate healthcare funding in the 2026
Appropriation Act, while also demanding immediate implementation of agreed
special pension benefits for doctors.
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