Private Hospitals Bleed as Doctors Flee Nigeria
The Business NG
|The BusinessNG
In this compelling analysis, CLEMENT ASIMATA exposes how Nigeria's worsening brain drain is crippling private hospitals, once considered havens amid failing public healthcare. As top medical talent emigrates in droves, private clinics now grapple with severe staffing shortages, burnout, and declining service quality-leaving millions of Nigerians at risk. The story captures the full extent of the crisis, from overstretched doctors to silent operating theatres, and warns of a looming collapse unless urgent action is taken.
-
Nigeria's private hospitals, once considered bastions of medical excellence amid the decline of public healthcare, are now buckling under the weight of the country's accelerating medical brain drain.
For years, Nigerians turned to these private institutions in search of timely, effective treatment. Today, these same facilities are overwhelmed, chronically short-staffed, and increasingly unable to deliver the quality of care they once promised.
Across the country, patients now face prolonged waiting times and rescheduled appointments—not due to system glitches or temporary outages, but because the doctors are no longer there. In Lekki, Lagos, a man seeking cardiological evaluation was told to return in two weeks. The hospital had just one consultant left, now stretched across two branches. In Gbagada, a woman's nephew who required an emergency appendectomy was asked to wait 48 hours. The hospital's only available surgeon had just completed a 36-hour shift and was medically unfit to proceed.
What was once seen as a government sector problem has now spilled fully into the private domain.
Doctors are exiting the country at alarming rates, lured by better working conditions, more reliable infrastructure, and substantially higher pay abroad. In many private clinics across Lagos, Abuja, and Port Harcourt, medical directors struggle daily to cobble together skeletal staff just to keep operations going. Paediatricians, anaesthetists, cardiologists, and even general practitioners are disappearing from rosters, their names replaced by "vacant" in shift schedules.
Denne historien er fra The BusinessNG -utgaven av The Business NG.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Business NG
The Business NG
Foreign Investors Eye Undercapitalised Nigerian Banks Amid CBN Clampdown
Nigeria's banking sector is at the center of an intense recapitalisation drive as the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) tightens enforcement ahead of the March 31, 2026, compliance deadline.
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
Lawyers Invoke FOI Act to Demand Disclosure of FIRS-France Tax Agreement
A civil society organisation, Lawyers for Civil Liberties, has invoked the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act to request access to the mem-
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
Tinubu to Present N54 Trillion 2026 Budget to National Assembly Today
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu will on Friday (today) present the 54 trillion 2026 budget to a joint session of the National Assembly.
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
Reps Amend Electoral Act, Approve Mandatory Electronic Transmission of Election Results
The House of Representatives has approved a proposal mandating the real-time electronic transmission of election results, marking a significant step toward strengthening Nigeria's electoral process.
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
Abuja Blackout Deepens Security Fears as Residents Slam AEDC's Silence
Residents of several communities in Abuja have expressed growing frustration and fear after a prolonged power outage plunged parts of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) into darkness, worsening security concerns and disrupting livelihoods.
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
Telecom Failures Put Minister Bosun Tijani Under Public Scrutiny
Once celebrated as one of Nigeria's brightest tech minds, Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Bosun Tijani, is now facing mounting public criticism as Nigerians question the tangible impact of his tenure.
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
CBN Targets N825Bn in Final 2025 Bond and Treasury Bills
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has announced plans to raise a total of 825 billion from the domestic debt market in the final round of Federal Government securities issuance for 2025, underscoring the government's continued reliance on local borrowing amid elevated interest rates.
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
Tax Reform Countdown: SMEs Gain, High Earners Pay More
Nigeria is set to witness a historic transformation in its fiscal landscape as the Federal Government rolls out sweeping tax reforms designed to boost fairness, ease the burden on low-income earners, and stimulate business growth.
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
Naira Holds Firm as Nigeria's Forex Reserves hit $45.4Bn
The naira remained under pressure at the Nigerian foreign exchange market (NFEM), closing at 1,455 per US dollar on Wednesday, reflecting ongoing demand for dollars amid liquidity challenges.
1 min
BusinessNg
The Business NG
Three Months to Recapitalisation: Weaker Banks Explore Mergers as Investors Hesitate
With just three months remaining before the Central Bank of Nigeria's (CBN) recapitalisation deadline, several weaker banks in the country are reportedly considering mergers as a strategy to strengthen their financial position and remain compliant with regulatory requirements.
1 mins
BusinessNg
Listen
Translate
Change font size

