Business

NSIA collaborates stakeholders to improve oncology outcomes in Nigeria

The Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) convened critical oncology stakeholders and strategic partners at the maiden edition of the NSIA Oncology Summit in Lagos to drive collaborations amongst partners and improve overall patient outcomes in cancer care.

 

Participants at the Summit included over 200 medical professionals in oncology, over 11 Nigerian tertiary hospitals, as well as over ten external collaborators, including from the University of Chicago, American Oncology Institute India; American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO); Bio Ventures for Global Health (BVGH); Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre; American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Centre (UPMC).

 

At the Summit, medical professionals split into focus groups across various specialty areas to discuss barriers to oncology care in Nigeria, possible solutions to address the same, and retention plans for homegrown talent.

 

Healthcare, being an investment sector of focus for the Authority, the NSIA set up the NSIA Healthcare Development Investment Company (NHDIC) to address medical infrastructure gaps, develop strategic collaborations to improve patient care, and enhance the talent pool of medical professionals.

 

In 2019, NSIA established the NSIA – LUTH Cancer Centre (‘NLCC’), a world-class out-patient oncology centre that has since attended to over 10,000 unique cancer patients. The Authority also invested in two diagnostic projects co-located within the Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital and Federal Medical Centre, Umuahia.

 

NSIA is now in the process of scaling these interventions, with 3 additional Oncology centres, 23 additional diagnostic centres, and seven catheterization laboratories across the six geopolitical zones of Nigeria in the works.

 

NSIA’s wholly-owned medical services portfolio company, Medserve, has been set up to implement these projects.

 

Furthermore, given the prevalence of dated medical equipment, poor operation and maintenance of same, the NSIA has set up another wholly-owned subsidiary called Equilease Systems Limited to offer alternative financial solutions to care providers to ease the burden of high acquisition and maintenance costs of modern medical equipment through strategic partnerships with Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs).

 

Medserve and Equilease will jointly allow the NSIA to be Nigeria’s largest medical infrastructure provider.

 

 

READ ALSO FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE 

 

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