UNICEF, United Nations Children’s Fund Canada
The Canadian government is providing the Bauchi State Government with a $3 million assistance to improve women's engagement in the healthcare sector.

UNICEF Partners IHS Nigeria to Support Pneumonia Treatment, Others in 8 States

The United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), in partnership with IHS Nigeria, is to strengthen oxygen supply in hospitals for the treatment of pneumonia, COVID-19 and hypoxemia disorders in newborn babies and pregnant women.

The benefitting states are Ogun, Dyo, Kano, Bauchi, Kaduna, Ebony, Cross Rivers, and Rivers.

The partnership, which is for 18 months, is to be executed by IHS Nigeria, a sub- sidiary of IHS Towers. This is a company specialising in Nigeria. building and operating tele- communication infrastructure throughout emerging markets

A statement by the Communications Officer of UNICEF Nigeria, Blessing Ejiofor said the partnership aims to further support the Federal Ministry of Health in meeting demands for effective oxygen therapy in Nigeria.

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According to her, IHS Nigeria has been a UNICEF partner since 2019, adding that under the new collaboration, oxygen plants will be installed in health facilities and incorporated into specific oxygen resilience plans, including training healthcare workers on the safe administration of oxygen

“In Nigeria, over 120,000 children die each year due to hypoxemia. With limited access to supplemental oxygen, the line between life and death is blurred for critically ill patients with pneumonia and severe COVID-19 symptoms.

The UNICEF representative in Nigeria, Peter Hawkins said the organization values its strong partnership with IHS. It is only through joint efforts and the support of trusted partners like IHS Nigeria that we can deliver robust healthcare and advance other sustainable development goals to all Nigerians, he stated.

The Chief Executive Officer of IHS Nigeria, Mohamad Darwish declared: “When we read about the number of deaths in Nigeria that could be avoided by making oxygen available, such projects become a must-do rather than an option.”