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Vital Signs Podcast

Podcast by Vital Signs Podcast

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Welcome to the Vital Signs Podcast - your go-to audio guide for public health, wellness, and the pulse of healthcare systems around the world. Hosted by healthcare professionals passionate about making health information accessible, we dive deep into the signs that matter most — from the latest medical research and real-life patient stories to mental health, preventative care, and the social issues shaping our wellbeing. Whether you're a curious listener, a health worker, or someone navigating their own care journey, this podcast is here to inform, empower, and spark meaningful conversations.

Kaikki jaksot

24 jaksot

jakson Two Nigerias: Who Gets To Live? kansikuva

Two Nigerias: Who Gets To Live?

There are two Nigerias when it comes to healthcare. One waits in long queues, on broken benches, hoping their turn comes. The other walks past private security guards into air-conditioned wings — and pays for everything in cash. In this episode of Vital Signs Unfiltered, we investigate the parallel healthcare system that determines whether you survive in Nigeria. Public hospitals serve the majority. Private hospitals serve those who can afford to escape them. The gap is not new — but it is widening. And in many cases, the same doctors who run public hospitals during the day are working private shifts at night. The National Bureau of Statistics estimates that more than 60% of Nigerians live below the poverty line. For most of them, private healthcare is simply not an option — a single specialist consultation in a private Lagos hospital can cost more than the monthly minimum wage, and a surgical procedure sometimes ten times that. Meanwhile, public facilities built to serve the majority are stretched beyond capacity. In rural areas, primary healthcare centres are often understaffed, under-equipped, or closed altogether. This creates a brutal sorting system: if you have money, you survive; if you don't, you wait. And waiting in Nigerian healthcare is often fatal. The wealthy have found a third option entirely — they fly out. Medical tourism to India, the UK, and Dubai costs the Nigerian economy billions of dollars every year. The country's elite have voted with their boarding passes. And the rest are left with what's behind. Because in Nigeria, healthcare is not just unequal. It is a class barrier — and that barrier decides who lives, and who simply doesn't make it. 🎙️ Follow Vital Signs Podcast on Spotify for the rest of the Unfiltered series. ⭐ If this episode moved you, please rate the show — it helps more Nigerians find it. Sources: National Bureau of Statistics, World Health Organization, Federal Ministry of Health Nigeria.

15. kesä 2026 - 2 min
jakson Missing Billions: Where Does Nigeria's Health Money Actually Go? kansikuva

Missing Billions: Where Does Nigeria's Health Money Actually Go?

Every year, Nigeria's government allocates billions of naira to public health. Every year, hospitals run out of gloves. Pregnant women buy their own gauze. Patients die from conditions that cost almost nothing to treat. In this episode of Vital Signs Unfiltered, we follow the money — through Nigeria's broken Abuja Declaration commitment, the gaps where billions disappear, and the families who pay the price. In 2001, Nigeria signed the Abuja Declaration, pledging at least 15% of every national budget to healthcare. More than two decades later, the country has rarely come close — most years sitting between 4 and 6%. The Nigerian government spends less than $15 USD per person on health per year. South Africa spends over $250. The United Kingdom spends thousands. Even Nigeria's neighbours Ghana and Senegal spend two to three times more. And of the limited funds that are released, much never reaches the front line. Audit reports from Nigeria's Office of the Auditor-General have repeatedly flagged unaccounted health expenditure running into billions — what economists call "leakage." Money allocated. Money disbursed. And money that simply vanishes between the federal government and the patient's bedside. The result is that ordinary Nigerians fund their own care. Studies show more than 70% of healthcare spending in Nigeria comes out-of-pocket. Out-of-pocket payments are the leading cause of medical poverty in Nigeria — families sell land, borrow from neighbours, crowdfund online. A single hospital admission can erase decades of savings. 🎙️ Follow Vital Signs Podcast on Spotify for the rest of the Unfiltered series. ⭐ If this episode moved you, please rate the show — it helps more Nigerians find it. Sources: World Health Organization Health Expenditure Database, Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation, Abuja Declaration 2001 Archive, Federal Ministry of Health Nigeria, National Health Accounts data.

8. kesä 2026 - 2 min
jakson Japa: Why Nigerian Doctors Keep Boarding Planes kansikuva

Japa: Why Nigerian Doctors Keep Boarding Planes

Nigeria has fewer than 25,000 practising doctors. For a population of over 200 million people. The World Health Organization recommends one doctor for every 600 people. Nigeria's ratio is closer to one doctor for every 9,000 - a gap of more than 15x. This is Japa. In this episode of Vital Signs Unfiltered, we investigate the silent emptying of Nigeria's hospitals - the mass migration of doctors, nurses, and pharmacists for the UK, Canada, the US, and the Gulf. We unpack why they're leaving, what it costs the patients left behind, and the painful irony that Nigeria pays to train these professionals only to lose them to richer countries within months of qualifying. Drawing on data from the Nigerian Medical Association, the UK Nursing and Midwifery Council, and the World Health Organization, this episode asks the question Nigerian healthcare can no longer avoid: when a country trains its best minds and watches them leave, what future is it actually building? 🎙️ Follow Vital Signs Podcast on Spotify for the rest of the Unfiltered series. ⭐ If this episode moved you, please rate the show — it helps more Nigerians find it. Sources: Nigerian Medical Association, UK Nursing and Midwifery Council, WHO Health Workforce Data, Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria.

29. touko 2026 - 2 min
jakson The Illusion of Care: Why Quack Nurses Are Killing Nigerians kansikuva

The Illusion of Care: Why Quack Nurses Are Killing Nigerians

In Nigeria today, when you walk into a clinic, you may have no idea whether the person treating you is qualified. Over 1 million women and children, including 241,000 newborn babies, die annually in Nigeria from preventable causes — and unqualified healthcare workers are part of the reason. In this episode of Vital Signs Unfiltered, nurses Taiwo and Oyinda investigate the proliferation of quack nurses across Nigeria people who wear the uniform, run the clinics, and even open maternity homes without formal training, licenses, or registration from the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria. We unpack the system failures that allow this to happen: the shortage of qualified healthcare workers, weak enforcement of medical licensing laws, and the public's trust in uniforms over credentials. We discuss the Nigerian Medical Association's "Show Your Valid License and Certificate" campaign, and what every Nigerian needs to ask before accepting care. Sources: Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria, Nigerian Medical Association, Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, WHO data on preventable deaths. 🎙️ Follow Vital Signs Podcast on Spotify for more episodes of the Unfiltered series. ⭐ Rate the show if this episode moved you — it helps more Nigerians find it.

23. touko 2026 - 2 min
jakson The Maternal Mortality Crisis: Why Nigerian Mothers Die kansikuva

The Maternal Mortality Crisis: Why Nigerian Mothers Die

Nigeria accounts for nearly 29% of the world's maternal deaths. A Nigerian woman dies every 7 minutes giving life. A child dies every minute before turning five.Most of these deaths are preventable.In this episode of Vital Signs Unfiltered, nurses Taiwo and Oyinda investigate why Nigeria's maternal and child mortality rates remain among the highest in the world — and what's hidden behind those numbers.We unpack the medical causes: postpartum haemorrhage, infection, hypertension, birth asphyxia. And we go deeper into the systemic ones: the lack of antenatal care in rural areas, the absence of skilled birth attendants, the long distances to hospitals, and the under-funded primary care that fails women before they ever reach a delivery room.Drawing on data from the WHO, UNICEF, and the Nigerian Medical Association, this episode asks the question that should be on every Nigerian's mind: why are preventable deaths still happening?If you care about Nigerian healthcare, women's rights, or public health policy in Africa — this is the conversation you've been waiting for.🎙️ Follow Vital Signs Podcast on Spotify to get every new episode of the Unfiltered series.⭐ If this episode moved you, please rate the show — it helps more Nigerians find it.Sources: WHO Maternal Mortality Report, UNICEF Nigeria Country Profile, Nigerian Medical Association data, NDHS 2018.

11. touko 2026 - 2 min
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