The Prague Post - In mega-city Lagos, 20 million count on just 100 ambulances

EUR -
AED 4.327184
AFN 81.300312
ALL 97.089294
AMD 451.417189
ANG 2.10957
AOA 1080.469334
ARS 1727.359565
AUD 1.766968
AWG 2.120878
AZN 2.010404
BAM 1.960076
BBD 2.372276
BDT 143.371588
BGN 1.956969
BHD 0.444261
BIF 3469.992518
BMD 1.178266
BND 1.509493
BOB 8.156796
BRL 6.265426
BSD 1.17787
BTN 103.808487
BWP 16.639303
BYN 3.988302
BYR 23094.00793
BZD 2.368868
CAD 1.622177
CDF 3367.483704
CHF 0.934602
CLF 0.02858
CLP 1121.202271
CNY 8.388065
CNH 8.380645
COP 4604.744876
CRC 593.294435
CUC 1.178266
CUP 31.224041
CVE 111.022116
CZK 24.311184
DJF 209.401389
DKK 7.463919
DOP 74.171603
DZD 152.744834
EGP 56.779687
ERN 17.673986
ETB 169.552081
FJD 2.633654
FKP 0.865987
GBP 0.86477
GEL 3.198059
GGP 0.865987
GHS 14.410455
GIP 0.865987
GMD 83.069646
GNF 10203.781375
GTQ 9.028699
GYD 246.42765
HKD 9.16537
HNL 30.823701
HRK 7.536071
HTG 154.126269
HUF 389.518119
IDR 19310.891299
ILS 3.946778
IMP 0.865987
INR 103.742584
IQD 1543.528081
IRR 49546.072864
ISK 143.206235
JEP 0.865987
JMD 189.172732
JOD 0.835402
JPY 173.160291
KES 152.234425
KGS 103.039288
KHR 4721.311295
KMF 493.097663
KPW 1060.447831
KRW 1625.240588
KWD 0.35956
KYD 0.981542
KZT 636.558828
LAK 25533.01778
LBP 105513.694083
LKR 355.776224
LRD 209.937477
LSL 20.443006
LTL 3.479113
LVL 0.712721
LYD 6.356688
MAD 10.579354
MDL 19.593749
MGA 5272.739296
MKD 61.623162
MMK 2473.278308
MNT 4238.365816
MOP 9.43749
MRU 47.042254
MUR 53.4347
MVR 18.022151
MWK 2046.647649
MXN 21.621388
MYR 4.956376
MZN 75.288332
NAD 20.454896
NGN 1767.433574
NIO 43.254019
NOK 11.567229
NPR 166.093378
NZD 1.9731
OMR 0.45305
PAB 1.17787
PEN 4.115093
PGK 4.921031
PHP 67.096336
PKR 331.622997
PLN 4.249523
PYG 8409.347304
QAR 4.289771
RON 5.062533
RSD 117.19062
RUB 97.793179
RWF 1703.772218
SAR 4.419634
SBD 9.681828
SCR 17.473741
SDG 708.725815
SEK 10.918376
SGD 1.507084
SHP 0.925932
SLE 27.483048
SLL 24707.647138
SOS 673.378455
SRD 46.117912
STD 24387.721302
STN 24.979233
SVC 10.306399
SYP 15319.64444
SZL 20.442813
THB 37.381069
TJS 11.136598
TMT 4.12393
TND 3.413446
TOP 2.759611
TRY 48.678983
TTD 7.994442
TWD 35.43104
TZS 2899.36082
UAH 48.530471
UGX 4128.006381
USD 1.178266
UYU 47.272737
UZS 14586.929273
VES 188.813987
VND 31082.649448
VUV 140.429528
WST 3.253077
XAF 657.39128
XAG 0.027583
XAU 0.00032
XCD 3.184322
XCG 2.122832
XDR 0.819242
XOF 656.891903
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.308319
ZAR 20.432217
ZMK 10605.80429
ZMW 27.826712
ZWL 379.401078
  • RBGPF

    -1.2700

    76

    -1.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.32

    -0.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.45

    +0.2%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    15.64

    +1.41%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    71.62

    +0.03%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    11.81

    -0.34%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    16.87

    +0.36%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    46.86

    +0.77%

  • RIO

    1.2800

    63.72

    +2.01%

  • BCC

    -0.5600

    85.12

    -0.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0365

    14.06

    -0.26%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    40.3

    -1.32%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    23.69

    -1.98%

  • BTI

    -0.5600

    56.03

    -1%

  • AZN

    -1.5100

    78.05

    -1.93%

  • BP

    0.3200

    34.21

    +0.94%

In mega-city Lagos, 20 million count on just 100 ambulances
In mega-city Lagos, 20 million count on just 100 ambulances / Photo: OLYMPIA DE MAISMONT - AFP

In mega-city Lagos, 20 million count on just 100 ambulances

Standing outside a public hospital in Lagos, Nigeria's biggest city, Michelin Hunsa is still "traumatised" from the two-hour wait it took to get an ambulance for her mother, found unconscious by her neighbours.

Text size:

Such waits can be deadly and are not unusual in the mega-city, where notorious traffic jams snarl commutes and only about 100 ambulances serve a population of more than 20 million.

"It's a serious problem, we waited far too long," Hunsa, 25, told AFP. Her mother, suffering a cerebral haemorrhage, ultimately survived the ordeal.

Political and business big-wigs regularly bust through traffic in the largest city in west Africa with armed convoys and flashing lights -- despite not being in any actual emergency.

Ambulances blast sirens, take shortcuts and speed as fast as they can -- but sometimes to no avail.

Part of the problem stems from mistrust among other drivers, who are used to a state of quasi-war on the roads from frustrated commuters trying to get ahead.

"I'm sure most of the time they don't transport real emergency cases, that's why I don't move," said Anthony Folayinka, a 38-year-old ride share driver.

Queen Soetan, a 33-year-old ambulance driver, told AFP such sentiments were common.

"Most people will not just want to leave the road, so it does affect our intervention time," she said.

The government currently provides 35 ambulances, Olusegun Ogboye, permanent secretary to the Lagos state ministry of health, told AFP.

That number pads the 80 to 90 operated by companies but still leaves the city with a ratio of roughly one ambulance per 200,000 people -- far below recommended medical guidelines.

- Private companies, floating clinics -

Since its founding in 2021, Eight Medical has run 34 ambulances, day and night.

The name comes from medical experts' recommended response time for ambulances of eight minutes or less.

"In Lagos, we are still far from it, but that's the goal I want to reach with my team," said business founder Ibukun Tunde-Oni, a 36-year-old doctor.

He was motivated to start the service after the deaths of two uncles -- one of whom died from a heart attack and the other who died in an ambulance while having an asthma attack.

Tunde-Oni has had his own lacklustre experiences with ambulances as well, once having to wait for three hours to receive care after breaking his arm in a road accident.

No data is available on how many people have died waiting for an ambulance, or while ensnared in one of the city's infamous "go slows", as traffic jams are known.

But "100 ambulances for Lagos is not enough", Tunde-Oni told AFP.

And the city is only growing.

According to the University of Toronto's Global Cities Institute, Lagos is on track to become the most populated city in the world by 2100, with 88 million residents.

But public services have not kept up with the breakneck growth in Nigeria, already Africa's most populous country with more than 220 million people.

Successive governments have been accused of squandering the nation's vast oil wealth: even if there were more ambulances, they'd still have to contend with Lagos's many pockmarked and unpaved roads.

Those who make it to the hospital are treated in poor conditions and by underpaid staff.

Lack of coordination with hospitals means that ambulances don't always know which locations have open beds, Tunde-Oni added.

Authorities have also tried to get creative: with the city sitting on a massive lagoon, in 2022 they put in place a floating clinic and boat ambulance to serve the 15 to 20 communities on the water's edge, said Ibrahim Famuyiwa, a waterways official.

But lacking funds to expand the initiative, the priority remains increasing Lagos's traditional ambulances, mostly through public-private partnerships.

C.Zeman--TPP