ABUJA- MOVES by the Senate to nip in the bud
increasing cases of Sickle Cell disease in the country, Tuesday got a boost as
a Bill for an Act to provide for
Compulsory Haemoglobin-Genotye Testing and for
other connected matters scaled second reading.
The bill which is sponsored by Senator Ahmed
Ogembe, PDP, Kogi Central and Co- Sponsored by Senator Ovie Omo- Agege, APC,
Delta Central, was first read on March 28, 2017. The bill seeks to provide for
compulsory haemoglobin-Genotype screening before a marriage is conducted under
the Marriage Act and before registration of new births under the Birth, Death
etc Compulsory Registration Act.
Leading debate on the bill, Ogembe who noted
that the objective of the bill was to establish a clear legislative framework
for effective management of Sickle Cell disease, which results from mismatch of
couples’ genotype, said that the bill has become necessary following the untold
pains suffered by people living with Sickle Cell disease. He said: “We simply
want to avoid human anxiety, pains and death as related to Sickle Cell disease.
We want to improve the lives of often forgotten citizens who live with it.
Unknown to many, it is one of the biggest public health problems in Nigeria.
Nigeria from reports, is known to have the greatest number of sickle cell
disease in the world.
“The picture is brought into sharper focus when we
consider the finding by the American Centre for Disease Control and Prevention that
slightly above 300,000 babies globally are born with sever sickle cell
diseases.
Vanguard reported that 225,000 are born in Sub-Sahara Africa, representing 75 per cent of
the global figure. “This bill when passed will reduce the incidence of the
disease to the barest minimum in our nation and allow families to live in joy.
Research has shown that only five per cent of children born with sickle cell
disease live past the age of 10 years in Nigeria,” he said. Senator Ogembe who
decried that while the life expectancy of persons living with sickle cell
disease in advanced countries is between 40 and 60 years, the case is not the
same with Nigeria, said that there was an urgent need for a solution to the
problem, adding that, “a situation where, in every two babies born in the world
with sickle cell, one is a Nigerian is not encouraging.”
According to him,
there was a need for compulsory testing and increased awareness to reduce the
menace of the disease in the country, adding, “This disease causes serious
pains that interfere with many aspects of the patients’ lives including
education, employment and psychological development. “It is a lifelong ailment.
A person suffering it will likely live with the complication and recurrent pain
for life. This effect is more manifest and severe when proper care is not
given.” He said that the disease could be avoided with proper awareness,
stressing that it would be unfair to bring children into the world to live in
unbearable pain all their lives. On whether or not the bill contradicted the provisions
of the Constitution, the lawmaker said it was founded on strong constitutional
basis, adding,” With regard to the legal basis, a few may think that this bill
may breach the right to private and family life as enshrined in Section 37 of
the 1999 Constitution. This is not correct. “Section 45(1) of the Constitution
states that nothing in Section 37 shall invalidate any law that is reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society in the interest of defence, public safety,
public order, public morality or public health. Contributing, lawmakers lauded
the bill, saying it would help to protect unborn children from the excruciating
pains associated with the disease, just as they described the disease as an
unnecessary, as it could be avoided with proper awareness on the need for
intending couples to undergo test. According them, while the prevalence of the
disease is on the decrease in other countries, same is not to be said of
Nigeria, which according to records has the highest number of people living
with the disease. In his remarks, Senate President Bukola Saraki who referred
the bill to the Committee on Health to be returned to Senate in four weeks,
urged the committee to merge the bill with one currently before it to come up
with a single bill that would address the problem.
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