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COVID-19: Resident doctors yet to suspend strike in Bayelsa

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Resident doctors at the Bayelsa Government-owned Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital (NDUTH), Okolobiri, have yet to resume from the indefinite strike suspended on Sunday by their national body.

The leadership of the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) had on Sunday directed its members across the country to resume work as the Federal Government said it has cleared outstanding hazard allowances, among other demands.

The Newsmen reports that NDUTH hosts the 100-bed capacity COVID-19 isolation center located on the outskirts of Yenagoa, the state capital.

The rising spread of confirmed cases to 169 from 130 in Bayelsa with less than 200-bed isolation capacity has raised concerns of an impending crisis in the coming days.

Dr. Olu Inestol, the President of the NDUTH chapter of Association of Resident Doctors (ARD), told NAN on the telephone on Monday that members of the association were still on strike.

“We cannot resume work yet like our counterparts in Federal Government establishments who are being paid the promised hazard allowances, but the same cannot be said for us at the state level.

“As we speak, nothing has been done about our own at NDUTH and that is why we cannot return to work, the strike therefore continues,” Inestol said.

However, at the Federal Medical Centre, Yenagoa some resident doctors were seen at their duty posts attending to patients’ haven complied with the directive on the nationwide strike suspension.

Dr. Divine Irole, the President of ARD in the hospital, told Newsmen that the doctors have returned to work as directed.

She however said that her members were still to be paid the hazard allowances as announced and we’re still awaiting its implementation.

The hospital premises was scanty as few patients were seen around.

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