HomeNewsProtest as Patients Suffer 17-Day Power Calamity in UCH, Ibadan

Protest as Patients Suffer 17-Day Power Calamity in UCH, Ibadan

Published on


KEY POINTS


  • UCH patients protest over 17- day power cut disrupts health delivery especially critical patient care.
  • Blackout will prevent operations, diagnostic imaging and treatments to patients.
  • This is because, facing the organization with a new difficult challenge of having to spend N80 million monthly on electricity bill.

The patients through their relatives demanded that immediate attention should be given to restore electricity and water supply at the University College Hospital (UCH) in Ibadan, Oyo State after power was out for 17 days.

Because of the blackout precipitated by unpaid bills, key operations in health facilities such as surgery and diagnosis have been impossible, prompting anger from patients and their kin.

Services affecting important health changes

With some patients clinical requirements ranging from oxygen support, renal replacement, mechanical ventilation and other life sustaining interventions, power cut by the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company has adversely affected the ability of UCH to respond.

The protesters have filmed different incident and uploaded them on social media while chanting to the management of the hospital to address the issue and supply power.

Hospital’s financial responsibility and action

According to the UCH management, the hospital operates under the “Band A” electricity tariff that costs the management N80 million per month.

This financial pressure has been instrumental in the delay and has made patients as well as healthcare providers put up in very helpless conditions.

The experience of UCH draws attention to problems that affect most public hospitals in Nigeria struggling to deliver important services while grappling with escalating costs.

This is specifically because protesters are asking for a quick outcome so that patients can get the care they deserve.

Latest articles

Nigeria DisCos Collected N210 Billion in October, NERC Says

Nigeria’s DisCos collected N210 billion in October 2025, according to NERC, as billing gaps and subsidies continued to weigh on electricity sector finances.

Tambuwal Says Nigeria Elections Often Distorted at Collation

Aminu Tambuwal says Nigeria’s elections are often distorted during collation, arguing that systemic flaws weaken voter influence and calling for electoral reforms.

Community Pharmacists Say Pharmacies Are Health Facilities

Community pharmacists say Nigerian law recognises pharmacies as health facilities, defending regulated point-of-care testing and urging collaboration across healthcare professions.

Nigeria Says Third Mainland Bridge Rehab Cost N43 Billion

Nigeria says the Third Mainland Bridge rehabilitation cost N43 billion, while the CCTV control centre cost about N2.5 billion, rejecting reports of inflated surveillance spending.

More like this

Nigeria DisCos Collected N210 Billion in October, NERC Says

Nigeria’s DisCos collected N210 billion in October 2025, according to NERC, as billing gaps and subsidies continued to weigh on electricity sector finances.

Tambuwal Says Nigeria Elections Often Distorted at Collation

Aminu Tambuwal says Nigeria’s elections are often distorted during collation, arguing that systemic flaws weaken voter influence and calling for electoral reforms.

Community Pharmacists Say Pharmacies Are Health Facilities

Community pharmacists say Nigerian law recognises pharmacies as health facilities, defending regulated point-of-care testing and urging collaboration across healthcare professions.