Abuja: The Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare states that strengthening access to oxygen at the Primary Healthcare (PHC) level is crucial to achieving Universal Health Coverage (UHC), particularly in ensuring health security in Nigeria.
Dr Jimoh Salaudeen, Director of Hospital Services, and Dr Shetak Gilbert, Head of Patient Safety and Oxygen, both from the Federal Ministry of Health, made this statement at the Africa Primary Health Care Forum (APHCF) session on Tuesday in Abuja.
The theme of the forum was: “Reimagining Primary Health Care for Universal Health Coverage and Health Security in Africa.”
Salaudeen stressed that despite the heavy investment in oxygen infrastructure across Nigeria, many hospitals still lacked functional oxygen delivery at the bedside, leaving critically ill patients without life-saving therapy.
“We have seen facilities with oxygen plants and tanks, but no oxygen at the point of care due to failed logistics systems.
“It is the most frustrating thing to witness. Oxygen is available but inaccessible, and people die as a result,” he said.
Salaudeen described this disconnect as a significant failure of the health system and called for systemic reforms.
The Director of Hospital Services recommended the inclusion of oxygen therapy under the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) to improve affordability.
Salaudeen also called for the standardisation of hospital architectural design to mandate piped oxygen supply in all new PHC and tertiary facilities, as well as periodic assessment of oxygen quality at the facility level, mainly where concentrators or cylinders were used.
He commended Anambra State’s policy banning the purchase of oxygen from unregulated roadside vendors, stating that the government would look into adopting a national policy that mandates sourcing oxygen only from certified and traceable suppliers.
In his intervention, Gilbert reinforced the urgent need to institutionalise oxygen access at the PHC level, particularly in rural and hard-to-reach areas.
“Oxygen therapy, supported by pulse oximetry, is not a luxury. It is the foundation of emergency and critical care.
“Primary healthcare centres are the first point of contact. If we fail to equip them with oxygen systems, we fail at saving lives,” he said.
Gilbert also called for a national mapping of biomedical engineering capacity to ensure the sustainable maintenance of oxygen infrastructure.
In addition, he advocated for making a piped oxygen supply a policy requirement for all hospital construction and rehabilitation projects.
He reiterated the need for budgetary provision in the 2026 federal budget to ensure that every tertiary hospital was equipped with both an oxygen plant and a backup liquid oxygen source.
Meanwhile, stakeholders at the forum warned that Nigeria currently relies on a single supplier of liquid oxygen, putting the entire country at risk should that supplier halt operations.
They also decried the 45 per cent import duty on oxygen cylinders, which remained classified as cooking gas cylinders by the Nigeria Customs Service, despite it being a life-saving medical equipment not manufactured locally.
They also stated that it was a serious barrier and required urgent exemption for medical-grade oxygen cylinders from import duties.
The forum ended with a unified commitment from the ministry and stakeholders to optimise oxygen investments, ensure they reach frontline health workers, and guarantee that no patient suffers hypoxemia due to poor logistics or policy failures.