1. Home
  2. News & stories
  3. Nigeria: How nursing care is saving mothers' lives

Nigeria: How nursing care is saving mothers' lives

11 May 23
This article is more than one year old

Nigeria: How nursing care is saving mothers' lives

Critical care nurse Theophilus Tyonongu Caption
Critical care nurse Theophilus Tyonongu

In Jahun, northern Nigeria, women and girls are admitted daily to the Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) maternity department intensive care unit with life-threatening complications in pregnancy or childbirth.

Registered critical care nurse, Theophilus Tyonongu, has followed in his parents’ footsteps to bring his skills and compassion to the unit’s lifesaving work.  


Nigeria is estimated to account for more than one in four of all maternal deaths worldwide. Globally, the top five causes of maternal deaths are considered mostly preventable.

These include preeclampsia and eclampsia, a form of high blood pressure in pregnancy; postpartum haemorrhage; and severe infection, all seen in MSF’s ICU in Jahun.

Yet they are only preventable if they are detected early and people can access skilled care without delay.

For women seeking healthcare in Jahun there are multiple obstacles that affect individuals’ and families’ choices and cause risky delays, according to Theophilus.

“People require admission into ICU because they usually come to the hospital late and when things have already gone very bad. For some the villages are very far, so they can't really come to our centre any time.

“If somebody has been in labour since Monday [their family] might […] keep them till Friday, which is market day. They will put the patient into the vehicle that is going to the market, and [only] then be able to bring the patient to the hospital, in a very critical state.”

A TB patient is being consulted by the doctors. Patients and doctors are both required to wear mask within the building.

Our work saves lives

Thirteen percent of women giving birth in the maternity department in 2022 were under 18 years of age. Although these teen mothers are often married, decision-making is a challenge for most married women in the culturally conservative communities of northern Nigeria, and especially so for young wives.

“The grandmothers or the mothers have to make decisions for them, or the husband”, say Theophilus. “But we do the best we can and recommend the best that is possible for them.”

Hearts that stop

Severe heart problems are not unusual among the women in intensive care.

“We manage a lot of pulmonary oedema [excess fluid in the lungs], which is mostly cardiogenic, so either from heart failure or from post-partum cardiomyopathy [difficulty pumping blood] and other heart-related issues,” says Theophilus.

“One of the patients we had, she came from a referral facility, which is also a general hospital. It was a transition [change of shift] period and I came earlier than I was supposed to, so I started taking over some basic things, and I took over from the person that brought her in. Unfortunately, she arrested just a moment after she was admitted into the ICU.

“The patients we have here sometimes are more critical than those that are being managed in our referral centres”

Theophilus Tyonongu
|
MSF nurse

“We were able to resuscitate her, and then we managed her from that time until we actually discharged her. So it was a scene of joy, seeing how much it did to her, and the impact that was able to create for her.

“The best thing about being a nurse is actually seeing the impacts of your care in the life of the patient. So you're able to see that the care you are giving to the patient, you see the patient practically improving and getting well from what you are doing.

“I’ve been with MSF for roughly two years, and I’ve been working in ICU for up to 11 months now,” says Theophilus. “Usually we have three nurses in ICU. Around Fridays and Saturdays and Sundays, we usually have a lot of very severe cases to manage.”

Theophilus Tyonongu, left, and his colleague Cecilia Ugochi Anaejionu, also a nurse, are part of the multi-disciplinary team treating women with pregnancy and childbirth complications in Jahun, Nigeria. Caption
Theophilus Tyonongu, left, and his colleague Cecilia Ugochi Anaejionu, also a nurse, are part of the multi-disciplinary team treating women with pregnancy and childbirth complications in Jahun, Nigeria.
MSF runs the maternity and neonatal departments of Jahun General Hospital in Jigawa state, Nigeria, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health. Caption
MSF runs the maternity and neonatal departments of Jahun General Hospital in Jigawa state, Nigeria, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health.

Being equipped to meet the high workload has sometimes been a frustration for Theophilus and his colleagues.

“The patients we have here sometimes are more critical than those that are being managed in our referral centres.”

Improving nursing care, generation by generation

Theophilus grew up steeped in healthcare, with his two parents working in hospitals and forming close bonds with their patients. “I saw how they assisted people, how they helped people. Some of them even became family friends from there.

“So I saw the impact they made in people's lives and I actually chose to follow this and be able to do more from where they stopped,” he says.

His background and training also make him a keen observer of the successes and challenges of nursing in Nigeria today.

“Nursing in Nigeria is actually developing very fast. There are a lot of improvements, there are a lot of innovations and creativity that is coming from the part of the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria.

“But I can see there's a high rate of under-employment, though there’s still a shortage of nurses in the country. Some nurses' own goals are not met as some may desire. So there's a high rate of emigration, to [places] where they feel they might have a better experience and be able to meet their personal goals better.”

Theophilus’ ambitions burn strong nonetheless, invested in the next generation. “What I would like to see in my country is a generation of nurses that are more committed to their work: passionate, and more scientific.

“So I would love them to put more energy than this generation again. I [also want to see] more specialties in nursing, more nurse academics in the population, to be more outstanding. And bring us in Nigeria to a point where we can be at shoulders with every other country.”

MSF and nursing

Working with MSF as a nurse is demanding and rewarding. From basic healthcare to helping set up health posts, nurses are vital to our work. In many situations, nurses are the backbone of our medical operations. Find out more about working with MSF as a nurse.