Meet Christopher Onuoha, 28 years old Chairman/Managing Director of GS Medics Limited with head office at Ejigbo, Lagos State. In this interview with SUCCESS DAMIAN, he talks about reason he went into Medicare after studying Political Science, state of healthcare in Nigeria, reason doctors are fleeing the country, among other critical issues.
Can we meet you?
My name is Christopher
Onuoha, MD, GS Medics Limited, we are into sales of medical equipment; we are
also a Biomedical Engineering Company that also deals on maintenance,
repairs and sales of medical equipment. We offer support to hospitals; that is
what we do at GS Medics Limited.
Your academic backgrounds
I graduated
from Madonna University, from the Department of Political Science, it is
unbelievable; someone who studied Political Science, what is he doing in the
health sector? My academic background does not really have anything to do with
my profession, but this is my passion, my calling, it is my love. It has even
made me to further my career in Biomedical Engineering, I am pursuing it as
postgraduate studies. I am thinking of different certifications, you
understand, because I feel this is my calling. This is what I want to be, this
is what I love doing, it involves health, it involves life.
Looking at
the healthcare system in Nigeria, like I always say, in fact we need evolution,
we need to work on it, because we don’t want a situation where people are dying
or people are travelling out from the country to go and get better healthcare
service, when we know that we can also provide such services here in Nigeria.
You are young and doing great things,
that means there is hope for Nigeria. How old is your company?
July this
year will make it three years.
What made you to go into the medical
line?
A lot of
factors necessitated my going into Medicare industry. Looking at the healthcare
system in the country, it is deteriorating, a lot of people go outside the
country for medical attention, because they feel that the country’s healthcare
system is not good enough to save life when it is needed. You are aware of the
recent case of former Big Brother Housemate, Rico Swavey who died last year.
One of the reasons he died, I feel, most hospitals lack Automated External
Dissimulator (AED). Most of the hospitals in Nigeria lack this medical
equipment, because this equipment, for example, if someone has an accident, you
can actually use that machine to resuscitate back with the shock wave from the
machine, so that machine alone saves life. If all the hospitals in Nigeria can
have this machine, operational, I think, most people that are brought in from
emergency cases will end up surviving.
A lot of
factors, I would say made me to venture into the healthcare; we are not in for
the profit alone, but we are looking at how we can be a great actor in the
healthcare industry. We are looking at how we can aid this healthcare
profession to do their best and achieve their best in the sector by providing
the best and quality, affordable medical equipment to them.
How do you get your equipment?
We partner
with top medical brands all over the world. One of the brands is MedEvolution,
it is a US based company. They manufacture most of these equipment we deal on. We
believe in quality, because everything about Medicare involves life, so we
don’t believe in selling or distributing inferior medical items. I am sorry to
say this, most equipment in the market, they deal on inferior equipment,
especially equipment used for animals; they sell these to hospitals because
they are affordable. But we at GS Medics, we don’t only deal on quality medical
equipment but we also make sure that our prices are affordable. We have supplied
many hospitals in Lagos, they can testified to this.
Are you partnering with government in
order to make sure this quality equipment get to Government hospitals also?
Yes, but mostly
we deal with private hospitals here in Lagos and other states. We have equipped
hospitals in Abuja, Port-Harcourt, and other places, in fact we are not just
Lagos centred; we are everywhere. One other reason I would say made us
successful in this business is the hospitals know that we deal with quality. So
that is what has sustained us to this stage we are.
Most of the time people that suffer
health issues, not that others don’t suffer health issues, but the grassroots
are mostly hit, how grassroots-oriented is your company, are you just dealing
with the elites?
No, we at GS
Medics, we take everybody along, Every big hospital in Nigeria started from the
scratch, okay let’s take Reddington Multi Specialist Hospital Lagos for
example, people say they started from Ikeja, some say from Oshodi in a very
small room, I think one room apartment, but now Reddington is everywhere in
Lagos. They have in Victoria Island, they have in Lekki, Ikeja, and now they
are the one that pioneered Duchess Specialist International Hospital, the one
at Ikeja. So we don’t neglect any hospital, regardless of the size of the
hospital, we believe that growth is constant.
Your company is basically import
based, so how do you battle with issue of FOREX?
It is really
challenging, when it comes to importation. We buy from the black market and
sometimes we buy from banks.
So what are the challenges?
It affects
us, last week when we confirmed the rate of dollars, it was N770 in the black
market; that is naira to dollar. It affects daily price. If you get it at N740
and we sell at that N740, next time you want to buy and it is N770, it becomes
difficult, that is the effect of this kind of exchange rate, it affects a lot.
We are looking at having a better government in this coming election, we pray
let the best candidate win; that candidate will turn the country to a better
one.
You are a young CEO, and an employer
of Labour, how many people are under your employ?
Well, looking
at our other branches, one outside Lagos, two in Lagos, we have 15 people
working in GS Medics Limited.
In the next five years, where do you
want to see your company?
In the next
five years, we are not just thinking about Nigeria alone, we are looking at other
countries, so we want to be one of the major actors in Africa and Europe.
Let’s be particular now, you deal on
medical equipment, what particular products do you bring in?
We deal on theatre
equipment, radiology equipment, when you talk about radiology we talk about CT Scan, MRI and others, there are a lot more. Then when you talk about
theatre, we look at the theatre light, different types of theatre lights,
halogen bulbs, operating table, two cram bed, one cram bed. We still deal on
laboratory and diagnosis equipment. We have a large range of products. Our
selling point, people know us, is quality like I said. We partner with top medical brands all over
the world, Hamilton Medical, MedEvolution, and a lot more.
What is that, that bothers you a lot
which you would like the government to tackle in health sector in Nigeria?
I feel
government is really neglecting that aspect. But there was something government
did last year that really took to my interest, most of the military hospitals
were equipped with medical equipment, this my company was also involved in the
distribution of those equipment; we went to different states, government tried
in that aspect last year. We delivered medical equipment in almost 20 states of
the federation, Abuja, Kaduna, Delta, Rivers, Ondo, name it, military base and
navy base.
I also plead
that government should not neglect other hospitals. There are a lot of
hospitals that need restructuring, government can improve on that too. If
Government can also assist the private hospitals, good.
Looking at the welfare of the
doctors, many are kidnapped, some are not paid, and those being paid are not
paid enough, leading to mass exodus of doctors, your view.
To me that
is one of the problems we are having in this country. I have a doctor friend
that left last year, not to talk about the nurses, biomedical engineers, these
are those involved in the healthcare sector in the country, but they are
leaving the country, why? Because most of them are under-paid. Believe it or
not, I pay more than what government is paying to some of these healthcare
workers, so it doesn’t make sense to me. Most of them receive peanuts as
salary. Majority of my friends are doctors, I chat with them; how many of them
have even asked me for money because they cannot take care of their families? I
have them, both those that work in private and public hospitals, it is one of
the challenges, this one travels, he prepares ground for another one, and they
are leaving, I have gynecology friend, one of the few and best in the country,
now he is planning to relocate to UK this year. Now when he leaves what happens
to the healthcare, leaving the work to all these inexperience medical doctors.
So I feel government should work on that aspect because it is essential. Again,
you see when you are distributing medical equipment and you don’t have people
to manage them, it is counterproductive.
What is your advice to Nigerian
doctors?
I believe in
change, change is something that is constant. Doctors should be patient in as
much as we are about to change the government, let’s see what the new
government will bring on board, they should not forget the mother land. They
might travel out and it might be one of their family members that would need quality
medical service and there would be nobody to intervene in such cases. So my own
advice is that they should be patient.
No comments:
Post a Comment