Abstract

The right to health care under article 12 of ICESCR is an instrumental right because it bears vital linkages to the realisation of other rights. For the many Nigerians living in poverty, their health may be the only asset on which they can rely for the exercise of other rights, such as the right to work or the right to adequate housing. Conversely, ill-health can be a liability to the many people living in poverty in Nigeria, even more so in the absence of equal access to affordable and essential healthcare services. This article aims to review the implication of article 12 of ICESCR on some of the existing initiatives for achieving the right to health care in Nigeria, especially in respect of human rights law and policy. The article argues that for Nigeria to meet its international obligations under the right to health care, it must commit to adequate funding of healthcare services and engage with regional and international partners to ensure compliance with article 12 of ICESCR. Given that the right to health care presently is not justiciable in Nigeria because of the ouster clause contained in section 6(6)(c) of the Nigerian Constitution, the article calls for an attitudinal change in the judicial perception of economic and social rights that come before the courts. It urges Nigerian courts to adopt the principle of the interdependency and indivisibility of rights, whereby judicial measures to enforce the right are given effect through the formally-enforceable civil and political rights contained in chapter four of the Nigerian Constitution. The Indian Supreme Court is reputable for taking this approach to the interpretation and enforcement of economic and social rights because the enjoyment of civil and political rights is linked to the satisfaction of economic and social rights, such as the right to health care. Finally, because of the importance of health care to a life of dignity, the article calls for Nigerian courts to adopt a progressive and broader approach when dealing with economic and social rights because of the evident connection between, for example, the right to health care and the right to life.

Highlights

  • Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa[1] and is reliant on oil exports as the mainstay of its economy

  • The article argues that for Nigeria to meet its international obligations under the right to health care, it must commit to adequate funding of healthcare services and engage with regional and international partners to ensure compliance with article 12 of ICESCR

  • Given that the right to health care presently is not justiciable in Nigeria because of the ouster clause contained in section 6(6)(c) of the Nigerian Constitution, the article calls for an attitudinal change in the judicial perception of economic and social rights that come before the courts

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Summary

Introduction

Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa[1] and is reliant on oil exports as the mainstay of its economy. The healthcare infrastructure is in a state of decay which has affected the quality of healthcare services in the country This has led to the country having one of the highest out-of-pocket expenditures on health care for citizens as households currently cover the cost of 75,5 per cent of the country’s total healthcare spending.[2]. Several initiatives, both domestic and international, have been put in place to achieve the right to health care in Nigeria. Most of these have ended up as mere exercises in target setting[3] without the desired impact on the ground, mainly because of the inability of the government to pursue a coherent health strategy and to create the necessary atmosphere for these healthcare initiatives to flourish

O Enabulele ‘Achieving universal health coverage in Nigeria
WHO ‘World health statistics 2018
Judicial measures and the right to health care in Nigeria
55 C Odinkalu ‘The impact of economic and social rights in Nigeria
Budgetary measures
79 R Uprimny et al ‘Bridging the gap
Findings
Conclusion
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