As Winston Churchill famously observed, “Healthy citizens are the greatest asset any country can have.” Nigeria’s current shortage of medical doctors therefore represents not only a health challenge but also a significant threat to national development.
While public attention is often focused on economic hardship, insecurity, and infrastructure deficits, a less visible yet equally dangerous crisis continues to threaten the wellbeing of millions of Nigerians due to the shrinking of healthcare workforce.
According to recent data released by the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), although the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) has registered over 130,000 doctors since its inception, only about 55,000 are currently practising within the country. With Nigeria’s population estimated at over 220 million, this translates to approximately one doctor serving between 3,600 and 4,000 people. This is a disturbing reality that should concern every Nigerian.
This ratio falls far below the World Health Organization’s recommended standard and places much pressure on the nation’s healthcare system.
The shortage is not merely a health sector concern; it is a development challenge with direct implications for productivity, education, poverty reduction, and social wellbeing.
For communities such as Oja’ba, Idi Arere, Foko, Popoyemoja, Isale Osi, and many other grassroots communities especially in Ibadan Southwest Constituency I, where I hail from, the impact is particularly severe. In many underserved communities, access to qualified medical personnel remains a major challenge.
Residents often travel long distances to access healthcare services, while many primary healthcare facilities struggle with inadequate staffing.
Consequently, illnesses that could have been prevented or treated early become life-threatening conditions.
The consequences are evident in maternal and child health outcomes, the management of infectious diseases, emergency response, and the growing burden of non-communicable diseases. When healthcare workers are overstretched, the quality of care suffers, waiting times increase, and patient outcomes worsen.
One of the major drivers of this crisis is the continued migration of healthcare professionals to countries offering better remuneration, improved working conditions, and greater career opportunities.
According to reports by the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), nearly 19,000 Nigerian doctors have left the country over the last two decades, with thousands departing in recent years alone.
This popularly “Japa,” trend continues to deplete the nation’s healthcare workforce.
Ironically, Nigeria continues to produce thousands of medical graduates annually.
However, systemic challenges limit the country’s ability to absorb and retain these young professionals. The Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria recently disclosed that approximately 6,000 doctors graduate from Nigerian medical schools each year, but the centralized housemanship system can only accommodate about 4,000, leaving roughly 2,000 young doctors facing placement challenges annually.
This raises an important question: Why are we unable to effectively retain and utilize the healthcare professionals we train?
The challenge is not simply about producing more doctors. It is about creating an enabling environment that encourages them to stay, practise, and thrive within the country.
It is time for governments at all levels to prioritize investments in healthcare infrastructure, improve remuneration and welfare packages for healthcare workers, strengthen primary healthcare systems, and create incentives for medical professionals to serve in rural and underserved communities. These measures are essential to rescuing Nigeria’s overstretched healthcare system.
Additionally, the private sector, development partners, and civil society organizations must support initiatives aimed at workforce retention and healthcare system strengthening.
As a health and grassroots development advocate, I firmly believe that healthcare is a fundamental pillar of national development. No nation can achieve sustainable growth when its healthcare workforce is overstretched and its citizens lack access to quality healthcare services.
As someone who works closely with communities at the grassroots, I have seen firsthand how the absence of adequate healthcare personnel affects lives, families, and livelihoods. The true measure of a nation’s commitment to its people is not merely in the roads it builds or the revenues it generates, but in its ability to protect the health and wellbeing of its citizens.
Nigeria’s shrinking healthcare workforce is a warning sign that demands urgent attention.
If we fail to act now, the cost will be measured not only in statistics but in lives lost, opportunities missed, and communities left behind.
Faysol Oluwakemi.
Broadcast Journalist |Health and grassroots development Advocate | People-focused and Result-driven Politician.
Sources and Attribution:
Data and statistics referenced in this article were obtained from reports and publications of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN), the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), the Federal Ministry of Health, and the World Health Organization (WHO), as reported in various public statements, health workforce assessments, and media reports between 2025 and 2026.

