Before Sustainable Development Goals (SDG): why Nigeria failed to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Obinna Ositadimma Oleribe, Simon David Taylor-Robinson
Author Information
  1. Obinna Ositadimma Oleribe: Excellence & Friends Management Care Centre (EFMC), Abuja, Nigeria.
  2. Simon David Taylor-Robinson: Hepatology Unit, Imperial College London, 10th Floor, QEQM Building, St Mary's Hospital Campus, South Wharf Road, W2 1NY, London, United Kingdom.

Abstract

World leaders adopted the UN Millennium Declaration in 2000, which committed the nations of the world to a new global partnership, aimed at reducing extreme poverty and other time-bound targets, with a stated deadline of 2015. Fifteen years later, although significant progress has been made worldwide, Nigeria is lagging behind for a variety of reasons, including bureaucracy, poor resource management in the healthcare system, sequential healthcare worker industrial action, Boko Haram insurgency in the north of Nigeria and kidnappings in the south of Nigeria. The country needs to tackle these problems to be able to significantly advance with the new sustainable development goals (SDGs) by the 2030 target date.

Keywords

References

  1. Lancet. 2005 Jan 22-28;365(9456):347-53 [PMID: 15664232]

MeSH Term

Conservation of Natural Resources
Delivery of Health Care
Global Health
Goals
Humans
Nigeria
Poverty
United Nations

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0NigeriaDevelopmentGoalsMillenniumnewhealthcareSustainableSDGMDGsWorldleadersadoptedUNDeclaration2000committednationsworldglobalpartnershipaimedreducingextremepovertytime-boundtargetsstateddeadline2015FifteenyearslateralthoughsignificantprogressmadeworldwidelaggingbehindvarietyreasonsincludingbureaucracypoorresourcemanagementsystemsequentialworkerindustrialactionBokoHaraminsurgencynorthkidnappingssouthcountryneedstackleproblemsablesignificantlyadvancesustainabledevelopmentgoalsSDGs2030targetdate:failedachieve

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