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Saliu Mustapha and the Meaning of Care
Saliu Mustapha and the Meaning of Care
In Kwara Central, leadership has taken on a quieter but more meaningful form. Not leadership that lives in slogans, but leadership that shows up where pain actually lives.....KINDLY READ THE FULL STORY HERE▶
This is the reality that has informed Distinguished Senator Saliu Mustapha, the Turaki of Ilorin, in the way he approaches healthcare.
His understanding is straightforward: healthcare is not just about buildings, it is about access, timing, and relief. For many communities across Ilorin West, Ilorin East, Ilorin South and surrounding areas, the gap between sickness and care is not only distance, but cost, awareness, and opportunity.
To bridge this gap, medical outreaches under his watch have gone beyond consultations.
Across multiple outreach programmes in Kwara Central, residents have received:
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Free medical consultations and diagnostics
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Blood pressure and blood sugar screenings, leading to early detection of hypertension and diabetes
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Eye screenings, followed by cataract surgeries for diagnosed patients, restoring sight for beneficiaries who had lived with avoidable blindness
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Women’s health interventions, including fibroid-related surgeries and referrals, easing conditions that had long affected quality of life
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Maternal and child health services, supporting pregnant women and nursing mothers
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Distribution of essential medications, ensuring patients left with treatment, not just advice
These were not symbolic gestures. They were structured medical engagements involving qualified doctors, nurses, surgeons, volunteers, and local health personnel. Patients were registered, assessed, treated, and where necessary, scheduled for procedures or referred for continued care.
For some beneficiaries, especially cataract patients and women who received fibroid interventions, the impact was life-altering. Sight restored. Pain reduced. Normal life resumed.
Community leaders and health workers consistently note the difference:
this was not about publicity.
It was about outcomes.
Beyond outreach days, these interventions align with broader efforts to strengthen primary healthcare delivery, ensuring that constituency-based healthcare support complements national and state health frameworks rather than operating outside them. This makes the work verifiable, traceable, and accountable.
What sets this approach apart is evidence.
Named communities.
Known medical teams.
Documented beneficiaries.
Healthcare, at its core, is about dignity. It is about ensuring that wellbeing is not reserved for those close to city centres or private hospitals. In public service, loud gestures fade quickly. What endures are the moments when leadership reduces suffering in real, measurable ways.
In Kwara Central, those moments are not abstract.
They are remembered.
They are felt.
And they explain, better than any slogan, the true meaning of care.
Osigwe Omo-Ikirodah is the Principal and CEO of Bush Radio Academy.
