Sustainable development is critical for healthcare systems globally, particularly in resource-constrained settings. Nigeria's healthcare sector faces distinct challenges in balancing service delivery with environmental, economic, and social sustainability. This brief report aimed to analyse the key principles, challenges, and opportunities associated with sustainable medical development in Nigeria from a defined historical perspective. It sought to identify prevailing themes and propose a framework for integrating sustainability into healthcare planning and practice. This was a qualitative, non-empirical analysis based on a review of relevant policy documents, literature, and expert commentary available at the time. Thematic analysis was used to synthesise the core issues. The analysis identified infrastructural deficit as a major barrier to sustainability, with a significant proportion of medical equipment reported as non-functional or obsolete. The findings highlighted a need for locally appropriate technology, life-cycle equipment management, and targeted training to ensure the long-term viability of medical services. Sustainable medical development in Nigeria, from this perspective, required a shift from short-term procurement to long-term, holistic planning. It underscored the interdependence of reliable technology, trained personnel, and environmental stewardship in building a resilient healthcare system. Key recommendations included establishing national standards for equipment procurement and maintenance, investing in local technical capacity building, and promoting green radiology practices to reduce the environmental footprint of healthcare delivery. Sustainable development, medical equipment, radiology, Nigeria, healthcare systems, maintenance This brief report contributes a structured historical analysis of sustainability challenges in Nigerian medical practice, offering a focused perspective for discussions on resilient healthcare infrastructure in Africa.
Aliyu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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