I stumbled upon this story which was published by Sahara Reporters.My main reason for sharing this is because i have a friend who has repeatedly complained about the same poor services the hospital renders.How patients are kept for long with no doctors in sight and how the attending doctors have no inkling on how to sort out an emergency.
It is very painful to lose a loved one and i hope this woman gets justice.Story culled from Sahara Reporters.
My husband called me at about 6:40 AM, Friday the 21st of November 2014,
from work. He asked me to come and pick him up, that he was not feeling
too good. I left with the driver to get him. When I got there, he was
too uncomfortable, and he asked me to take him home. But on our way
home, I noticed that he was in pains, so I asked the driver to reverse
the car and head instead to the hospital (St. Nicholas Hospital in
Lagos).
On reaching there, we met Judith, the receptionist. I asked if there
was a Doctor around. This was around 7 PM. She said yes and after some
time we were asked to go into Room 2. Right there we met a young Doctor
called Dr. Ogidigben Kevwe. He asked a few questions that I answered
while my husband was wallowing in pains. He (Kevwe) opened an emergency
file because according to him, my husband’s file was locked up in Dr.
Bamgboye’s office, and no one has access to that office. I told Dr.
Kevwe that my husband had incisional hernia surgery done a few months
back at the same hospital, August to be precise and it was performed by
one Dr. Mohan an India man, and Dr. Balogun at St. Nicholas Hospital. He
started to examine him. He then left us in his office and said he was
coming back.
He came back after some minutes and said he was trying to reach Dr.
Balogun from the reception, but he is not getting through. So I used my
husband’s phone and dialed Balogun and got through. At this point, I
gave the phone to Dr. Kevwe, and he started explaining to Dr. Balogun,
what he thought was the problem. Balogun on the other end asked if my
husband was in pains, and Kevwe said yes. Dr. Kevwe told Dr. Balogun
that he was suspecting intestinal obstruction. Dr. Balogun asked if
there was any swelling around where the incision was done, but Dr.Kevwe
said no. Balogun asked if there was any reddish sign around the same
area, and Kevwe said no. So Dr. Kevwe suggested giving him antibiotics,
but Balogun said that they have to be careful what they give him, since
he is a post kidney transplant patient. Balogun asked them to give him a
particular injection twice to ease the pains, and he said that they
should observe him till the next morning. So I left to go get him what
he had asked for (his tea and his stockings). On my way around Bonny
Camp, I got a call from a strange number, when I picked up; it was Dr.
Kevwe, on the other end. He asked me to turn back to come pick up my
husband, and I asked why?
He (Kevwe) said that my Husband is feeling much better, and wants to
go home. I asked the driver to reverse and head back to the hospital.
And on getting there, I went in and asked the Dr. again why he wants me
to take him home. He repeated once again that he feels much better and I
asked Kevwe if he was asking me to take him home because he thinks he
feels better or that the hospital doesn’t have a bed for him. I asked
this because the nurse had mentioned earlier that she needed to check
for bed space. Kevwe at this point told me that my Husband would be
fine, he asked me to take my Husband home and bring him the following
morning. Meanwhile, before then, Kewe wrote a prescription of drugs for
my husband which I took to the pharmacist and when the lady there saw
it, she asked which Dr. I saw. I told her that it was Dr. Kewe. She
moved over to the other side and called the Dr’s office. They both
argued about the drug that he wrote, she then gave me just1 tablet of
Exforge. When my husband got up from the hospital bed, he staggered and I
held him and asked if he’s fine. The Dr. said that it’s the injection
that was given to him that he would be fine. So I took him home.
We got home. And just about 15minutes after, my husband said he felt
like throwing up. I brought a bowl to him, and he vomited, and he felt a
bit better. He slept for some time and got up in excruciating pain.
Immediately I jumped into my clothes and then called Dr. Balogun, to
say that we are on our way back to the hospital. He said no problem that
the doctor will be waiting for me. I asked, which doctor? And he said
the doctor is their senior surgeon by the name Dr. Fadiran. Balogun said
that Dr. Fadiran was the doctor on call. We got to the hospital in less
than 20 minutes; my husband came down from the car himself. He walked
into the hospital by himself before he was wheeled into the ER. Then
came Dr. Kevwe, and I asked him about the senior surgeon, and he told me
that he would be coming very soon. I wasn’t too happy with that, as I
had mentioned to Dr. Balogun that my husband was in serious pains. I
expected to see a consultant like he said. Kevwe started by
trying to
put him on a drip that took forever, as he was unable to successfully
get his veins while my husband was languishing in pain.
My husband kept telling them (DR. Kevwe and the nurse) that he wants
to throw up or use the restroom, and he would be fine. He kept saying
that if he throws up he will be fine. Meanwhile, Dr. Kevwe was taking
instructions on the phone from Dr. Fadiran. This was when I asked when
the Dr. would come. I kept asking, “when will the doctor come?” And Dr.
Kevwe said Dr. Fadiran asked him to get my entire husband’s
information. DR. Kevwe told me that they are
waiting for the Radiologist and the Anesthesiologist, and none of these people showed up.
My husband kept on saying that he wants to throw up. But then,
Dr. Kevwe asked the nurse to give him an injection, I asked what the
injection was for? And he said it will stop him from vomiting. He became
so uncomfortable and was losing his breath. They put him on oxygen,
but I guess he was already choking.
Meanwhile, Kevwe was still taking instructions from Dr. Fadiran on
the phone. At this time, he started gasping for air. Meanwhile, before
then, another doctor showed up. I don’t know his name, but he’s average
in height and dark complexioned. He inserted a suction tube into his
mouth, but I guess he was two hours or more late with that. Because if
that was done when I brought him to the hospital that morning, he would
have been here with me today.
If Dr. Fadiran were at the hospital, even after he was told that it
was an emergency; my husband would have been here with me. If the
anesthesiologist was at the hospital, he probably would have been here
with me. If the radiologist were around on that morning to at least see
what was happening inside of him, he probably would have been here with
me. If Dr. Kevwe knew exactly what he was doing that morning without
taking instructions from Dr. Fadiran on the phone, with an emergency
case right in front of him, my husband would have been here. My husband
died of total negligence on the part of St. Nicholas Hospital, and I
know it. Like I said earlier, the doctor was 2 hours plus late with the
suction, because, at this time, the nurse was already calling my
husband’s name, shouting “Mr. Charles, Mr. Charles!” He was given four
adrenaline injections. The drip wasn’t going at all, all this while lest
I forget. I watched my husband struggled to breath. I watched him fight
for his life, and I was right there when he died. And even though they
were busy with CPR, I knew when he passed on because immediately he
stopped struggling, fluid started gushing out of his mouth and nose, I
knew that was it. That was the same fluid that was choking him. If there
were a senior consultant or surgeon at the hospital as at when I
brought him, he probably, would have been helped. In between all this,
Dr. Kevwe at a time said to Dr. Fadiran on the phone that he should come
now as the patient is in a critical condition. He said to the same Dr.
Fadiran that 11 O’clock might be too
late. I brought my husband at
about 6 AM to St. Nicholas Hospital and he died at about 9.30AM without
receiving prompt and adequate care.
Human life cannot continue to be lost soo cheaply in Nigerian
Hospital, people must be made to account for their actions as
professionals hence I have contacted my Lawyers to investigate the cause
of death as he has died with our dreams, aspirations, and vision and
planned future together.
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