Ex-Anambra Governor Peter Obi Commends First Consultant Hospital CMD: As How The Hospital Stopped Sawyer From Spreading Disease Further
The country may have fought and
subdued the deadly Ebola Virus Disease (EVD), but the enormity of losses it
left in its trail is yet to go away.
At First Consultant Hospital,
Obalende, in Lagos, the hospital, where the disease berthed, the management and
staff are still in the throes of pain and anguish.
They are yet to fully and finally
quantify and overcome the string of losses that came their way after Patrick
Sawyer, who imported the disease into the country arrived their facility. The
hospital lost two doctors: Stella Adadevoh, a senior consultant and Dr. Abaniwo,
as well as two nurses, who contracted the virus from the index case.
Lately, the hospital was cleared to
resume full clinical operations after three rounds of comprehensive “state
certified decontamination process” by the Nigerian Centre of Disease Control,
Ebola Emergency Centre. Since then, some prominent Nigerians have been
visiting to commend and commiserate with the hospital and staff following the
human and material losses, which the disease brought to them.
Last Wednesday, former Anambra State
governor, Mr. Peter Obi, joined the growing number of eminent Nigerians going
over to thank Dr. Benjamin Ohiaeri and his team of medical professionals at
First Consultant Hospital for their clear sense of heroism, patriotism and
professionalism. He also commended Governor Fashola for his efforts, noting
that “he scored high marks” in all he did during the trying time and for
visiting the hospital, thereafter.
Daily Sun gathered that as soon as the hospital was reopened for
business, Mr. Peterside Akande, Chairman, IBTC Stanbic Bank Plc; Mr. Tunde
Ayeni, Chairman, Skye Bank Plc, Dr. ABC Orjiakor; Mr. John Momoh, CEO, Channels
Television; Lagos State governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, officials of Diamond
Bank Plc had shown support, one way or the other.
Obi, paid made the impromptu visit
to the hospital as part of his own way of saying ‘well done’ to the pack of
professionals who staked their lives to save the Nigerian community from the
epidemic. It was such a solemn but brief visit that resurrected the pain and
anguish, which lay buried right in hearts of staff of the hospital.
On hand to receive Obi on the
occasion were Dr. Ohiaeri, the Chief Medical Director of the hospital and some
of the remnants of his doctors: Dr. Ada Igonoh, the 28-year old, who survived
the scourge and Dr. Pakash Chaurasia. The visitor was later taken round the
facility to see what the hospital was putting in place: a neonatal centre to
take care of premature babies born at four to seven months, a library for Ebola
research, and some new lines of equipment.
The meeting was such an emotional
one for everyone. The hosts and guests alike had squeezed into the fairly,
spacious but sufficiently descent room which serves as office of Ohiaeri. The
room airconditioner over his head was busy spewing cold and humid air. Every
attention was focused on this tall, wiry man, who our correspondent gathered is
a consummate obstetrics and gynecology specialist. He is of slight built, but
his frail frame had borne such a weighty burden, which saved Nigeria, a
calamity of indescribable proportion, yet very little has been said about him
and his role.
After the traditional exchange of
greetings, Obi told his host that “yesterday when I came into town, I attended
a function where I made up mind that I was going to visit our friends at First
Consultant Hospital and hear their story. So much has happened to you in
the past months and you just have to tell your story to the world. If you
don’t, you will be like a man who lit his candle and put it under the bed. You
are the man who has borne enormous burden for the country.”
When Ohiaeri began to speak, his
voice betrayed a man still in the grip of pain and anguish. His words too were
as cold as ice, which could taw every heart.
“Thank you for coming here , Sir,” he
began. “The events of the past months have been very overwhelming, to say the
least. I have refrained from speaking all these while because I wanted to tell
my story is a sequential manner,” he said.
Taking a deep breath, he continued:
“We have lost a lot of things – our laundry, cleaning, laboratory, nursing,
monitoring line; name it. But none of these compares to our human resource
losses. When people come here and ask me how much equipment we have lost, I say
to them that the most important equipment to me are the people.
“I recall that some of my colleagues
with whom we took decision together are now late, l cannot understand it. I
wonder why am still alive and not dead? I wonder why the dead are not like me.
“Here in Lagos, we lost seven people
as a result of Mr. Sawyer’s bioterrorism and four of such deaths were staff of
First Consultant Hospital. That means that we bore the brunt of the disaster
for the country.
“Look at Dr. Adadevo, for instance.
Here was a doctor who used to take care of me because I’m hypertensive. She
used to give me my drugs weekly. But before this Ebola experience, she gave me
a dosage that was to last me for one month. Then I said to her, ‘it is like I
have graduated now to taking one month dose’ and we laughed over it. She had
her son in this hospital and I was the one who took the delivery.
“Look at Dr. Abaniwo, who died
before Dr. Adadevo. He was with us for four years. He contracted the virus when
he went over to intervene when Mr. Sawyer was harassing Dr. Adadevo at a time
he (Sawyer) had become angry and restive. That was how we got into this.
“Evelyn was a widow and a nurse with
four children – very humble, loyal and diligent. She was with us when Dr.
Adadevo was delivered of her baby. She was the first person who welcomed Mr.
Sawyer. She was part of this institution. Her death was heartbreak. It was
total devastation. Soon after her death, the landlord threw her children out of
their home. And we are doing all we can to take care of them. We have got them
and accommodation and they have settled in.
“For Dr. Adadevo, she worked with me
for 21 years. She was a smart professional who I took as my number one person.
Look at this lady here (pointing at Dr. Ada Igonoh who survived the epidemic),
I have adopted her as my daughter. She started work here on July 1, 2014, 20
days before the arrival of Mr. Sawyer. It was Dr. Adadevo who brought her here.
At the isolation centre, she was two beds away from Dr. Adadevo. Yet, she was
the one monitoring everyone in the hospital and giving us reports on hourly
basis. That helped us to know what packages to bring to them and every line of
action to take. In fact, it was right in her arms that our own late Justina
died.”
The coming of Sawyer to the hospital
Recalling the how the late Sawyer brought
the virus to the hospital and the country, he said: “When the gentleman was
brought in here, he said he had malaria. We ran a series of test, which
confirmed that he was malaria positive. Every other thing was normal.
Twenty-four hours later, he wasn’t any better. By Tuesday, he was already
having hemorrhagic symptoms – blood in his urine and eyes. That was how the
alarm bell started ringing.
“It was at that point that Dr.
Adadevo started suspecting the man must be having either Ebola or Lassa fever
disease, more so when he was from Liberia. Then, we decided to question, to
know whether he had had contact with any Ebola patient, but he denied that.
“For us as a people, that was the
first time we were having such challenge. So we took his blood sample and sent
to University of Lagos Teaching Hospital (LUTH), but the result was that it was
a ‘signal.’
“Suspecting that he had Ebola, we
notified him that we had to test him for the disease. Then he didn’t bother. But
when told that we weren’t going to let him go, he went bananas. He refuse
further medical care and demanded that we discharged him and that we should
sign the paper indicating that he left hospital against doctors’ advice. Then,
we decided to send his blood sample to Senegal, to the centre the US set up.
“When he was uncooperative, one of
the doctor, who later died, went to his room to ask him why he was behaving
that way, reminding him that we were trying to help him.”
Liberian ambassador to Nigerian came
to the picture
“Shortly after, Liberian ambassador
to Nigeria, certain Ambassador Conte, came into the matter. He insisted Mr.
Sawyer must be released to proceed to Calabar because he had an import role to
play there. He said if it were because of the money, he would put more than
enough on the table. But I was unyielding. He then started howling: ‘What sort
of doctor are you. You are arrogant. Don’t you know that you are infringing on
this man’s fundamental human rights?’ I told him ‘with due respect, Sir, we
won’t let him go. He may have the right to demand to leave the hospital,
against medical advice, but I was relying on Superior Provision of the law to
decline the request for the good of the public. The ambassador said he
was coming to the hospital to personally take Sawyer away himself.
“That whole 24 hours of waiting for
the result was for us, like a stay in limbo. At that point, we knew we had a
legal trouble in our hands. What if the test came back and the man was Ebola
negative? So we contacted our lawyers. We told them that we were taking a
risk, but we trusted in the judgment of our physician.
“But after the test confirmed that
Mr. Sawyer was Ebola positive, Ambassador Conte was no longer calling us.
Rather he was contacting Professor Abulsalam Nasidi. He didn’t bother to come
back to us.”
Ohiaeri recalled that he advised Dr.
Adadevo to proceed to the isolation centre in Yaba, Lagos for the Ebola test,
even when she said she felt okay. The test later confirmed that she was Ebola
positive.
Obi speaks
Obi praise the act heroism displayed
by the 161 hospital-work force, insisting that their effort saved the country a
lot of heartache. He also praised Governor Fashola for rising to the challenge
before the Federal Government came into the fray and for finding time to visit
the hospital and inviting the survivors to his office in Ikeja.
“If not for the
vigilance of the hospital and insistence that Mr. Patrick Sawyer should not be
allowed to leave, the crisis would have been more complex and difficult to
manage,” Obi said.
The former governor, who urged
Nigerians to remain grateful to them and see them as heroes, sincerely
thanked Governor Raji Fashola and the Lagos State Government for showing
leadership at that critical time and President Goodluck Jonathan and the
Federal Government for their response to the crisis, noting that if not
for the promptness of the response, the crisis would have gone out of
control.
He noted that the success in
handling the crisis has brought international recognition to Nigeria’s ability
to manage emergencies given the right leadership.
He also thanked good-spirited
Nigerians that supported the hospital at their hour of need, especially Atedo
Peterside, who was the first to call the hospital and offered moral and other
support; Dr. ABC Orjiakor and others and urged other Nigerians to emulate
them in service to their country and humanity.
Obi urge the state and Federal
Government to come to the aid of First Consultant Hospital. He said that
now that the hospital had been declared Ebola Virus free, that Nigerians
should go back to using their facilities, describing it as comparable to the
best in other parts of the world.
While conducting Obi round the
hospital, Ohiaeri showed him some of the new lines of equipment that were being
installed after the old ones were condemned. One of the new theatres was the
neonatal theatre where infants would be managed.
He also took the guest to the Ebola
library being constructed saying: “We want to dedicate this to all those who
have departed and we hope that what we have learnt would be put in here. We
believe that various agencies will be visiting here and the facility will
stimulate the young ones.”
Ex-Anambra Governor Peter Obi Commends First Consultant Hospital CMD: As How The Hospital Stopped Sawyer From Spreading Disease Further
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Friday, October 10, 2014
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