Lagos Man Loses Two Kids In Six Months Due To ‘Doctors Negligence’
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Donna
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Mr
Frank Ogundana has lost two kids in just six months due to what he described as
‘doctors’ negligence’.
His eight-year-old daughter, Donna, who was
admitted at the General Hospital Ikorodu on Monday April 8, died last Thursday
under questionable circumstances morbidly reminiscent of the death of his only
son at the same hospital about six months ago. The grieving man has therefore called
on the Lagos State Government to check “the excesses of doctors at the Ikorodu General Hospital” as he alleged that no fewer
than 20 couples in his community may have lost their children in similar
questionable circumstances at this tertiary health institution.
Donna, a primary four pupil of Lagos State
Polytechnic Staff
School was diagnosed at
birth as being afflicted with Sickle Cell anemia. But a later test was to
confirm that she was AA. Indeed she was never admitted in any hospital until
her predicament of April 8. According to Ogundana who lectures at the Lagos
State Polytechnic, Donna had never been admitted or had blood transfusion since
she was diagnosed to be AA in LUTH about five years ago. “I have four children,
three girls and a son but my only son died at the Ikorodu General Hospital due
to doctors’ negligence, that was six months ago. “My daughter had never been
sick until 2012 when she complained of general body pains and under medical
advice, we placed her on prescribed medication.
When we returned from church on Sunday, she
complained of body pains and was given her medicines. But I realised she did
not sleep throughout the night and we took her to General Hospital Ikorodu on
Monday April 8 and she was placed on admission. “Some medical tests were
carried out on her and her blood count was 29 per cent, while malaria parasite
was negative. She was treated for malaria, pains and also given sedatives. But
rather than get better, my daughter’s condition got worse as she complained of
increasing pains.
“On Tuesday, she started crying frequently and
her eye balls became yellow. Unfortunately, doctors were not available to
attend to her. I walked up to a nurse to complain about the situation but she
said the symptoms were normal. “On Wednesday, I could not bear it any longer as
my daughter could not sleep for 24 hours; her heart was beating fast but the
nurse on duty said they have increased the sedatives which means she would
sleep for longer hours but this was not so.
“Frantic with worry I went round the hospital
to see if a doctor could help out; I eventually came across the doctor who
placed her on admission but he asked me to exercise patience. I left the
hospital by 8pm while my wife stayed back so that I could attend to our two
kids at home.
“By this time, I thought of transferring my
daughter to another hospital but the doctors were not available to issue a
report. The nurses said they had severally drawn the doctors’ attention to my
daughter’s worsening condition without an appropriate response. “My wife told
me that one of them, Dr. Abu, promised to show up but he never did. By 11pm, I
drove to the hospital. As soon as I approached the gate, I heard my daughter
screaming. I parked the car and started running to the children's ward. There were
two doctors on duty, a male and a female, but the duo refused to show up in the
ward.
“In annoyance, I followed the nurses to the
doctors’ office and to my greatest surprise, one of them, a female, was sound
asleep. After waiting for a while, I forced the door open; my action created a
scene which forced the male doctor out of his office. But rather than
addressing my problem, he accused me of peeping into a female doctor’s office
which aggravated my annoyance and I dragged the female doctor to the ward.
“On noticing my daughter’s predicament and
without carrying out any medical examination, she administered sedatives and
told me not to worry; that was at midnight. “My daughter woke up around 6am of
Thursday April 11 and she was very weak. By that time, her blood level had
reduced drastically to eight per cent and my lovely daughter died in my arms. I
am heart-broken; doctors in Ikorodu
General Hospital
have thrown me into mourning,” Ogundana narrated.
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