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Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks - Health - Nairaland

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Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by ogododo: 12:36pm On Jun 14, 2020
Nigeria’s failed health care system caused dad’s death – Daughter of patient wrongly labelled COVID-19 case

Long after the COVID-19 pandemic is over, many people will continue to remember the viral outbreak because of the pain inflicted on them as a result the loss of their loved ones. One of such is Nenelyn Iwelumo, daughter of the late Mr. Emmanuel Iwelumo, who died after being rejected by several hospitals in Lagos on suspicion of being infected with COVID-19. She shares the family’s ugly experience and pain in this report by Tessy Igomu

Mr. Emmauel Iwelumo, a retiree residing in the Ikorodu area of Lagos, had quite an optimistic view about life and the Nigerian health care system.

According to his only daughter, Nenelyn, this was the mindset he had even as death stared him in the face.

As she mourns, she is certain her 63-year-old father had every chance to survive the sudden ailment that claimed his life, despite being diabetic and hypertensive.

Nenelyn believes her father’s chance of survival was narrowed by his inability to get prompt medical attention from the country’s apex hospitals: the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Aba; the Infectious Disease Hospital, Yaba; Federal Medical Centre, Ebute Meta; and Military Hospital, Yaba.

She is especially accusing LUTH of complicity in the death of her father, claiming they denied him lifesaving medical intervention on the grounds of not having bed space and being a suspected COVID-19 case.

Poorly treated and rejected

Nenelyn told Punch Healthwise that health care workers on night duty at the Accident and Emergency Unit of LUTH, left her father unattended to in an ambulance for nine hours, noting that the neglect aggravated his already dire health condition and led to his death

According to the distraught lady, her father was rushed to the facility on Thursday, April, 23, from a private hospital, St. Raphael Divine Mercy, in Ikorodu, at about 7.pm. She said a female doctor, identified as Omotara, claimed he could not be admitted due to lack of bed space and that he could be a suspected COVID-19 case.

She also alleged that the doctor, as well as the nurses, never bothered to find out what was wrong with her father, despite being told that he was in a critical condition and on oxygen.

“They just stood behind the locked gate and were looking at us like lepers. At a point, the female doctor collected the referral letter we came with, scanned through it and told us to leave the premises as there was no bed space.

“I pleaded with her to attend to him inside the ambulance because he was already showing signs of distress but she ignored my plea. She returned an hour later and told us to take him to the spillover area.

“The security men were not happy with what was happening and they told us that there are bed spaces for patients.

“They also said the health workers were in the habit of being unruly to patients and referring them to the spill area, a private ward where patients are billed heavily,” she said.

How our sad journey began

Recalling how the journey to LUTH started, Nenelyn said, on the morning of Sunday, April 19, her father woke up hale and hearty. But by 9.am, after his morning devotion, they heard him scream.

“My mother, who at the time was in the kitchen, rushed into their bedroom and screamed for help. We met him looking a bit disoriented and weak.

“My father told us that he suddenly discovered he could not breathe well, but that he managed to drag himself into the bathroom to pour water on his head.

“My mother and my younger brother, Victor, took him outside and after checking his blood pressure, discovered it was quite high. He was hypertensive and diabetic but despite that, he had been quite healthy.

“We were outside for quite a long time and when he started dozing off, I told him to go inside to have a proper rest.

“As soon as he got into the living room, he had the same experience again. I quickly called a relative, who is a retired matron, to come and check him out.

“The woman checked his BP and sugar level and told us they were unusually high.

“Later, as he stood up to use the restroom, he started gasping for air and was rushed to a specialist hospital on Ijede Road in Ikorodu. He was admitted immediately and placed on oxygen.

A new twist

Recounting further, Nenelyn said by Wednesday, her father’s condition had improved drastically and he was taken off oxygen. She said he was meant to be discharged but that this blood sugar spiked again, making the doctor advise against letting him go home.

“On Thursday morning, which was my birthday, he woke up early to pray for me, after which I left to freshen up at home. Less than an hour after I got home, I got a call from my brother saying the doctor wanted to refer him to LUTH, so that he could be seen by a cardiologist,” Nenelyn narrated.

The lady said she returned immediately to the hospital, only to find him already in an ambulance and on oxygen.

Inhuman treatment at LUTH

“We got to LUTH that night and were treated shabbily by the health workers. The female doctor on duty was so inpatient and not ready to listen to anything we had to say.

“Even her attitude towards my sick father was disheartening. She would ask him a question and as he made an effort to answer, she would move on to another one. At a point, he just closed his tired eyes and was just nodding to her questions.

“I cried and pleaded with the doctor to attend to him but she was unmoved. By 9.pm, the ambulance driver told us the oxygen had finished. We moved my father into our car and he hurriedly left for a refill.

Nenelyn said by 11.pm, doctor Omotara came out and told them to take him for an X-ray, emphasising that the result would determine if he would get treated at LUTH.

She said, “At the radiology department, we were told the X-ray result would be ready by 6.am.

“But by 2.am, I went to the X-ray room and was shocked to realise that the result was ready and I was not notified, despite leaving my number with them. I ran back with it and appealed to one of the security men to call the doctor.

“She came out and after studying the result, started yelling at me, at the same time calling on the security men to send us out of the premises that my father was a suspected COVID-19 case. We were shocked at her outburst.

“I was angry and asked her when an X-ray became a parameter for determining those infected by COVID-19. I told her that I am aware LUTH is among the listed isolation centres in Lagos and that she should alert the infectious disease unit so that a test can be carried out on my father.

“I also pleaded with her to isolate us in a room, so that my father could get the basic treatment needed to stabilise him.

Journey to IDH

“The doctor insisted that we leave for the Infectious Disease Hospital, Yaba and that as long as we were outside the emergency ward, LUTH will not be responsible for anything that happens to us.

“I kept insisting that my father does not have COVID-19 because no member of my family has left the family house since the lockdown commenced. We stocked up the house and received no visitor,” she said.

Nenelyn said they got to the IDH at about 3.am and met a doctor that calmly attended to them and went through the referral letter, X-ray results and also examined her father.

“The doctor said it is simply a medical case. He was quite upset and said even if it was what they suspected, there are accepted standard safety procedures that should be adopted to treat such a patient while awaiting a confirmatory result.

“The doctor accused LUTH of always turning patients away on the pretext of having COVID-19 because they don’t want to attend to them.

“He said an X-ray is not a standard determinant of a confirmed COVID-19 case and that it can’t substitute an ideal COVID-19 test.”

COVID-19 test stalled in IDH by lack of PPE, test kits

“I appealed to him to help facilitate a COVID-19 test for my father. He assured me it will be done as soon as the laboratory open by 5.am.

“By 4.30 am, the ambulance driver had to leave again to refill his depleted oxygen tank at the Ikeja General Hospital. Luckily, my father was stable by the time the oxygen was turned off.

“By 9.am, we took my father to the lab but was told that there was no Personal Protective Equipment and test kits available. We returned by 11.am and were told the same thing.

“As I stood under the shade of a tree crying, another doctor walked up to me to find out what the problem was. After listening and examining my father, he said he required urgent medical attention.

“He went to the laboratory and instructed them to carry out a COVID-19 test on my father immediately. He then wrote another referral for us to go to the Federal Medical Centre, Ebute Meta.

Rejected by FMC, chased out from Military Hospital for lack of COVID-19 test result

Nenelyn said at the FMC, they were not even allowed to drive in as the ambulance was turned back at the gate.

“They said there was no bed space in the male ward. I pleaded with them to treat him in the ambulance pending when we can get a bed space, but they refused and told us to take him to the Military Hospital, Yaba.

“At the Military hospital, we were chased away by the armed guards, who insisted on seeing a COVID-19 test result before we can be allowed into the premises.

“At a point, the ambulance driver joined to plead with them but they were adamant. They ordered us to leave or else, there will be consequences. We had to return my father to IDH, which was on the same road.

“At the IDH, we saw the doctor that referred us to FMC and explained the outcome of our visits to the two hospitals.

“He then directed some nurses to put my father in a room and instructed them to commence treatment pending when the COVID-19 result comes out.

“The nurses were aloof and showed no form of empathy towards my father. One of them just pointed at the bed and told us to put him there.

“As soon as he laid down, he started gasping for air. I rushed outside to tell the nurses that he needs to be put on oxygen.

“They became angry and told me not to teach them their job. They also said until they finish sharing the rice they brought for them, they will not attend to him.

“We kept pleading but they ignored us. I had to go looking for the doctor that admitted him but was told he was attending to patients in the isolation ward. He later sent another doctor to the room before the nurses started attending to my father.

“As he was being placed on oxygen, I and my brother were driven out of the room by the nurses. After waiting for a while, we left for home at about 4 pm.

A death too painful

Nenelyn said they had just reached home when his brother got a call from a doctor at the IDH that my father had passed on.

“I felt drained and angry at the same time. My knee buckled and I sat on the ground. Whatever was left of my hope in the health sector just fizzled. It was more painful knowing my father believed he would be fine once taken to any of these government hospitals.

“His corpse was later transferred to the Ikorodu General Hospital morgue with an instruction that it should not be kept among COVID-19 corpses, pending when the test comes out,” she said.

Two weeks later, the family was thrown into another bout of mourning when the COVID-19 result came out negative.

“For a moment after I got the news, everything went bleak. I can’t describe the calamity that befell my family. My father died out of mere assumption from LUTH management. The hospital could have saved his life by taking precaution while treating him since they were in doubt.

“LUTH is complicit in the death of my father. Denying someone with an underlying medical condition treatment is like committing murder.

“I expected that since he was suspected to have the virus, we would have been quarantined or told to self-isolate. But no, no one reached out to us or bothered to know where we live. Let us assume we have the virus, we could have been spreading it,” she said.

Nenelyn said her father has been laid to rest but that the “pain of the loss runs skin deep as “they are sadly reminded of the love and sunshine he epitomises.”

https://healthwise.punchng.com/nigerias-failed-health-care-system-caused-my-fathers-death-daughter-of-patient-wrongly-labelled-covid-19-case/

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Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by ogododo: 12:37pm On Jun 14, 2020
We don’t reject patients, LUTH

When contacted, Prof. Wasiu Adeyemo, Chairman, Medical Advisory Committee, LUTH commiserated with the family over their loss.

He, however, said there are processes for diagnosis and they must be duly followed. He also admitted there are challenges but that people should make treatment easier by presenting early to the hospital, not at a critical stage.

“We have about 90-bed spaces in our isolation ward and in some cases, we refer when there is a need. We accept COVID-19 cases and don’t reject patients.

“The standard procedure is that once a patient comes to the Accident and Emergency, we do what we call triage, where patients are separated based on their condition.

“Those who are critically ill and are likely to die are promptly attended to before any other person.

“If there are suspected COVID-19 cases, the Infectious Disease Unit will be alerted to do a review. Questionnaires are handed out and once the team has any suspicion, such patients are separated for sample collection.

Usually, it takes between 24 hours or more for a COVID-19 result to be out and if within that time, the patient is critically ill and needs support, the person is admitted into the holding area, not isolation centre.

“The patient is placed on oxygen or other needed protective care. If the result comes out positive, the person is admitted into the isolation centre. But those that are negative are routinely admitted into normal wards.

However, there are few instances, where samples have been taken and the patient is critically ill and the holding area, which is about five-bed space is not readily available, we facilitate the transfer of such patients to IDH or any other isolation facility.

Sometimes, X-ray can indicate if a patient has COVID-19 related pneumonia but a COVID-19 test will finally confirm that.

We don’t reject patients but if the person is critically ill and we don’t have space, we rather refer than allowing the person to die,” Prof. Adeyemo said.

Reacting, the Chief Medical Director, FMC, Ebute Metta, Dr. Adedamola Dada, apologised for the troubles the family of the deceased might have gone through.

He noted that the facility’s doors are open to every patient, including those infected with COVID-19.

“Our hospital is presently like a market because of the daily turnout. The truth is that we are always running out of bed spaces.

“If the hospital is filled up, it is filled up. We cannot put mattresses in the open space to treat people. It is not something we are happy about.

“We have just opened a 4-bed ICU for severe respiratory challenges and other COVID-19 related cases,” he said.
Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by ogododo: 12:58pm On Jun 14, 2020
This man don die, what a life!

1 Like

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by ogododo: 1:29pm On Jun 14, 2020
Why is our system devilish, no be this man now

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by Tupaq: 1:33pm On Jun 14, 2020
None of the management of the hospital bordered to investigate the incident in other to avoid


future occurrences. This is really sad. May his soul rest in peace.

5 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by ogododo: 1:39pm On Jun 14, 2020
Tupaq:
None of the management of the hospital bordered to investigate the incident in other to avoid


future occurrences. This is really sad. May his soul rest in peace.

Make God no allow us sick.

Lala

6 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by ogododo: 2:11pm On Jun 14, 2020
Dearth of health sector.
Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by CanadaOrBust: 9:43pm On Jun 14, 2020
Sad

1 Like

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by ogododo: 10:07pm On Jun 14, 2020
CanadaOrBust:
Sad

Indeed, moderator make una help out
Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by CanadaOrBust: 10:49pm On Jun 14, 2020
ogododo:


Indeed, moderator make una help out

For that to happen u need to add one or two snakes.

Here, let me help u out...

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by ogododo: 8:59am On Jun 15, 2020
CanadaOrBust:


For that to happen u need to add one or two snakes.

Here, let me help u out...

Lala has not seen the snakes.

1 Like

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by PoliteActivist: 9:20am On Jun 15, 2020
ogododo:


Lala has not seen the snakes.

Lalasticlala, sir, we wish to respectfully direct your attention to the snakes above

3 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by joshepade(m): 11:45am On Jun 15, 2020
Whatever will convince me that Nigeria can be great will really try!
Even tho I'm a man of great expectations, but not for Nigeria.
Point to a sector, just one that works presently in this country and I will be convinced of a better Nigeria.
Health, finance, works, education, politics, security, oil, please name one, I need just one...

23 Likes 1 Share

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by rawtouch: 11:46am On Jun 15, 2020
sad

sad reality of the healthcare system

1 Like

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by olaboy33(m): 11:46am On Jun 15, 2020
The number of non-Covid 19 daily deaths due to negligence and unnecessary panic from hospitals around the country has been on a steady rise and might be more than Covid 19 deaths.

Economic regression, avoidable deaths, loss of livelihood, Budget cuts... These are what innocent Nigerians are suffering and would suffer because our leaders have refused to think.

Malaria(a norm here) was rebranded, sold to us and as expected, we fell for it.
We copied lock down from Italy and US with more than 100,000 deaths and a sustainable economy to our country with less than 1000 deaths and a very fragile economy.

Yet, no one is complaining.

9 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by sammysneh(m): 11:47am On Jun 15, 2020
d
Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by dxdiag(m): 11:49am On Jun 15, 2020
So sad,
Nigerian health workers and health system failed him
RIP to the dead

2 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by Coldie(m): 11:49am On Jun 15, 2020
Most of these covid19 cases are scam.

I dont know about other continent's but Africa own, Nigeria own is a pure scam. Take it from me

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by gambia(m): 11:49am On Jun 15, 2020
Who has time to read all these epistle undecided

1 Like

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by sammysneh(m): 11:50am On Jun 15, 2020
so many people that have related ailment have been labelled Covid-19 patients

1 Like

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by IyaTola: 11:50am On Jun 15, 2020
Don't confuse education with intelligence. You can have a Bachelor's degree and still be an idiot and also don't forget that there are some things that money just cannot buy... like MANNERS, MORALS, AND INTELLIGENCE.

6 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by Joefat: 11:51am On Jun 15, 2020
Funny.. how come. This is kind of confused to me.

But you can still believe in this Covid 19 for the happiness of your soul.
Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by donjazet(m): 11:52am On Jun 15, 2020
This is very pitiful. I just wish Nigerians can wake up from their slumber and remove all these useless politicians.

We have to vote in new people from a new party who would indeed serve the people and start developing our sectors.

Know that all these present politicians are all corrupt. Stop supporting any because of tribe or religion.

I weep for the future of our country.

7 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by loadedvibes: 11:52am On Jun 15, 2020
I'm very sure this is one of many.. is it not naija again


Anyway.. did you know your kids can now learn as they play ?
Get them our kids educational tablets now to help them
Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by techmo(m): 11:52am On Jun 15, 2020
cool


Doctors and Nurses are scared of Corona Virus to the extent they reject patient at LUTH, and you are here saying Corona Virus is a Scam, are you not stupid like this


.

9 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by yanabasee1(m): 11:52am On Jun 15, 2020
It's a confused country tho....

1 Like

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by goshen26: 11:53am On Jun 15, 2020
Our major prayer to God is that we shouldn't fall sick


Our health workers are scared


I had to call my wife uncle at UCH, who is a professor before my baby was attended to at LUTH by one Dr Okonkwo of Cher....


We were told to get blood, and u know how scarce it is to get blood now that pandemic is on the increase


The half baked Dr could not make line so he abandon the blood to cloth


Seeing the stress I went thru to get the blood I started making calls


My wife's uncle called one of his trainee at Luth, who is a boss to them

It was then that they started running helter skelter

Saying I should not av called anyone na



Our health sector is now a place where u have to know someone before u can get medical attention



If not for covid19 the man would be living, but because of failed system where govt refuse to supply PPE they (Doctors and Nurses) are stylishly ignoring work loads




May God give us sound health, so we won't artificial health workers to survive

11 Likes

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by Nobody: 11:53am On Jun 15, 2020
Lost Addict
Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by sureteeboy(m): 11:53am On Jun 15, 2020
Who else read the part where the Nurses said until they finished sharing the rice they were given, they won't attend to the patient?
There's something seriously wrong with Nigerians generally.

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by Danjunior(m): 11:53am On Jun 15, 2020
Ghaa ghan ghaaa ghan...
....This is super story.
Season is out after Benue incident grin grin grin grin
Re: Emmanuel Iwelumo Death: Daughter Of Patient Wrongly Labelled COVID19 Case Speaks by Fragility6: 11:53am On Jun 15, 2020
IyaTola:
Don't confuse education with intelligence. You can have a Bachelor's degree and still be an idiot and also don't forget that there are some things that money just cannot buy... like MANNERS, MORALS, AND INTELLIGENCE.
How does this relate to this post. Am curious

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