Ebola Scare In Bayelsa: Negligent Health Workers Abandon Accident Victim To Die In Pain
Category: Health & Physical Fitness
A medical worker who spoke on condition of anonymity said that health
workers who resumed work on Monday came to meet the patient but were
scared due to the Ebola disease. “Nobody had the courage to help the
victim especially as we did not have any idea of the case history, and
we did not have the necessary protection to handle this type of case.
Nobody wanted to take unnecessary risk."
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An accident victim who was rushed to the the Federal Medical Centre
(FMC) Yenagoa on Monday reportedly died for lack of medical attention,
as health workers declined to attend to the patient who passed away
early Tuesday.
According to investigations by Sahara Reporters, the
death has been traced to the fear of Ebola amongst health professionals
at the facility.
Mr. Bernard Akpedi, Public Relations Officer at
the FMC, had confirmed on Tuesday that medical services were restored to
the hospital following the suspension of strike by non-medical
workers on Monday, but asserted that the death had nothing to do with
the Ebola virus.
On August 12, 2014, the workers, under the
auspices of the Joint Health Sector Unions, embarked on an indefinite
strike over outstanding promotion arrears.
According to Akpedi,
the victim, a middle-aged woman,was brought to the hospital by good
samaritans, and that her condition was being managed by the hospital
before her death.
However the health workers, including doctors
on duty at the casualty unit of the hospital, said that there were no
protective kits to handle the patient, who remained in pain.
The health worker
furthered: “Our safety has to be guaranteed first because no one can
endanger his life, that is the truth about it we just resumed from
strike yesterday and one of the issues under contention was our paltry
hazard allowance of N5,000 Naira, amongst other issues. Who will risk
his or her life for N5,000?"
It was also gathered that the
morticians were hesitant to handle the remains of the patient until a
senior official of the hospital intervened.
Speaking on the
scare, Dr. Ebitimi Etebu, a member of Bayelsa Task Force on Ebola Virus
Disease, said that the state was adequately prepared to contain the
outbreak of the disease.
He urged members of the public to disregard rumours of the disease spreading to Bayelsa.
He said that a suspected case which had symptoms similar to that of Ebola was found to be otherwise.
“There
is no cause for alarm, the one suspected case at the Niger Delta
University Teaching Hospital which presented symptoms similar to Ebola
turned out negative."
He further added that medical emergency
crews were able to identify and properly report suspected cases to
monitoring centers. “Ambulance workers have been trained and ready to
convey any suspected case to the designated surveillance centers. There
is no other pending case,” Etebu said.
Source: Sahara Reporters
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