Five out of nine survivors of the dreaded Ebola Virus
Diseases, EVD, yesterday, met with Lagos State governor, Babatunde Fashola, and
some members of the State’s Executive Council, SEC, where they recounted their
experiences. They include Dennis Akagha, husband of late Justina, a
nurse at First Consultant Hospital, Dr Fadipe Akinniyi, Dr. Ibeawuchi Morris,
Dr. Adaowa Igowoh and Kelechi Enemuo, wife of late Dr. Iyke Samuel Enemuo, who
died of EVD in Port Harcourt.
Three of the survivors who are staff of First Consultant
Hospital, contracted the virus from the index case, late Patrick Sawyer, the
Liberian who brought in the disease into Nigeria on July 20, 2014.
Dr. Igowoh,
who was the first to recount her ordeal, described yesterday as a glorious day
in her life. She said, “it is a day of joy. I want to say that we are here
today because of God. It was He that made us to survive. We are privileged to
see this day and to be here with everybody, it is an honour. Thank you so much
Governor Fashola, we can’t thank you for everything. We at First Consultants Medical
Centre took a risk, we risked our lives because we knew that we wanted to
ensure the safety of Lagosians, Nigerians and humanity because we are a global
village; from a small village it can spread to the world and we knew the
implications, but we said we would risk our lives and we would not let the
index case leave the hospital.”
Dr Akinniyi:
“I am most happy here today because as matter of fact, when everyone was
running helter-skelter, I told myself I only opened the door and by the virtue
of that, nothing should happen to me. I never knew I was deceiving myself,
until the day I recorded my temperature and there was a kind of spike. I told
myself what is going on. Once I have treated malaria a while ago and I told
myself that it could be malaria. I used anti malaria drugs but nothing changed,
rather it was getting worse. Eventually, I went to a private hospital to
treat myself because I did not want to admit it was Ebola. I felt they would be
able to proffer solutions to all my problems but it wasn’t to be so. Rather, it
was becoming terrible and I started stooling and vomiting. I summoned
the courage and called the doctors at the monitoring units that my temperature
has been persistently high.”
Dennis: “I really want to appreciate and commend everything you have done. My case was different, I wasn’t among the doctors, my wife, Justina Echelonu Obioma happened to be one of the nurses that cared for the index case. She got contact with the index case, when she came back home, she told me. We didn’t know what was happening because she was having symptoms. She was two months pregnant. She was feeling feverish. Infact that was her first day on the job, it was her first day and her first patient was Patrick Sawyer. She just resumed that day, I encouraged her to go to work, but she was reluctant because of her situation, but I had to convince her to go and tell them in the Hospital about her condition so that they can give her more time. That was just the first day. When she came back, the following day she went to work again, then the next two days, she was off. We were just at home when the case was announced the case of Sawyer and she told me that she cared for him at the hospital and I asked her if she was sure about what she said, because we have been hearing about it. I asked her what kind of contact she had with him and she said she used protective gloves. Hearing that, I felt rest assured.”
Morris Ibeawuchi:
“I was the person that received Patrick Sawyer the day he was rushed to First
Consultant Medical Centre. It was like a joke. I did not know what came upon me
that day. Unlike me, I was so reluctant to attend to him. But I was compelled
by my colleagues to attend to him. When I got there, I was just talking to him.
It was very unlike me. Being a doctor, you must examine your patient. After due
examination, I asked him some questions. But Patrick Sawyer lied to me, even
the ECOWAS Protocol Officer, who sat there, kept quiet.
Fashola:
However, Fashola, who called for one minute silence for those who lost their
lives to EVD, commended the courage of the survivors by coming out to the
public to share their experiences and damning possible stigmatization.
He stated: “We sympathize with you for the trauma that
you went though. Perhaps it was avoidable. But I am sure that hard lessons have
been learnt. Beyond that, I must congratulate you the survivors of the EVD. I
felicitate with you and members of your family and friends. But most
importantly, I thank you so much for coming forward because you took a great
thing and you showed so much courage. And you have helped us to take next step
forward. And you have helped us to put an end to the spread of the EVD.”
Gov. Babatunde Fashola of Lagos(4th
left) with survivors of the Ebola Virus Disease, EVD, during a visit to the
Governor in Lagos, yesterday. From Right: Dr. Adaora Igonoh, Dennis Akagha,
Fashola, Dr. Ibeawuchi Morris, Dr. Fadipe Akinniyi and Dr. Enemuo Kelechi
|
-vanguard
No comments:
Post a Comment