02

May

2008

Our “Misdiagnosed” Healthcare System PDF Print E-mail
By Abiodun Ladepo

You should have, like every other proud Nigerian, been embarrassed, maybe even sad and disappointed, when you learned that your president, Shehu Yar Adua, was hurriedly whisked to Wiesbaden, Germany, for medical care. And if you were not, it is probably because you had no idea what Wiesbaden looked like.

Wiesbaden is a “retirement city”, 20 minutes from Frankfurt and 120 minutes from Berlin, the capital of Germany. Wiesbaden is about the size of Oshogbo in Osun State, or Abeokuta in Ogun State, littered with old and medieval retirement homes. It is a relatively expensive place to live because all those who can not afford to live in Frankfurt (but work in Frankfurt) live in Wiesbaden and commute to work from there daily. Nothing, besides the Mainz River, is spectacular about Wiesbaden. I lived there from 2002 to 2007.

You should have even been doubly embarrassed if you learned that your president’s ailment had been repeatedly “misdiagnosed” in Nigeria. It took a hapless physician in Wiesbaden – Wiesbaden, for Christ’s sake - to correctly diagnose Yar Adua’s ailment. I am in shock.

There was a time in Nigerian history when the University College Hospital (UCH) in Ibadan was the authority on health problems. There was a time when the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) in Lagos was the authority on health problems in Nigeria. There was a time when the Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital (ABUTH) in Zaria served as the last word on health issues in Nigeria. If you were literally on your death knell, you went to the ABUTH, or the LUTH or the UCH. If they could not fix you up there, you died a noble death, knowing that the best brains and hands in the business tried their best. My father died in the hands of such doctors at the ABUTH in 1978 at age 42, and the entire family felt satisfied that the doctors did the best they could to save him.

Today, those three hospitals are shells of themselves – old, cruddy, empty shells. I have not been inside the LUTH or the ABUTH in a while, but I was at the UCH in 2007, visiting an ailing relative. It was the sorriest state in which a university teaching hospital could be. Should I talk about the sparse patients’ rooms or should I mention the apathetic attitude of the young doctors and nurses? Or maybe I should talk about the decrepit condition of the hospital as a whole - massive cobwebs in patients’ rooms, thick enough to trap an elephant; paint, faded and peeling off; the stench, oh, the acrid stench that permeated the air. You could get sick just by visiting that hospital. A doctor friend, who went through the UCH in our university days over 20 years ago, told me that there was less equipment in the UCH today than there was when he went through. Wow!

Technology in general, and medical technology in particular, have made many advances, nay, revolutionary strides, that it is criminal for our foremost medical establishments to remain consigned to pre-historic medical practices.

Already, Nigerians have had to live with the embarrassment of the wife of a sitting president, Stella Obasanjo, dying in a foreign hospital bed while undergoing a “tummy tuck” – a cosmetic operation that is so very routinely performed in many countries. Former Bayelsa State governor, Alamieyeseigha, walked around with a bleeding stomach from a “tummy tuck” that could have been performed in Nigeria.

What if Yar Adua had died (God forbid) in Wiesbaden? How do we explain to the world that with all the medical brains in Nigeria, the oil money and the grandiose National Hospital, in Abuja, our president sought medical care abroad (in Wiesbaden, of all places!) and died there? How do we explain that to posterity? And if Yar Adua can easily jet out to Germany for treatment, what about the rest of the 150 million (or so) Nigerians? Who do they call when they are seriously ill? Did I say “call”? Does anyone even know the Emergency telephone numbers in Nigeria? Where do Nigerians go when they are at their medical tether’s end?

In 2002, my friend’s sister and another young lady – Bukky (not her real name) - about 25 years old, visited my friend and I at the D’Rovans hotel in Ibadan. We strolled to the Suya spot right outside the hotel’s gates and purchased some Suya. All four of us ate the delicious Suya with my friend and me washing it down with some cold gulder beer. Two days later when I saw my friend’s sister, I cursorily asked about her friend. “Oh, Bukky is in the hospital, you know?” She said. She told us that Bukky had suffered from diarrhea since the day after we all ate Suya. “It is very serious o”, she said.

About two days later, my friend and I visited the so-called hospital to see Bukky. It was not a hospital. It was one of those private clinics set up in residential neighborhoods by young doctors barely two years out of medical school, whose parents are wealthy enough to fund it. They specialize more in performing abortions than treating malaria. But to many people, it is a “private hospital” and it is synonymous with private care – something long absent in government hospitals. The problem with those kinds of private clinics though is that the doctor is usually inexperienced, has limited reference materials, has no colleague on whom he could bounce ideas about treatment, cares more about paying his clinic rent and so charges exorbitantly, and comes to work only when he feels like it.

On the day we went to see Bukky, she had been in the clinic for about a week. The doctor had seen her only once since the day she was brought in. Her condition was terrifying, to say the least. If I had never seen her before, I would never have known how much she had deteriorated. The gorgeous lady that we saw at D’Rovans had been reduced to a hollow, frail, wrinkled and dying body. She must have lost about 20lbs. in 4 days. Her eyes had sunk into their sockets, lips pulled apart and cheeks rarefied. The strangest thing was her abdomen. It protruded like she was 6 months pregnant! Just above her head was the Intra-Venous (IV) bag that was connected to her arm. This clinic was located in the Mokola area of Ibadan.

Her mother, who did not know who we were, told us that she had not eaten for days and the drips were all that she had received. I just KNEW that Bukky would never make it. My friend and I asked to speak with Bukky’s mother outside. We asked her if she could remove her daughter from that clinic and take her to a government hospital. She resisted at first, afraid that Bukky would be left to die at a government hospital. We pointed out to her that Bukky was dying in the private clinic anyway. The family, she said, had spent everything they had on Bukky. The clinic charged N2000 per day for the bed alone and they now owed N12,000 total. The cost of the drips and the doctor’s fees are charged separately. In fact, she said Bukky’s father had just left to borrow more money from friends. My friend and I offered to take care of the clinic’s bills if Bukky would be moved.

Bukky was moved to a government hospital in the Onireke area of Ibadan the next day. Three days after she arrived at the hospital, my friend, his sister and I visited her. The nurse at the Reception warned us about touching anything to avoid contracting diseases. In this hospital, Bukky shared a room with three other patients. As we entered the room, the thing that first caught my attention was the “bed.” Check this out: It was nothing but a tarpaulin stretcher placed on four short bamboo poles dug into the dirt floor of the hospital! A bucket was placed under the bed, right below the location of the patient’s buttocks. I looked over to a vacant “bed” and discovered that a hole, large enough, had been cut through the tarpaulin to allow patients do their toilet business. Bukky’s mother told us she was there to empty the bucket whenever Bukky used it. My mouth was agape. A plot of land in the Onireke area of Ibadan, if you found one for sale at all, would cost nothing less than N3 million.

Bukky looked at us and said softly: “thank you, sir.” Her mother, ever present at her side, also thanked us. Bukky had gotten back most of her strength and radiance in just three days! She was slightly embarrassed to be seen by strangers in her weakened condition, but we assured her that she was just like our sister. Just as we were about to leave, the doctor walked in. He must have been at least 60 years old. He was making his second and final round, checking on his patients before leaving for the day. He exuded experience and confidence. I thought I wouldn’t mind dying in the care of someone like him. I asked him what the problem was with Bukky. He told me he would let the patient tell us herself, but all he had to say was that she had been “miss-diagnosed” and therefore “miss-treated” at whatever medical facility she had been. “If she had not been brought here when she was, she would surely have died”, he concluded.

Bukky was one of the few who manage to survive common medical emergencies in Nigeria. Many have been buried prematurely because our health system is in shambles. I had not the foggiest idea what the problems were and neither did I know what solutions to proffer. But at the onset of President Yar Adua’s recent ailment, two distinguished Nigerian medical practitioners (Dr. Robert Sanda and Dr. Segun Adekale) exchanged illuminating email messages about the embarrassment. Their messages served to widen my horizon as regards our health system. What they said is enough to open your eyes. But if you can think deeper about what they did not say, you would become even a more knowledgeable person. I have asked one of them, Dr. Robert Sanda, to allow me to share with you excerpts of their messages. You will agree with me that parts of the problems with our health system are political, economical, grand official ineptitude, jealousy and institutionalized corruption, as with every thing else wrong with our country.

President Yar Adua needs to get well, wake up from the anesthetics that seem to have numbed the senses of successive administration officials and fix these issues. Sanda and Adekale are based in Saudi Arabia and Canada respectively:

 “The sad reality is that our professional fore-runners have created a gulf between them and the future generations of doctors. When resident doctors started agitating for better training opportunities in the mid-1980s it was those first generation of Nigerian doctors that betrayed us and made sure that the erstwhile mandatory overseas one year training for resident doctors at the level of senior registrars was not sponsored by the government and was stopped. This second generation of doctors that trained or graduated in the 1980s and early 1990s left the country in droves. The result is that the first generation was out of touch with new medical innovations and taught the third generation outdated stuff. I recall late Professor LJ Egler lamenting around 1995 that his knowledge of HIV research was 4 years behind because the medical library had no relevant journals in the preceding 4 years.

“I know the ex-President you were referring to…” (This was another previous Nigerian president that was misdiagnosed of his ailment until the diagnosis proffered by Dr. Adekale, which was ridiculed and rejected by his superiors in Nigeria at the time, was upheld in France and in Germany and the then ex-President was correctly treated in France!). “… And I know your eminent senior Professors at the time. These are the same grandiose men and women who would never admit to having gone wrong let alone admit that a junior colleague could be right. I recall the former chaplain of ABU protestant chapel, Cyril Okorocha ThD, lamenting the fact that Nigerian leaders would climb a height and then remove the ladder to make sure that nobody else caught up with them. This is the legacy of our medical forebears in Nigeria and though I know many people would feel offended by this statement from me, in my perception it is the reality on the ground. How else can you explain this scenario: a candidate for the primaries of the national postgraduate exams was told by his examiner that he would not be allowed to pass at his first attempt because the examiner passed at his fifth attempt? Or better still, a candidate was asked how many times he had read the book REVIEW OF MEDICAL PHYSIOLOGY by Ganong and when he replied that he read it twice from cover to cover, the examiner told him to come back after reading it five times from cover to cover. In other places, the examiners would let the candidate know his areas of weakness and advise him to focus on them and wish him good luck at his next exam. No, not in Nigeria! The more failures the merrier!

“Just recently a colleague from medical school had to bring his sister-in-law here in Saudi Arabia to remove an intra-maxillary sinus polyp because the consultant ENT (Ears, Nose and Throat) surgeon at the National Hospital, Abuja said he had no facilities for endoscopic nasal surgery. Right here, Hail General Hospital boasts of endoscopic nasal surgery sets, and endoscopic surgeries are an everyday thing. Yet the National Hospital in Abuja has to turn patients away. What a mess our health system is in. In a way this episode is a blessing in disguise as it should make the president aware of the staggering backwardness of the health system in Nigeria and look around for exceptional Nigerians to revive the health sector or we are all doomed. The N300 million shared shamelessly and sacrilegiously as Christmas bonus by the staff of the Ministry of Health last year by the holy name of Jesus Christ would have done the country a degree of good if, for example, half of it was spent buying endoscopic ENT equipments and sharing the same to all hospitals in Nigeria that have ENT doctors. The other half could have been spent in sending at least 30 to 40 Nigerian ENT surgeons for short courses of between 6 to 12 months, and fewer ENT patients would have to leave the country for treatment in places like Saudi Arabia.”

 

Since the ABUTH, UCH and LUTH have been relegated to the status of glorified clinics, I visited the website of the so-called doyen of Nigeria’s hospitals – the National Hospital, Abuja. It was founded in 1999.

Here is their “Mission Statement”: We are the flagship of the medical institutions in Nigeria and endowed with sophistication in men and materials. Our corporate objective is to provide a friendly atmosphere for the care of all discerning patients without discrimination. We serve with empathy for the sick and devotion to duty. Our services are prompt, courteous, comprehensive, efficient and effective.

The “flagship of medical institutions in Nigeria”? The…The… Flagship? If they are the most important and the most prestigious (for that is the meaning of “flagship”) then we are in deep trouble. “…Sophistication in men and materials”? Yet we are unable to properly diagnose the ailment of our No1 citizen? “…Comprehensive, efficient and effective”? Haba! Give me a break.

The problem is not that our doctors are intellectually deficient. Lack of resources in our medical establishments, to include even the lack of modern equipment in our teaching hospitals, seems to me to be a major contributing factor to this malaise. I know too many Nigerian doctors, young and old, who come to the United States after being denied employment, pay raise or even promotion, take the requisite certifying Board examinations and pass in flying colors on their first attempt, and go on to become indispensable in their fields. Dr. Sanda reminded me of Dr. Janeth Chiaka Ejike, based in California, USA, who received a prestigious award at the third congress of the World Society for the Abdominal Compartment Syndrome (WSACS) held in Belgium in 2007. Dr. Sanda and Dr. Chiaka are the only Nigerians on this international body. Chiaka would never have been so recognized if she had remained in Nigeria. In fact, she might have spent half of her life hopping from one jail to another if she agitated for her rights like many of our bright minds have had to do.

 

Abiodun Ladepo

Uijongbu, South Korea

Oluyole2@yahoo.com

 

 

 

 



Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 02.05.2008 00:29


You should have, like every other proud
Nigerian, been embarrassed, maybe even sad and disa...Read the full article.

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Bunch17Bunch17 is offline

 # 2 | 02.05.2008 07:14

I read the article with interest. I found it difficult to follow the writers line of thought but I did notice his frustrations. He made some valid points about the state of our health care services, he showed a lot of ignorance about the practice of medicine and was contradictory in some areas. He utilised a lot of personal anecdotes to try to get his points across which is obviously wrong. Though some times touching areas such as the funding of health care institutions in Nigeria, I got the distinct impression that his rage was targeted at health care professionals.

Overall, I will give a D minus.

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aguabataaguabata is offline

 # 3 | 02.05.2008 14:35

The misdiagnosed story could be a lie? Yaradua allegedly has Churg strauss syndrome (officially unconfirmed and could also be a lie) and has specialist doctors managing him in Weisbaden. He has had the rare illness for a while.His personal physician would be monitoring him in Aso rock and be in a position to declare an emergency and scurry him off to Germany on the presidential jet. The writer starts by painting a bleak picture of weisbaden but failed to say anything about the hospital and its world status on the area of medicine that our president is allegedly suffering from. The health system in nigeria is in tatters so is our prisons, universities, police,secondary schools,customs etc. Will i be ashamed if our president dies in a foreign hospital? hell no. Could the presidents ailment skew his policies to favour the health sector? yes.

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Bode EluyeraBode Eluyera is offline

 # 4 | 02.05.2008 17:44

Here comes Nigeria's MESSIAH, Alhaji Shehu Yaradua, the MOST competent president with VERY BIG vision, INCLUDING PLUS VISION 2020, that Nigeria has ever had. Very soon, 'Mr GO SLOW' will lead 140 million Nigerians out of the wilderness in next 200 years! Yawa!!!

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DewdropsDewdrops is online

 # 5 | 02.05.2008 17:58



You should have even been doubly embarrassed if you learned that your president’s ailment had been repeatedly “misdiagnosed” in Nigeria. It took a hapless physician in Wiesbaden – Wiesbaden, for Christ’s sake - to correctly diagnose Yar Adua’s ailment. I am in shock.

There was a time in Nigerian history when the University College Hospital (UCH) in Ibadan was the authority on health problems. There was a time when the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) in Lagos was the authority on health problems in Nigeria. There was a time when the Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital (ABUTH) in Zaria served as the last word on health issues in Nigeria. If you were literally on your death knell, you went to the ABUTH, or the LUTH or the UCH. If they could not fix you up there, you died a noble death, knowing that the best brains and hands in the business tried their best. My father died in the hands of such doctors at the ABUTH in 1978 at age 42, and the entire family felt satisfied that the doctors did the best they could to save him.

Today, those three hospitals are shells of themselves – old, cruddy, empty shells. I have not been inside the LUTH or the ABUTH in a while, but I was at the UCH in 2007, visiting an ailing relative. It was the sorriest state in which a university teaching hospital could be. Should I talk about the sparse patients’ rooms or should I mention the apathetic attitude of the young doctors and nurses? Or maybe I should talk about the decrepit condition of the hospital as a whole - massive cobwebs in patients’ rooms, thick enough to trap an elephant; paint, faded and peeling off; the stench, oh, the acrid stench that permeated the air. You could get sick just by visiting that hospital. A doctor friend, who went through the UCH in our university days over 20 years ago, told me that there was less equipment in the UCH today than there was when he went through. Wow!

Technology in general, and medical technology in particular, have made many advances, nay, revolutionary strides, that it is criminal for our foremost medical establishments to remain consigned to pre-historic medical practices.

Already, Nigerians have had to live with the embarrassment of the wife of a sitting president, Stella Obasanjo, dying in a foreign hospital bed while undergoing a “tummy tuck” – a cosmetic operation that is so very routinely performed in many countries. Former Bayelsa State governor, Alamieyeseigha, walked around with a bleeding stomach from a “tummy tuck” that could have been performed in Nigeria.


http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/index.php/content/view/9099/55



Well, you can't blame us too much. Too busy fighting British Airways. I am happy that Yaradua is facing what the common man in Nigeria is facing too. He too has been richly rewarded by the excellence of the "Nigerian---Say Your Last Prayer-- Healthcare" system. Now he will use all his "Nigerian" wealth to travel frequently to some village in Germany to by some more time on earth. I wish millions of Nigerians had that privileged too instead of dying "after a brief illness" always.

Yet, the Ex-Minister of Health or should I say Death reportedly had a 300million Naira surplus to share amongst her circle of friends in 2007 while cobwebs occupy oxygen tanks and mattresses of so called health care facilities.

What kind of wickedness is this even to ourselves? And people are signing petitions all over the place against BA and other foreign airlines, while countless of Nigerians die from the selfishness/maltreatment of the so-called leaders we should be so proud to have, including the ones who will not patronize Nigerian hospitals but choose to hop on private jets to villages in Germany. While majority of Nigerians cannot afford simple drugs to treat a headache.

THE RICH ALSO CRY!!!!

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LadepoLadepo is offline

 # 6 | 03.05.2008 06:36

(1) The personal anecdotes were intended to dilute the abstractness of the piece. Too many important articles lose their import because they are written like a thesis. The intent here was to make it "readable".
(2) Again, there is nothing spectacular about Wiesbaden...not even its two mid-sized hospitals. This was not the first time that Yar' Adua flew to Germany for medical care. But it was the first time, since becoming president, that he flew to Wiesbaden.
(3) Nothing should be difficult to understand here. The rage, if any, is directed at healthcare administrators. Very simple, I would think.

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Bunch17Bunch17 is offline

 # 7 | 03.05.2008 08:22


=Ladepo;4295013320>(1) The personal anecdotes were intended to dilute the abstractness of the piece. Too many important articles lose their import because they are written like a thesis. The intent here was to make it "readable".
(2) Again, there is nothing spectacular about Wiesbaden...not even its two mid-sized hospitals. This was not the first time that Yar' Adua flew to Germany for medical care. But it was the first time, since becoming president, that he flew to Wiesbaden.
(3) Nothing should be difficult to understand here. The rage, if any, is directed at healthcare administrators. Very simple, I would think.



Dear Ladepo,

Thank you for taking time to respond to the issues that I and other posters have made in response to your write up. I apologise for my rather caustic response.

I must say that your rage was very obvious in your article, I must point out a few areas where I think you ered.

1) We have no evidence that Yaradua was misdiagonsed in Nigeria. All we have is a statement from a politico. Unfortunately, the doctors if they wished cannot take issues with the report because of patient confidentiality.

2) No one clinician is perfect. That is why you have a system where one refers to another clinician if he or she is stumped.

3) It is not every time that a condition presents classically. The symptomatology of a disease is continually evolving , eg in Shingles, the pain can present up to 10 days before the classical rash, so while the first physician has a difficulty in making a diagnosis, the last one is actually given the diagnosis on a platter. It does not make him a better clinician than the first one.

4) That he is in a hospital that mainly caters for elderly patients is perfectly understandable. These individuals often have several chronic medical problems making their treatment somewhat complex.

5) If that hospital has a world renowned specialist in Yaradua's area of need, there is no reason why he cannot be treated there.

6) I mentioned your article being contradictory in some places, here is an example, In one part you described a betrayal by some doctors who went abroad and towards the tail end, you pointed out some examples of people who would not have reached the pinnacles of their careers.

7) You described apathy by Doctors and nurses in the Government hospital you went to, but did you know that these chaps are often not paid there wages sometimes up to six months?

I have to point out that the problem of health care delivery is multifactorial and not just caused by the medical administrators. Yes there are problems atributable to the government and health care professional, but there are also problems atributable to those who use the services too. One day I hope to be in a position to outline these problems.

Finally,how can one expect , the health care services to remain the same when other aspects of Nigeria are in a state of decay? The same value system that gave us OBJ, Andy Ubah, Etteh etc cannot be expected to produce a "first class" health care system.

Peace.

PS:

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10Kobo10Kobo is offline

 # 8 | 04.05.2008 17:47


=Dewdrops;4295013179>Well, you can't blame us too much. Too busy fighting British Airways. I am happy that Yaradua is facing what the common man in Nigeria is facing too. He too has been richly rewarded by the excellence of the "Nigerian---Say Your Last Prayer-- Healthcare" system. Now he will use all his "Nigerian" wealth to travel frequently to some village in Germany to by some more time on earth. I wish millions of Nigerians had that privileged too instead of dying "after a brief illness" always.

Yet, the Ex-Minister of Health or should I say Death reportedly had a 300million Naira surplus to share amongst her circle of friends in 2007 while cobwebs occupy oxygen tanks and mattresses of so called health care facilities.

What kind of wickedness is this even to ourselves? And people are signing petitions all over the place against BA and other foreign airlines, while countless of Nigerians die from the selfishness/maltreatment of the so-called leaders we should be so proud to have, including the ones who will not patronize Nigerian hospitals but choose to hop on private jets to villages in Germany. While majority of Nigerians cannot afford simple drugs to treat a headache.

THE RICH ALSO CRY!!!!



You said well in everything EXCEPT that you mischievously chose to INVOKE the over-flogged...."Mr. Omotade's BA protest", into an otherwise incisive response!

What is your 'personal beef' with this chap? Let him be and lets move-on.
Hmmmm.....
Different strokes, for different folks, abi? :confused1
Cheers

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mingimingi is offline

 # 9 | 13.05.2008 21:00

Mr ladepo, Thanks for your write-up. You just replicated my thoughts about our health care system. I am a doctor practicing in the UK for the past 9 years ( I also worked as a doctor in Nigeria for about 3years post med School).
Last year, I lost my elder brother in a ?private clinic in yenegoa. It opened my eyes to how much misdiagnoses patients are left to contend with in nigerian hospitals. He was 58yrs old. He came back from work breathless and was rushed to the "best ?private clinic. He was given intravenous ADRENALINE even though his BP was over 180/110 ( The doctor told me this over the phone when I called to make enquiries about the circumstances surrounding his death). The injection of this drug most likely aggravated his condition and induced a cardiac arrythmia. He was subsequently defibriillated (shocked) even though there was no ECG or cardiac monitor to show what rythm he was in. It is my belief that he was shocked for the benefit of relatives present.
To make matters worse. My family was treated with utmost disdain by the hospital when I arrived Nigeria for the funeral about 2 months later. I had visited the clinic in the company of my wife to find out exactly what happened. The MD (an ortopaedic surgeon) had without tact told me that my brother was moribound and would have died even if he was taken to the best clinic in Europe ( My brother was talking when he arrived the clinic). I felt he said that to impress my wife who is white and also a UK based doctor. She was horrified and told him what she felt the hospital had done wrong. Trust Nigerians. Our doctors know all and will never admit their faults.
Until the culture of medical litigation is ingrained in our people, such negligence,misdiagnosis and unprofessional behaviour will go on unhindered ( This is ironic because my dad will not allow me to sue the hospital and also report the doctor to the Nigerian Medical and Dental Council because doctor is from our village). Can you beat that?

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10Kobo10Kobo is offline

 # 10 | 14.05.2008 09:20

Mingi,
Sorry about your Brother. Accept my sympathy.
Your story is very touching and towards the end, the you stated the reaction of your old man.

To sue or not to sue the hospital (abi na clinic sef?)
Your old man's mind-set, as with most people at home, on the ground, might go thus:

Our closed-community style cultural set-up might mean that "na dat Papa Mingi-boy wey go abroad no want make our illustrous Dokita son to also prosper; This Mingi-family is so wicked :D That how folks think.

Secondly, God forbid, if GrandPa was ill all of a sudden, where or who will they call or take him to, for "first-line-of-defense" medical attention? You, in Obodo-Oyinbo or this same mistake-ridden Doctor in his neighbourhood?

The answer is obvious and would GrandPa jeopardize his limited chances (bearing in mind that our dear Dokita can get it right some or most times but no all the times!) by allowing you to rightly seek redress but alienate an otherwise cordial and potentially life-saving relationship? (our Doctors dont really have any relationship with their patients, the only relationship seems to be with the wads of naira the patient can put on the table :D)

Think about these or would you rather pack-up and come home to improve the situation? (9 years is a long time to be outside :D)

The same issue was highlighted in the case of Malawi where the Country is in dire need of Doctors as they have all relocated to UK but do we blame them?

Can you ever imagine doing your surgical operations, using candle-light and native intelligence since all those nice and sexy looking equipments wont just come-up without electricity (Generator ke? Even the noise and fumes is enough to kill a convalescing patient :D )

Cheers and remain blessed.
10Kobo
 

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