Ebola Scare: Lagos Hospitals Reject Patients Civilians Denied Access into Military Hospitals.
Scared
stiff of the Ebola virus especially in some Lagos hospitals, the
military has secretly ordered its health care workers to stop attending
to civilians at its hospitals across the country.
In
most military hospitals in Nigeria, civilians account for less than 80
per cent of the patients that are attended to on a daily basis, meaning
that the order will be depriving a sizeable number of Nigerians from
accessing medical care from the military hospitals.
A
source close to the military told THISDAY that the instruction was
handed down in a memo to all Nigerian Air Force hospitals in the country
last Friday in memo titled, “Order to Unit Order”.
According
to the source, “Such a memo can only be from above and it clearly
stated that henceforth all NAF hospitals are to stop attending to
civilians seeking medical care at our hospitals”.
THISDAY
gathered that the NAF hospital along the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway has
begun the implementation of the order by turning back civilians at its
gate.
An outpatient at the hospital said: “I got there
on Monday and to my surprise, I was not allowed beyond the gate. I
learnt that there was an Ebola scare in the hospital and the military
does not want such a development in their environment.”
The source
added: “I saw people picking cards when I got there, but they were all
turned back. It’s sad that the military authorities are doing this to
us.”
THISDAY made phone calls to the military high
command for a confirmation of the story, but calls to the mobile number
of the Director of Defence Information, Major General Chris Olukolade,
went to voicemail.
A text message sent to the mobile number was not responded to either.
In
a related development, most Lagos hospitals are still turning down
requests from patients to be treated of ailments unrelated to Ebola,
because of the fear that their health workers may contract the disease.
Yesterday,
a patient was left to die at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital
(LUTH) without attention because the nurses thought she had the Ebola
virus.
The patient, a pastor in one of the Redeemed
Christian Church of God (RCCG) parishes identified as Solomon Olayanju,
was taken to LUTH on Monday after he was referred there from a private
hospital.
According to a relative of the deceased, he
developed high temperature overnight and was taken to a nearby private
hospital last Friday where they tried to stabilise him before referring
him to LUTH.
“He had a high temperature last Friday and
we took him to a private hospital from where they referred us to LUTH.
At LUTH, the pastor was abandoned to die without care. The doctors
didn’t show up to attend to him. The doctor simply prescribed drugs for
him through a phone call to the nurse,” said Bonny Oriarehu, a close
associate of the deceased.
THISDAY’s frantic effort to
get LUTH to respond equally proved abortive. The hospital’s Public
Relations Officer, Mrs. Hope Nwalolo, didn’t pick her calls, nor did she
respond to a text message.
Also THISDAY gathered that
more patients are dying in many hospitals due to their inability to
access medical care based on the fear that they might have contracted
Ebola.
A nurse with the Lagos State Government hospital
in Alimosho Local Government Area told THISDAY that patients are
usually assessed from the gate and asked to turn back, if they are
discovered to have a fever.