According to Leadership paper, Mr. Ahmed
Sani, 38, father of conjoined twins that died at the National Hospital, Abuja,
last weekend, has accused the management of the hospital of not acting promptly
to separate the set of twins.
Sani, who narrated his
ordeal to Leadership Weekend during the period the babies were in the
hospital, said they were dumped in the hospital for four days without even a
scan carried out on them or telling him how much was needed for their
separation.
“They said they were
carrying out some tests and that I should go and come back on Monday because
even if I decided to come on Sunday, I won’t find anyone to attend to me. So
they demanded my contact which I gave them including that of my wife and even
those of some of my relatives before I left.
“I went to the hospital
on Monday and they apologised for not being able to reach me, claiming that all
efforts to reach me proved abortive. That was when they told me that the babies
died on Sunday.”
Sani said he demanded the
bodies of the babies so that he could bury them according to his religion but
the hospital begged him to return after three hours so that they could use the
dead babies for experiment. “I came back after three hours and discovered that
they had separated the dead bodies,” he stated.
A source disclosed to
Leadership Weekend that the babies probably died of hunger because, while at
the Mararaba Medical Centre, they were fed with baby food since their mother
could not breastfeed them. “But at the National Hospital, they were not fed for
the four days that they survived.”
The source further
claimed that a consultant paediatrician at the National Hospital, whom the
babies were handed over to, claimed that they were brought on a weekend and
that was why they were not attended to. The babies were taken to the hospital
at 4pm on Thursday, January 3, 2012.
When contacted, the
public relations officer of the National Hospital, Prince Tope Haastrup,
confirmed that the babies died on Sunday and were taken to the mortuary. “That
is all I have to say, I can’t speak further on it.”
The president of the
Nigerian Medical Association, Dr. Osahon Enabulele, said he was going to carry
out an investigation as to what happened at the National Hospital before he
could speak on the matter.
The medical
superintendent of the Mararaba Medical Centre, Dr. Angela Smart, said Safiya
Sani, the mother of the twins, was referred to the medical centre at about 10am
on Thursday, January 3, from Mararaba Primary Health Centre.
Dr. Tolulope Utele, a
consultant paediatrician, Garki Hospital, Abuja, said cases of conjoined twins
happens every 50,000 live births. A majority of them face still birth or die
shortly after birth.
The survival rate of
conjoined twins is about 25 per cent. They are more likely to survive when they
are together than when you separate them.
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