Heavens
smiled on Mr. David Akingbehin, when his 45-year-old wife, Margaret, told him
she was pregnant.
After their last one was born 12 years ago, the couple had tried
to have another for more than a decade without success.
“When we learnt she was pregnant, we were overjoyed,” David told
our correspondent.
He said they agreed that the gift from heaven must be well taken
care of. So, Margaret registered for ante-natal at the Lagos University
Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, Lagos.
“She never missed her ante-natal appointments. In fact, medical
officials at LUTH commended her for her regular attendance. She went there
every Thursday. We knew she was due between February and March,” David told Saturday PUNCH at their home in Kofoworola Street,
Jakande Estate, Isolo Lagos on Sunday.
On February 28, 2013, Margaret started feeling some pains in her
tummy.
Our correspondent learnt that she quickly picked her purse, took
her hospital card, drove her Sport Utility Vehicle to LUTH since it was her
appointment day.
On the way, she called her husband, who was not around at the
time, to inform him that she was on her way to the hospital.
David narrated how expectant his family was about the child
Margaret was carrying.
He said, “We repainted the house, did some more decorations and
made a lot of adjustments to the home, just to ensure that our child comes into
a lovely house. We spent at least N2m, to show you how serious we were about
that child.
“The child was supposed to be the joy of our family. We wanted
to give everything we had to ensure the child was well taken care of.
“We actually decided she should register for ante-natal at LUTH
because friends had told us that since it is a federal hospital, they would
have capable hands who would ensure she had a safe delivery.”
But Margaret, who drove to the hospital in high spirits, never
came back home.
Even though David is mourning, the circumstances surrounding his
wife’s death have caused him to cry out for justice and demand answers to what
happened.
“The hospital staff killed my wife,” he simply told our
correspondent.
When our correspondent visited David, sympathisers and family
members surrounded him, consoling him and expressing their anger at the staff
of LUTH who allegedly left Margaret uncared for before she died.
Dabbing his eyes occasionally with a handkerchief, David
narrated what happened.
“A doctor who attended to Margaret two weeks ago during her
ante-natal appointment had told her that she was going to be delivered of the
baby through CS because of her age. We had already agreed that it was fine by
us.
“On that Thursday, my wife called me from the hospital and said
one Dr. Makwe had said she would be admitted and scheduled her for a Caesarean
Section. She even suggested to the doctors that she would come back on Monday
but I insisted that she should just stay there. I told her there was nothing
for her to do at home that I could not handle.
“The following morning, she had already paid all the necessary
bills. They had also secured a bed space for her. Around 6am that morning
(Friday), she called and said she was being moved to the labour ward,” he said.
According to David, by 7 am, he arrived the hospital with
the things his wife needed.
Margaret told him that a doctor who attended to her had
quarrelled with another doctor on duty for keeping her waiting.
David said, “My wife told me the doctor said it was an emergency
case, that they should have scheduled her for a CS right away. She said a
device was used to examine the breathing of the child and it was learnt that
the baby was in distress.
“But can you believe that since about 7am that the doctor
instructed that she should be scheduled for a CS, they did not make any attempt
to take her to the theatre until 2pm?
“She was delayed for those hours before she was moved to the
theatre. At this time, she was already having contractions. They took her to
the theatre and brought her back to the ward. They took her back on two
occasions. She had started experiencing serious pain at that point.”
David said as he agonised over the state of his wife, he learnt
that someone else had been rushed to the theatre, which was why his wife had to
be taken back to the ward.
He told Saturday
PUNCH he overheard some of
the nurses say in Yoruba, ‘We need to attend to staff first.”
He explained that the way they said it made it unclear whether
the patient who had displaced his wife was a wife of a staff member or an
employee.
It was learnt that when David started complaining about his
wife’s situation and how the medical personnel had neglected her, they asked
him to go out. At this point, Margaret was kept waiting at the pre-surgical
room of the theatre
David said, “They did not even care about her as she writhed in
pain. When they asked me to go out, I could even hear the nurses chatting. They
did not care about the pain she was feeling.
“While I was waiting outside, I think a nurse must have noticed
she was groaning. I heard someone say, ‘the baby’s head is showing, don’t
push’. But the baby later came out and it was found dead in the room. Some
moment later, my wife died in the same room and I did not know. They told me
nothing until about 4 pm.
“One of the nurses called me to go see Dr. Olorunfemi, who was
on duty. He could not even look at me in the face and tell me what happened. I
asked him what happened to my wife and he just held his head and said ‘sorry
sir.’ I told him immediately, ‘You people have killed my wife.”
The Akingbehin family has decided to petition the Medical
Council of Nigeria and the Chief Medical Director of LUTH. They insisted either
the hospital staff’s negligence or preferential treatment given to a patient
who displaced Margaret in the theatre killed her.
They said they needed the hospital to take responsibility for
her death and apologise, nothing more.
David is left to care for his two children at the moment. One
thing he said he would regret for the rest of his life was choosing LUTH as the
hospital where his wife would give birth.
But the hospital has denied abandoning Margaret at the time she
was supposed to undergo the CS.
Spokesperson for the hospital, Mrs. Hope Nwakolo, told our
correspondent on Wednesday, “It is true she was scheduled for an emergency CS
but when the deceased was taken to the theatre, two emergency surgeries were
being done there. So, the doctors had to wait until the ongoing surgeries were
completed.
“By the time it was her turn, she had developed complications
and it is truly unfortunate that her case turned out the way it did. Efforts
were made to rescusitate her without success.
Source: Punch
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