1/ In the late 90’s, my friend’s younger sister had an appendectomy at a hospital in either Nsukka or Enugu, I forget which. At some point during surgery, according to my friend, there was a power outage and the doctors wrapped up by flashlight.
2/ My friend’s sister survived and the story of her surgery by flashlight has become a dinner table anecdote. Some years ago, a woman I knew in Belgium returned to Nigeria to process the papers for her two children in Benin City to join her and her new husband in Europe.
3/ It was the beginning of summer. She had hoped to be done on time for the children to be in Belguim for the first day of school in September. On her last day in Nigeria, she was in a car accident and was heavily injured.
4/ By all accounts, she would not have died had she been given adequate treatment. Since last week, #Justiceforpeju and #JusticeforOmolara have been trending.
5/ Mrs. Peju Ugboma and Omolara Omoyajowo are both, tragically, the latest victims of a healthcare system that has been in shambles for so long it is impossible to imagine that there was ever a time when things were different.
6/ In Ugboma’s case, the private hospital in Lagos she was admitted to and where she apparently suffered internal bleeding after an elective surgery, did not have a CT scanner.
7/ In Omoyajowo’s case, the hospital in Ogun State where she had been a patient for two years did not even have her medical history and did not have an ambulance available for her when they wanted her moved to another facility because her condition was critical.
8/ They asked her friend to move her in a private car and to keep the windows down for air ( because they could not send an oxygen concentrator with her).
9/ Twitter users have been posting too of their own horrific experiences with hospitals in Nigeria, losing friends and families because hospitals did not have basic amenities one would expect a hospital to have: blood , power supply, oxygen tanks.
10/ Why are we even shocked when Buhari’s wife told us that Aso Rock clinic did not have ordinary band aid. And yet, things were not always this terrible
11/ According to Global Citizen’s Akindele Okunola, “Nigeria’s health care system has gone from being comparable to the rest of the world in the 70s and early 80s, to one of the world’s most underfunded and least robust."
12/ Per 2018 figures from the World Bank , Naija's public spending on healthcare is only 3.89% of its $495 billion GDP. For Naija to reach the global average of 2.7 beds per 1000 people, it's got to seriously invest: an additional 386,000 beds and tens of billions of $
13/ That investment does not seem like one the government is prepared to make. Not while those in charge can travel abroad for their physicals and treatment. Why invest where they can’t benefit?
14/ In 1983, when the military took over, one of their grievances and one they were allegedly willing to tackle was healthcare, because, "our teaching hospitals have been reduced to mere consulting clinics.” Almost forty years later, very little has changed.
14/ According to the Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA), Nigerians spend $1Billion annually on medical tourism. Those who can’t travel abroad but can afford private hospitals, do so.
15/ However, the private hospitals dotting the country don’t appear to be doing much better. Ugboma and Omoyajowo were both patients of private hospitals. Out of curiosity, I looked up the requirements for setting up a private hospital in Nigeria and have it accredited.
16/ Unsurprisingly, one of the requirements is that the hospital must have proper and satisfactory equipment. I am not a medical practitioner but a CT scanner and oxygen tanks all seem like ‘proper and satisfactory equipment’ for a hospital to have.
17/ And in a country like Nigeria where we have frequent power failures, a backup generator most certainly falls into the category of ‘proper and satisfactory’ equipment. So how are these hospitals being allowed to operate? Who or what is policing them?
18/ Apart from dealing with poorly equipped hospitals, there are also terrible stories of hospitals turning patients back for not having enough money on them to pay for an admission card or in public hospitals, charging patients for services that are supposedly free.
19/ A 2020 survey of public hospitals in Abuja by Tap Initiative for Citizens Development in collaboration with Dataphyte, revealed that in the FCT's public hospitals , patientswere being asked to pay for bed space, consultancy fee, lab. fees and the “movement of files”.
20/ The sad thing is that this is hardly surprising. Bribery and corruption is so ubiquitous in Nigeria, one can almost refer to it as a Naija cultural habit. In cases of life and death, this cultural habit is beyond cruel.
21/ That Nigeria needs urgent healthcare reform is not in doubt. Affordable healthcare for all ( we can dream) and well equipped (private and public) hospitals. What we also need is to see medical malpractice punished.
22/ However, there is a feeling that in many cases, patients do not even recognize negligence and when they do, are not completely aware of their rights to take negligent practitioners to court.
23/ I am not advocating for a ridiculously litigious situation like in the US, God forbid bad thing, but rather one where medical negligence is treated like the serious offence that it is.
#Justiceforpeju #Justiceforomolara. May their souls Rest in Peace.

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More from @chikaunigwe

22 Apr
1/ This week, a video of five female students of Oreyo Senior Grammar School, Igbogbo Ikorodu, Lagos State, smoking shisha in what is presumably a private home went viral.
2/ In the video, the students are in school uniform, so they either sneaked out of school or they are day students who detoured after school to someone’s place for a hookah smoking session rather than return home.
3/ I read somewhere that the girls have been suspended. I've never been in favour of removing students from the classroom unless they are violent (and/or disruptive). Suspensions (and expulsions) are often not effective forms of punishment (a discussion for another day).
Read 23 tweets
16 Apr
1/ So Jack of Twitter, carried his business to Ghana and the Giant of Africa is raking because how dare he leave Nigeria with all its resources; human and otherwise to go and land in Ghana where their jollof is rubbish?
2/ Thing is though, that no matter how many more Twitter users Naija has than Ghana (36 million, almost 4 million more than the entire population of Ghana) an argument I have heard more times than I care to count, Jack owes us nothing.
3/ He is free to set his headquarters wherever he thinks it makes good business or personal sense for him to do so. Maybe he just likes Ghana. Maybe he wants it in a place where he’s not having to invest in security details and power supply
Read 17 tweets
1 Apr
‘The African Woman’ (For The ‘Real’ African Man)
1/ Never talk about African women as if they were individuals. Remember: they are a monolithic group. There is the African Woman of which there are two subgroups: the Bad African Woman (BAW) and the Good African Woman (GAW).
2/ Members of each group are easy to spot: The Bad African Woman is a feminist which means that she hates men and spends her days pretending to be happy and her nights crying in loneliness because she has put career before marriage.
3/ Note: it doesn’t matter whether she’s married or not, that’s beside the point. For her, always use adjectives like ‘bitter’, ‘frustrated’, ‘sad’.
Read 24 tweets
31 Mar
1/If you have the heart for it, and you understand Igbo, you can watch/listen to the original interview here. It's heartbreaking : bbc.com/igbo/afirika-5…
2/ How is he justifying domestic violence, sexual assault? In the name of culture? Whose culture? And women should be flattered when they are sexually harassed?
3/ How can he, working in the industry that he does , with smart, intelligent women, acting in movies with such women , even directed by such women come out and say that women have small brains. And imply that they are less intelligent (than men?)
Read 4 tweets
19 Mar
On Sunday, African Giant, Burna Boy won his first Grammy for Best Global Music, and Wizkid’s collaboration with Beyonce (and her nine-year-old daughter) won Best Music Video. Nigerians were ecstatic.
Even Tiwa Savage and the two Kuti brothers, Femi and Made, whose collaboration with Coldplay would have won them certificates (rather than Grammy statuettes) had it won (which it didn’t) were being congratulated on Twitter by Naijans for winning. All win na win abeg.
I am not being facetious. Far from it. It's easy for us, now, to take the fact of Nigerian music going global for granted. H/ever, those of us who were born in the 70’s and came of age in the 90’s know exactly how big a deal it is -
Read 21 tweets
5 Mar
I woke up (earlier this week) to the good news that the 279 girls kidnapped last week from Government Girls Junior Secondary School (GGJSS), Jengebe, Zamfara State, had been released.
I had my piece for this week all ready and had to discard it, but I have never been more grateful for a curve ball being thrown at me. When the news of their abduction broke, parallels were immediately drawn with that of the Chibok girls which happened seven years ago.
Everyone wondered if in 2028, the Zamfara girls would still be in captivity. Of the 276 girls kidnapped by Boko Haram from Government Secondary School Chibok in 2014, 103 were released, 57 fled and four later escaped while 112 are still missing.
Read 20 tweets

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