
"This piece is a hard one for me to
write, hard and very difficult. As I
write this, I am filled with deep sorrow
for what could have been that was not.
This piece is not intended to do
anything but to warn unsuspecting
members of the public. A warning that
is necessary at this time because “evil
deeds thrive when good men do
nothing”
My discourse is centered on the level of
mismanagement, inefficiency and a
total lack of respect for life exhibited by
management and staff of EKO Hospital
on Mobolaji Bank Anthony Way, Ikeja.
My friend’s wife, Dolapo, a young
mother of 2 boys, with a promising
banking career with Wema bank,
pregnant with the 3rd child had
complained of leg pains to her husband
on Tuesday, March 31, 2015. Her
husband took her to the EKO Hospital
for treatment (their registered HMO
provider), they were told that the leg
pains were normal for pregnant women
at her stage and were subsequently
given some paracetamol tablets to use.
Getting home, the pains did not subside,
in fact, it grew worse. It got to a point
that she could not walk with the legs on
her own. The husband had no choice
but to return to the hospital on Friday
April 3, 2015 at around 3pm when it
was obvious things were not getting
better. At that point, The doctor on
duty advised them to wait for the
consultant and Dolapo was made to sit
out the ‘’wait’’ in a wheelchair as her
legs could no longer support and carry
her, in any case the consultant did not
show up until Saturday afternoon being
04/04/2015. She repeatedly beckoned on
the staff on duty to perform a CS and
safely get the baby out as she could
sense and feel that something was
ominously wrong. The pregnancy was
well into 8 months. Some scan were
recommended and the person to
conduct the scan had reportedly closed
for the day and only surfaced at about
9pm on Friday and the wait dragged
well into the night.
Dolapo was in pains on the wheel chair,
she was being moved from her ward to
the scanning room when the head of
the baby came out on the wheel chair,
her husband screamed and rushed her
quickly into the elevator, yes,
ELEVATOR!!. The baby could not stand
the trauma, he came out in transit, right
there in the elevator. A nurse had to
hold the baby’s head, supporting it
while the elevator goes to labour
theatre, the baby was pulled out before
they could make it to the theatre. This
was at 9.30pm on Friday. The baby
became the centre of attention for the
hospital staff of Duty while neglecting
Dolapo all alone for more than 1 hr 30
mins while they attended to the baby to
revive him.
She was left unattended to, in pains,
right there in the theatre. She was
eventually moved back to her ward. The
consultant eventually turned up around
4pm on Saturday. The husband engaged
him and he requested that some tests be
done to ascertain what level of
treatment or care to give. He was told
she (the wife) would be fine and the test
results would be ready by Tuesday
because of the holidays.
On Sunday, April 5, 2015, at about
8am in the morning, I visited her in the
hospital and sat beside her on the bed
offering words of encouragements. She
was still in pains, and she was hardly
audible, she could only answer in nods
and made attempts at a faint smile to
reassure myself and her husband that
she would be fine.
It came as a rude shock when I called
the husband at about 12 pm and he was
crying profusely, saying Dolapo is lying
down lifeless and that I should please
pray. I was to say the least devastated, I
was asking loads and loads of questions
and he kept saying please pray, pray.
I got to the hospital to meet the lifeless
body on the bed, she was dead! What
happened? How did this happen?
Nobody could offer any explanation.
There was no doctor around, I asked the
nurse on duty and she just said she is
dead. I recalled she was eating when I
left earlier, how could she have gone
from eating to being dead in less than 3
hrs?
The husband told me she was given an
injection to suppress the pains on her
leg and immediately started gasping for
breath, oxygen tanks were brought in to
revive her but it was too late. She was
gone before anything could be done.
The body was left in the room for more
than 24 hours, several prayer sessions
were held to bring her back to life. In
the more than 24 hrs period after her
death, no doctor from EKO Hospital
came out to say this was what
happened. No personnel came around
to ask people to leave the room, the
body was not covered nor washed. It
was simply business as usual for them.
It was normal for someone to give birth
and die? The Medical Director of the
hospital did not deem it fit to offer
explanation or even try to prevail on
the family to leave the body so that
necessary medical procedures could be
done.
I will leave my readers to ask questions
from this write up, perhaps, I am being
too expectant, maybe too optimistic
about my expectations from a Hospital
as reputable as EKO Hospital!
The family has accepted their fate and
decided to move on…. But should we
move on? Should we just accept this as
normal? I was talking to a friend in my
office yesterday and was shocked when
he informed me that his wife also died
in this same EKO Hospital some 6 years
back and the same treatment was meted
out on him!
Please pass this story around, let people
know what is going on, don’t stop until
it gets to the right quarters where
something could be done to save others
and get doctors and hospitals to be
more responsive to their duties of
saving lives and not taking lives.
Dolapo is gone but who knows who will
be next?????"
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