Tag: Adadevoh:

  • Ebola: Colleagues raise questions as NMA prepares to honour Adadevoh

    Ebola: Colleagues raise questions as NMA prepares to honour Adadevoh

    TRIBUTES poured endlessly during the week soon after Dr. Stella Adadevoh’s death became public. The Senior Consultant Physician at First Consultants Medical Centre Ltd gave up the ghost after she was infected by the deadly Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) by the late Liberian diplomat, Patrick Sawyer.

    While the now famed late female doctor’s life-style was likely to have been largely a private affair, her colleagues have thrown their weight behind her even at death, and declared her a heroine.

    According to the Vice Chairman of the Lagos State Medical Guild, Dr. Oseni Salau, he did not know her (the late Dr. Adadevoh) nor did he interact with her. “She worked at First Atlantic Consultants, while I work with the Lagos State Government. Our path never crossed. But as a colleague, I feel her death is an unfortunate one. Those doctors that are rendering medical services to these Ebola victims should be declared heroes. That is because they are the ones that have made it possible for us to be able to at least try to contain the disease. She, particularly, I mean the late Dr. Adadevoh from what I heard, resisted all entreaties from the Liberian Embassy for late Liberian Dr. Patrick Sawyer to be released from hospital.

    “If the Liberian had been released, he would have spread the disease all over the place. So the reality here is that, she and her colleagues were the first to attend to him and were vigilant to ensure that he does not leave the hospital to spread the virus.” On his part, the Secretary of the Nigerian Medical Association, Lagos State, Dr. Babajide Saheed told us that he did not know her personally, but he knew she was a Consultant with First Consultants Medical Centre. “I wish she is alive,” said the doctor, “As far as I am concerned, the family of those affected should be compensated because they are actually the ones that have contained the spread of Ebola disease this far. If they had allowed the man to move out, it would have been a worse situation now. Dr. Adadevoh is a hero but a big loss to her family.”

    As regard honour for the late Adadevoh, Dr. Salau, the Vice Chairman of Lagos State Medical Guild, said: “Well, she will be honoured. It will more likely be the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) that will do that. But as a guild, that may come up later when we have got full details of what has taken place and so on. But in the meantime, most of my colleagues and I agree that she is a heroine based on the fact that she prevented the man from spreading the disease around to the general public as he the Liberian Patrick Sawyer, intended.

    “Yes, we are already working on a befitting honour for her,” said the Secretary of the Lagos NMA, Dr. Babajide Saheed. “My colleagues and I will come up with something soon.”

    But while that arrangement is going on, the doctors are calling attention to more hair-raising issues about the outbreak of Ebola in the country and its management.

    For instance, Dr. Oseni Salau believes that the on-going doctors strike has really been a blessing in disguise because “if the strike was not on, Sawyer would probably had been taken to LASUTH. And I can bet you that not less than 10 doctors would have come in contact with him. There would also have been the possibility that the Medical Director of LASUTH would have come in contact with him and even the Lagos State Commissioner for Health too would have had to come in contact with him at the hospital because of his diplomatic nature. They would have contacted it.

    “And if we had got one patient that had it there in LASUTH, with the least information on Ebola as it were then, the thing would have gone around like wild fire. The truth is that, government should not blackmail us with resuming because of Ebola. The reality is that the lesser the number of people that get in contact with the Ebola patients, the better. For all those that are being cared for right now, they do not need more than five doctors to take care of them. So saying that the strike should be called off because of that is not related at all. Also, even if the strike is called off, what do we have on ground to prevent or protect us from the patients when they come to the hospital?”

    “This is exactly what the NMA is fighting for,” added Dr. Babajide Saheed. “Doctors deserve to have better allowances, most especially life insurance. It is sad that people do not understand this matter that doctors are fighting for. The doctors presently at the Ebola Centre are okay. They have gone through test and have been found negative. But from the study, they have to be monitored. Though they are said not likely to come up with the disease because they now have a defence mechanism against the disease. But they still have to be monitored for about 60 days. And that includes their blood and so on. After the 60 days, they can then be wholly confirmed to be negative. That life insurance has not been done by the government even as at today. It is very unimaginable that we are working without life insurance at this period in time.”

    Dr. Oseni Salau absolved the late Adadevoh of any negligence in protecting herself from the disease. “I do not think in any way that it was her fault to have contracted the disease. A doctor does not wear a glove for all patients, especially when there were no epidemic diseases in circulation. At the time the late Dr. Sawyer came around, when he was being interviewed, he denied ever coming in contact with any Ebola victim. He denied that he had ever interacted with anyone that has such. There was another issue about him urinating indiscriminately.

    “But the reality is that until now at hospitals, doctors were not really wearing gloves for all patients, unless of course they have their suspicions. Moreover, Ebola starts like malaria. Most doctors will not ordinarily wear gloves because they want to attend to a patient that has malaria. Even when you wear gloves, how about sitting on a seat that someone with Ebola has sat down or laid down on the bed that someone with Ebola has laid? So all those risks are always there.

    “There is also the possibility that Sawyer might have decided to pass the disease to those who did not let him go after all entreaties from his country’s embassy had fallen on deaf ears. The possibility is there. They resisted it and made sure he didn’t leave. Don’t forget that it is said that the man was urinating indiscriminately and even said to have spilled blood around. If that was the case, there is the possibility of deliberate attempt to unleash the disease on those that took care of him at the hospital. And you know, there were a thousand and one possibilities of how he could have passed it to late Dr. Adadevoh.

    “That is why we insist and ask for personal protective equipment. If the man had urinated on them, they probably rinsed it with water, not knowing that it was a tragedy. It was only much later that the awareness became more and people got better informed about Ebola.

    “The necessary gadgets should be made available for those that are caring for the patients. The government says that it has the protective gear, but we have not seen it. All we see are those shots of it taken in countries outside Nigeria. Where are the protective gadgets? Please, let the government bring out what they have and let those caring for those people use it. The Lagos State Government says it has 20 and the Federal Government claims it has 1,000. Are the Ebola victims in Abuja or Lagos? Let them (FG) send it down here.

    “From the normal operations of that place, you need 30 per day. So, if we have 20, where do we stand? I must tell you, it is not good enough. I have not been able to go in there, and they have not shown to us any of the patients that are there. Our people have been volunteering. Some of them are even working in there. A lot too are presently involved in advocacy and so on.

    “We have a committee in the NMA and in the Guild working on that. But those having direct contact with the patients must be well protected. We are not sure that they are well protected. Nobody is giving us that information. Right now, as I am talking to you, neither I nor the NMA Chairman has seen any of these patients. It shouldn’t be so. We are professionals; we are ready to do our work. We are also saying that the government should protect us too.”

    Dr. Babajide Saheed, the NMA Secretary, insisted that the Minister of Health lied when he recently said that the resident doctors are not part of those caring for the Ebola victims. “The minister lied that resident doctors are not part of those caring and managing the patients. That shows that the minister is not in tune with what is happening with Ebola response treatment. If he knows what is happening there, he wouldn’t have made such comments. It is unfortunate that a minister and a doctor should say such about his colleagues. He was once a resident doctor before he became a consultant and a minister. With that comment, he has successfully made the resident doctors working there to be devastated. He is trying to discourage a lot of people from responding to the volunteer call for eradication of Ebola.”

  • How to honour Adadevoh,by Azikiwe’s son

    How to honour Adadevoh,by Azikiwe’s son

    The Owelle of Onitsha, Chief Chukwuma  Azikiwe,  wants a permanent memorial established in honour of Dr Stella Adadevoh who lost her life to Ebola after treating  Liberian-American Patrick Sawyer.

    Azikiwe, a cousin of the late Dr. Adadevoh, also said she should be given the  highest  national honour and  the positive aspects  of her character and life be disseminated.

    In a tribute in Onitsha,the son of Nigeria’s first President, Dr.Nnamdi Azikiwe, described her as  “very kind, caring, and selfless.”

    “She also had discipline and steely determination,” he said  adding: “I am not surprised that her selfless compassion and steely discipline would  make her restrain Sawyer from escaping the hospital to probably spread the Ebola virus to epidemic proportions. This she did at  risk to her life.”

    Throwing light on the family background of Adadevoh, he said: “Her mother, Mrs Deborah Adadevoh,nee MacIntosh, is my cousin. Deborah’s grandmother, Okwuegbunam, nee  Azikiwe, is the immediate senior sister, same father same mother, of Obed Azikiwe, Zik’s father.

    “Ameyo was both my relation and pal.

    “Inspite of her upper class background, Ameyo was  very down to earth and  full of compassionate empathy for the disadvantaged and poor.

    “Even when she was a medical student at  LUTH, she used to tell me and my friends about the plight of some of her brilliant, but very poor school mates. She was one of my favourites among the younger generation of our cousins.

    “Ameyo’s father,  the late Professor Kwakwu Adadevoh, was the grandson of Herbert Macauley.

    Kwakwu’s mother was Herbert Macauley’s daughter.That made Ameyo Herbert Macauley’s great  grand daughter.”

    Professor Adedavoh  wasat different times, Vice Chancellor, University of  Lagos and  Director-General, Nigerian Institute for Medical Research, Yaba, Lagos.

  • Immortalise Adadevoh,  expert tells govt

    Immortalise Adadevoh, expert tells govt

    Vice-President of West African Region of the Commonwealth Medical Association, Dr Osahon Enabulele, has called for the immortalisation of Dr Stella Ameyo Adadevoh, who died on Tuesday of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) .

    She treated the late Liberian-American Patrick Sawyer in a Lagos hospital.

    Enabulele said her death  was a major loss to the medical community and Nigeria’s health care system.

    The expert said the circumstance of her death was another reminder of the grave hazards that health workers, especially doctors, face in caring for patients.

    He said: “It clearly re-emphasises the need for the government to institute schemes to guarantee the safety of health workers, particularly the institution of a robust life insurance policy.

    “Certainly, it brings to light the need for government at all levels to take the welfare of health workers seriously and drastically review upwards the miserable hazard allowance of N5,000 per month paid to doctors and other health workers in Nigeria.”

    Enabulele condoled with the family, management and workers of First Consultants Hospital, Lagos, members of the medical community and other Nigerians on Dr Adadevoh’s death.

    He said: “I call on the Federal Government to memorialise and bestow on all health workers and other volunteers felled in the course of caring for the Ebola Virus Disease patients posthumous honours.”

    He prayed God to grant eternal rest to Dr Adadevoh and others.

       Also, a former President of the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), Dr. Osahon Enabulele, has urged the Federal Government to take the welfare of health workers more seriously.

    He said the death of a leading consultant, Mrs Ameyo Stella Adadevoh, who was infected with the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) while attending to the late Liberian, Mr Patrick Sawyer,  re-emphasises the need for government to institute schemes to guarantee the safety of health workers.

    He also urged the government to review upwards the monthly N5,000 hazard allowance paid to doctors and other health workers in Nigeria.

    In a statement  in Abuja, Enabulele said: “Her (Dr Adadevoh’s) death at this time of national public health emergency is a major loss to the medical community and Nigeria’s health care system.

    “The circumstance surrounding her death is another reminder of the grave hazards that health workers, particularly medical doctors face in the course of delivering care to patients. It clearly re-emphasises the need for government to be more committed to institute schemes to guarantee the safety of health workers, particularly the institution of a robust life insurance policy.

    “Certainly, it brings to light the need for government at all levels to take the welfare of health workers seriously and drastically review upwards the miserable hazard allowance of N5,000 per month paid to medical doctors and other health workers in Nigeria.

  • Adadevoh: In the eyes of her people, others

    Adadevoh: In the eyes of her people, others

    As soon as the news of the death of Dr. Ameyo Adadevoh filtered to her immediate family, Kwame Adadevoh, her cousin living in Atlanta Georgia in the United States of America  (USA), changed his Facebook profile picture.

    The picture Kwame put up was the headshot of the late Dr. Adadevoh, with clear and sparkling eyes and lips parting in a warm smile. She had on her head a bright blue head tie, tied in the fashionable satellite dish fashion, she was full of life.

    Under the picture, Kwame wrote: “Dr. Ameyo Stella Adadevoh, you are a hero to a lot of people in Lagos, Nigeria saving lives and caring for people was your passion.”

    The sentiments expressed by Kwame were shared by another relative, her brother Kodjo who lives at New Hope Pennsylvania also in the USA. In response to the death of his sister, he had posted several family pictures of the late doctor showing her in different moods and activities. Most of the pictures were the ones taken with her family members at home while some were taken at what looked like family function. In the entire picture, Dr. Adadevoh was always in the middle with that smile and warmth; it would be easy to conclude that the workaholic doctor also had another side to her that was warm, loving and fun.

    Another relative, Belinda Yesutor Adadevoh who lives in Ghana said: “A sad moment for the Adadevohs home and abroad. May the priceless and beautiful soul of Dr Ameyo Adadevoh RIPP.” Her post was followed by several condolence messages.  Some hours after, she wrote: “Dear snr sister may your beautiful RIPP. You fought a good fight and taken a royal bow from this wicked world. Dr Ameyo Adadevoh.”

    But the post that seemed to convey the thoughts and sentiments of her family members was this: “A price to pay for your duty to God, Country and Humanity. May your beautiful soul find rest.”

    Following the postings on Facebook, there has been outpouring of condolences from around the world to her immediate family. Some of the callers were “shocked beyond words” while others wanted to know if it was “the same Dr. Ameyo that died.”

    Another cousin, Babatunde Akinyanju, said he had hoped for her recovery and asked that a memorial be established to her and her fallen colleagues.

    “The tributes to Cousin Ameyo are all very touching. Still very raw knowing she is no longer with us. Only a couple of days ago I heard she had slightly improved so the whole family was quietly confident that she would pull through,” Akinyanju said.

    Akinyanju also remarked about her “wit and warmth” when he met the late doctor in April 2014 at a “Joyous family occasion.”

    Special Assistant to President Jonathan on New Media, Reno Omokri,  in a tweet via his handle @renoomokri  wrote, “No greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends-John 15:13. Rest in Peace #DrAdadevohaRealNigerianhero”.

    Former Minister for Education, Dr. Oby Ezekwesili,  in her tribute described the late Adadevoh as an embodiment of godly doctor.

    The late Dr. Adadevoh was also described by a family member as a “true” patriot for that the late Sawyer did not escape from quarantine.

    A family member, who does not want to be named, said the Consultant Endocrinologist at First Consultant Hospital, Obalende, Lagos, acted wisely to stop the index EVD patient from infecting others.

    The source said the family was hopeful that she would recover from the disease like other doctors that were discharged but her condition worsened and she passed on. “We were shocked. Right now I don’t even know where I am. Our sister was merciful and always looking for the interest of others,” she said.

     “Although she was born to Ghanaian parents, her life has been all about Nigeria. She was born and raised in this country. Her grandmother was a Yoruba woman.

    “She like her father served Nigeria with all their might. They gave their all to ensure the country gets better. All her family had at one point or another served the country.”

    She said the late physician put the interest of the country before herself.  “Not many professionals can do that.”

    The source said her mother, Madam Deborah Adadevoh, is devastated; so was her son. “Her death affected us so much that we cannot stop crying. It came so sudden,” she said.

    Describing late Adadevoh, the source said, she was very warm, accommodating and well-mannered, adding that the deceased brought joy to people’s lives. “She lived what she preached as a doctor because doctors always play with people before treating them,” she said.

    Secretary, Lagos State council of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Dr Babajide Saheed, said the deceased was a woman of substance.

    “Before her death, she was the consultant in-charge of cases relating to endocrinology. She was called to the hospital that fateful day to review the late Sawyer’s case,” he said.

    Vice Chairman, Lagos State Medical Guild, Dr Oseni Salau. said an embassy called the hospital to discharge the Liberian-American but Ms Adadevoh kicked against it to save the country from a scourge because “Sawyer was enraged and wanted to infect as many people as possible. Thank God she didn’t allow him to escape.”

    Her action, he said showed that she was a professional and a true one at that because she helped to contain the disease.

    The Chairman, Board of Trustees of First Consultant Hospital, Dr Wale Balogun said yesterday that the family of the deceased will be meeting both State and Federal Ministries of Health today, to discuss the logistics of her burial.

    “But I cannot preempt the family on the decisions of her burial.”

    Chairman, Joint Task Force on the EVD outbreak in the country, Professor Abdulsalami Nasidi, said, “There will be a meeting with the relatives of the deceased today. The final decisions on best ways to adopt in handling the body.”