Tag: baby

  • The evil baby factories do

    The evil baby factories do

    That I will maintain this sacred trust holding myself afar, aloof from wrong, from corrupting, from tempting others to crime.”

    The foregoing is an excerpt from an oath attributed to Hippocrates (460BC – 370BC), a philosopher, who is regarded as the father of medicine. Though the oath was not penned down until about a century after his demise; the statement has, however, undergone several modifications, with the emergence of different versions.

    Page Seven of the Code of Conduct of the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) is coined from the Hippocrates’ oath, which medical professionals refer to as the “Physician’s Oath”. It reads: “I will maintain, by all means in my power, the honour and noble traditions of the Medical (dental) profession.”

    Being a doctor comes with honour because the society sees medical practitioners as role models. Those who do not listen to the scripture are ever willing to wait patiently to hear a doctor’s advice to maintain a healthy life. What a noble profession!

    However, the behaviour of some doctors nowadays leaves much to be desired. By aiding and abetting several medical blunders, many doctors have violated the oath they took while leaving medical college.

    Late last year, security agencies uncovered two baby factories in eastern Nigeria, where pregnant ladies delivered babies for sale in the market. These baby factories hid under the umbrella of maternity, motherless babies home and non-governmental organisations (NGO) with a pledge to rendering humanitarian services.

    Ezuma Women and Children Right Protection Initiative, and Ahamefule Maternity and Motherless Babies Home were baby factories operated by 65-year-old medical doctor, James Ezuma, and a woman referred to as “Madam One thousand”. The business of these criminals boomed because they were assisted by doctors, nurses, social workers and civil servants.

    A 17-year-old Adaobi Akabueze said she was referred to the centre by a medical doctor when her pregnancy was seven-month old. People could be so heartless to run such shameful business. As a medical doctor Ezuma is supposed to know the pains ladies undergo during childbirth. What could have made Ezuma to thread this inglorious path?

    Who approved “Madam One Thousand” a licence to operate a maternity home? When the health officers assisted the victims to deliver their babies, did they not the kind of business they were aiding? Could it be the love of money against the service to humanity for which the medical profession is known?

    Worse, these criminals move about in exotic cars, an indication that their satanic business was booming. What is the morality behind selling babies and use the proceeds from it for philanthropy.

    I could not imagine how unbearable life would have been for the victims to be camped in a poorly ventilated room and robbed of their priceless gift from God by agents of devil. What those operators of the baby factory have done can best be termed “modern day slavery”.

    Section 34 (1) b of the Constitution says: “Every individual is entitled to respect for the dignity of his person and accordingly, no person shall be held in slavery or servitude.” But the victims were held and brainwashed against their wishes to sell their babies. The perpetrators should not be allowed to go free. They should be treated in accordance with the laws to serve as deterrent to those already nursing the ambition to promote the nefarious business.

    Could it be unemployment that led the criminals to engage in the bad business? Come on, some Nigerians are surviving despite the widespread poverty in the land. Yet, some religious leaders may say the existence of baby factory business is a sign of the end time. This is a ‘Nigerian mentality’.

    We are quick to attribute anything negativity to end time – unemployment, high mortality rate, political instability, Boko Haram insurgency and corruption. Whereas, these are vices that can be tackled if we are ready to change our ways as a people.

    The stigmatisation of pregnant ladies out of wedlock is one of the reasons why baby factories thrive. This should be discouraged. The fact that a lady ‘mistakenly’ got pregnant does not make her a failure.

    The MDCN, body overseeing medical practice in Nigeria, should not relent in sanitising the system. Proper monitoring should be ensured to purge quacks and criminals from the system and prevent miscreants from invading the revered profession.

    We must also collaborate with the professional body to rid the country of this ill. Section 24 (E) of the Constitution states: “It shall be the duty of every citizen to render assistance to appropriate regulatory agencies in the maintenance of law and order.” This is a call for attitudinal change as we cannot keep waiting on government to effect the change we need.

    If we fail to arrest the scourge of baby factory putting our nation into disrepute, our efforts to rebrand the nation will forever remain a mirage.

    •Eddy, 100-Level Medicine, UNIBEN

     

  • My baby is in danger, says quadruplets’ mother 

    A mother of quadruplets, Mrs. Alice Akor is concerned that one of her babies may not survive if financial help does not come quickly.

    The four babies were delivered on April 23, 2013 at the National Hospital in Abuja, who was admitted in the Kubwa General Hospital.

    Akor who spoke to newsmen stated that the baby went down with a fever. She said she rushed him to hospital, adding that she was in need of money to pay the medical bills for the treatment.

    Akor, a mother of five, delivered the quadruplets in April last year and have since been pleading with the government and well-meaning Nigerians for assistance.

    When our reporter visited the hospital, Akor was with her baby boy, worried about his fate and that of her family who have been struggling to make ends meet.

    “I have to get to the pharmacist to get his drugs. And I need to rush home to bathe the other children at home. It hasn’t been easy. My husband has to collect money from people to offset our medical bill. And now one of the children is sick again. We need assistance from anybody that can help us,’’ she said.

    Mrs. Akor, a National Diploma (ND) holder, stated that before giving birth to the quadruplets, she was earning money from selling clothes, but had to stop due to the financial burden and physical demands of raising her children.

    She stated that her husband had to borrow money to pay for the medical bills after she delivered, before she and the newborns could be discharged from the hospital.

    Akor, a native of Kogi, and her husband were already parents to a boy when she gave birth to the quadruplets.

  • Where are this baby’s parents?

    Where are this baby’s parents?

    It was a party for children at an orphanage. But for many at the party, their attention was on a baby named Excel, whose parents abandoned on a heap of refuse, writes MIKE ODIEGWU.

    His first name is Excel. But he has no surname because he does not know his parents. The six-month baby is receiving care, attention and love that his unknown parents denied him. He is, indeed, growing and developing physically and mentally at the Bayelsa Children’s Home, Opolo.

    Niger Delta Report was told that little Excel was dumped on a heap of refuse by an unknown person few days after he was born. But a Good Samaritan rescued and brought him to the orphanage.

    His story is now a pleasant one. He has been nurtured into an irresistibly beautiful baby by the caregivers at the orphanage. He lacks nothing and no child living with his parents would boast of enjoying the yuletide more than Excel; all thanks to philanthropic Nigerians and generous oranisations.

    In fact, Sidoni Foundation and Miss Peace Bayelsa Organisation were the first to put smiles on the faces of the orphans at the orphanage. The foundation established by Dr. Selekaye Victor Ben and Mr. Seleipre Tonbie organised a party for the orphans in conjunction with Miss Peace Pageant Bayelsa Organisation (MPPBO). The playful Excel was in the party and was the cynosure of all that attended the event.

    The management of the orphanage was happy to see the children rock and roll as they danced to different tunes of music. The children also engage in other various performances and competition. At the end of the party, they were appreciated and rewarded with various types of gifts. One of the children at the orphanage identified as Agnes was particularly happy that the foundation and Miss Peace remembered them.

    “I am happy and l feel at home. I thank the foundation for coming here to celebrate with us. They are taking care of us and l would like more people to come and celebrate with us,” she said.

    On the reason behind the party, Tonbie, who is also the Director of MPPBO, said the bash was to show the children love and affection. He said it was designed to make the orphans feel at home and to reassure them that they were part of the larger and normal society.

    Tonbie said: “Most of these children are not enjoying their childhood because they are orphans and have limited opportunities to their rights to survival, development, protection and participation.

    “We need to make sure that they do not suffer a double tragedy by losing both parents and utterly neglected by the society. There is a need to show them love and care, especially at this festive period.

    “Today, we came to party with the kids. We had some performances by the orphans themselves. We had dancing competition, gave them wonderful meals and gifts.”

    He said the foundation also gave the orphanage some items such as stoves, clothes, plates, food among other items. But Tonbie lamented the failures of the government to partake in worthy ventures like caring for the less-privileged and orphans. He insisted that the government was not doing enough to lift the spirit of the orphans in the state.

    He said the government had spent so much money organising awards and international tourist events without recourse to the welfare of orphans. He said the government should show more interest in issues, activities and events concerning the wellbeing of the less-privileged.

    He continued: “There is this glamour that Bayelsa is the entertainment hub in Nigeria but quite unfortunately, people from here do not have access to funding. Bayelsa has spent so much money on various awards that have no bearing on the less privileged and the vulnerable.

    “So if Bayelsa needs to grow, they need to look inwards and support their local industry first rather than throwing money away to organise awards that do not impact on the vulnerable and the less privileged.”

    He lauded the simplification of the process of adopting children from orphanages simple. He said last year when the foundation hosted a similar event, about 40 children in the orphanage. “I am happy that people are now thinking of adopting children and taking care of them. Last year when we came here, they had about 40 orphans but as we came back, only eight children were remaining. When l asked, l was told they had been adopted.

    When asked the monetary value of the event and the gifts, he said: “We have hosted this kind of event for the third time. Basically it is not the monetary value that matters, it is the intent. The fact that we realised that there are people like this and we have to reach out to them is the most important thing.”

    On the challenges facing the foundation, he added: “We are faced with the challenges of collaboration and funding. We designed jingles on how to support orphans. We have written several letters and held many meetings but all of them ended in promises. We are hoping that government will come to support us because Bayelsa is also our state”.

    Reacting to the development, Miss Peace Bayelsa Queen, Annie Gabriel, said for peace to reign in any society, people must take issues concerning orphans seriously. He said the society would be chaotic if abandoned children were not catered for.

    She said: “If the society is not at peace, there is no way anybody would think of the less privileged. I think a peaceful society will make people to have an idea of people that are vulnerable.

    “I feel bad over the plight of the vulnerable. That is why I am happy that I have an opportunity to lend my support to the orphans through my crown. I feel that the government is not doing enough to help the orphans in the state. I appeal to them to put more effort to lift the hope of the less privileged.”

    Gabriel said she had good discussions with the children and that the children had wonderful dreams for the future. According to her, some of the children said they would like to lawyers, engineers, doctors and other professions. She said she enjoyed her chat with the kids/

    But some persons who attended the event rained curses on mothers who are fond of abandoning their children. After listening to the story of Excel, a woman who identified herself simply as Mary, could not control her emotion. She wondered why some people should cast their toddlers away while others were ready to pay fortunes for such babies.

    She said: “Imagine a mother abandoning her own child in a refuse bin. This is a peak of wickedness. I do not like praying bad prayers, but in this situation, I differ. I pray that God should block the womb of this wicked woman who did this to a God-given handsome child.

    “Many women are using millions of naira to look for a child but here is a woman, who got a child freely from God but decided to throw him into the dustbin. Whoever she is, she is wickedness personified and a shame to womanhood. I know God is not sleeping. He sees everything and I am optimistic that this boy will be a pride of this nation.”

  • How we smashed kidnap, baby factory syndicates in Imo

    How we smashed kidnap, baby factory syndicates in Imo

    Give us more insight about you Muhammad Musa Katsina is a highly disciplined police officer with commitment to ensure that I assist in the dispensation of law as mandated by the Inspector-General of Police. That is absolute commitment, zero tolerance for corruption and fighting crime without any reservations. I am from Katsina State.

    In less than a year that you assumed office, we have seen the achievements this command has recorded in fighting crime in the state. How have you been doing this?

    This is a combination of many factors. First, God Almighty has been very kind to me. You must not forget the Biblical passage that says unless God watches the city, the watchman watches in vain. I give that special thanks to God. Secondly, the training and tutorial I received from the current Inspector-General of Police also plays an important role in our success.

    Aside from the strategy that I have put in place, I consider myself lucky to be in the midst of very intelligent, highly committed and dedicated officers who support me in all aspects of policing. More importantly is the vibrant crop of journalists here in Imo State who have been assisting me in the provision of information.

    You can see that the journalists here are not only doing their work, they are also assisting the police in fighting crime, following me to scenes of crime without being afraid. Last but not the least is the wonderful people of Imo State who are highly enlightened, highly exposed and highly committed in assisting the police towards fighting crime in the state. In addition, out of the lots, I will like to highlight one aspect, the intelligence strategy I have put in place.

    Anybody who wants to succeed as a police commissioner must first understand the peculiarity of the environment he operates in terms culture and economic interest of the people, location of the area, topography whether it is undulating or whether it is Sahara or tropical rain forest among others. When you do that, it will also help you to come out with a robust working plan where you can study your manpower. Where there is weakness you leverage it, where there is strength, you encourage it, where there is threat, you put all efforts to eliminate it.

    So also is training which is very important. You can see my fighting squad- the Ambush Squad. These are officers and men who are sharp shooters and marksmen and through my tutorial, they have come to realise that to do all these, you have to be professional in the job.

    You came to the state when the place was be-devilled with high rate of kidnapping and other heinous crimes. What was the mandate you were given and how have you gone about it?

    You know the Inspector-General of Police Mohammed Abubakar is a no-nonsense man and a goal getter who will post you to a station with a template. He told me to go to the state and be an ambassador, that I was aware of the high rate of kidnapping and armed robbery in the state, I should go there to confront it. He assured me that wherever I go that he will go with me. So, that is the tunic and challenge interwoven with some encouraging motivation. With this tutorial, I knew what I was coming to meet on ground. So, I was already on top of my duty before I came to Imo State. Therefore, immediately I arrived, I knew how I was going to start and I started it.

    Will you say it has been very smooth so far?

    I will not say that. I do not want to be the proverbial agama lizard who nods its head whenever it falls from a tree. In terms of policy, you can never give yourself a pass mark unless others judge you. I see what I see, but you also see and you feel what you feel. It is not for me to see whether the man called Muhammad Katsina has performed so well or not. But from all what I have seen, there is one thing which I called my own philosophy. I see no rest until I disorganise whoever wants to disorganise this state. I see no sleep until I neutralise any negative power that has the potential of disorganising this state. This is my standard today.

    There is this report that you also go on the trail of criminals, even to their hideouts in the thick forest. How true is this and how were you able to cope as the man at the helm of administration?

     

    Well I am a trained field officer. Apart from that, I am a professional crime scene investigator. I take the lead as the leader. I am not an arm chair leader. I take the lead to encourage my subordinates, I take the lead to empower them. I take the lead to motivate them and I take the lead to educate them because my trainings both within and outside Nigeria were all on crime scene investigations.

    So, I have mastered the art of preservation at the scene of crime and I have also mastered the art of identifying a scene of crime as a silent witness. I have also come to realise that there is no crime that can be committed without leaving a trail. The problem is that we do not have the capacity to understand the language of what to get at any scene of crime.

    Moreover, we are leaving a legacy because we are training the younger ones for them to know. It is not about combatant engagement; creativity is very important when a crime is committed. The most important is the ability to preserve a scene of crime, to take cognizance of any strange element at the scene of crime no matter how infinitesimal. The scene of crime is nothing other than a spot where the crime is committed, it can be mobile, stationary, single, multiple or tertiary.

    For you to understand it, you need to get the picture of everything and the mental ability. The strength of the mind is very important because an average policeman must be endowed with an ever inquisitive mind, without that, you are not fit to call yourself a policeman.

    How has it been with the prosecution of the suspects, have you equally succeeded in that area? How many of them have been convicted?

    This is a triangular relationship and the whole three segments must be seen to be working harmoniously. We call it the administration of justice and when you talk of administration of justice, you talk of three things-the arresting authority, the investigation authority and the prosecution authority. So, the police must not provide the third aspect- prosecution. And when this thing is properly done and the case file is ready, the judiciary comes in, they will then be the one to administer justice. If the suspect is finally convicted, he goes to serve his prison terms. But you know our job is more difficult. When we fail, the whole thing goes down the drain. A police officer is just like a mason you are asked to build a mansion. During the process of investigation and interrogation, the items for the building all together are described as strong evidential value.

    Now you will mould them in such a way that you build a strong edifice that can contain the room of a judge. If the building is shaky and appears unreasonable, no judge would enter there. So you should expect whoever that is in the edifice in its holistic term to carry out his own duty because you have done your own. The prison is a receptacle. They receive everything in their tummy, we prepare the food, the judiciary chews and munches. So you can see that we are indispensible. Mine is to ensure that I lead my men well so that nobody will discharge somebody for want of prosecution. I will be happy if you will be the watchdog of society. It is not only going to the scene of crime, you should also be involved in how we are doing our investigation; whether we are doing the right thing or not even to prosecution.

    I am worried sometimes about the speed some of these miscreants are granted bail. I am worried. I want to tell authoritatively that most of these suspects were once our customers; they were once arrested, taken to court and granted bail.

    Despite the good work this command is doing, there are still bad eggs. What are the disciplinary measures put in place to check this?

    Police is a disciplined organisation. The entire structure of the police is hinged on discipline because without discipline, that inner quality developed through training will not be there. This is where conscience plays an important role. For instance, I cannot imagine me taking money from a kidnapper. It is something that is highly unimaginable. There are other corrective

  • Dakore  Akande rocks baby  bump

    Dakore Akande rocks baby bump

    CONTRARY to the news making the rounds that the marriage of screen diva, Dakore Egbuson, to Olumide, son of the billionaire cum politician, Chief Harry Akande, will take her off the klieglights, the mother of one has continued to rock the social circuit.

    The Bayelsa State-born actress co-hosted the Nollywood Movies Awards last weekend.

    Not only did she anchor the event well, she proudly rocked baby bump. This is the second baby of the screen star. The couple already had a two-year-old daughter.

  • Baby doll dress in town

    Baby doll dress in town

    BABY DOLL dresses were the rave of the 50s, 60s and early 70s. This well-tailored ball dress is now back. It is characterized by knee-length and above-the-knee-length gowns with mostly small sleeves and at times, big spaghetti straps.

    What make the dress more appealing are the wedge shoes, peep toe or heelly sandals that are used to complement it. Despite its not too tight nature, baby doll dress still emphasizes feminine curves. Since indigenous fabrics, especially ankara, are the in-thing now, baby doll dresses are mostly sown with these fabrics.

    One good thing the baby doll dress has, going for it, is that it does not require a scarf or head-tie, and remember, the best foot accessories for it are the peep toe, stiletto or wedge shoes.

  • Baby sling, how safe for mother and child?

    Baby sling, how safe for mother and child?

    The world health organization reports that 80-90% of normal populations irrespective of race will at one point in

    time develop pain in the lower back. Though it has been easy to discuss etiological factors for back conditions such as job type, sports, life style, smoking, alcohol, trauma , body proportion and infections, the mechanisms that underpin the complex symptoms have not been exhaustively explained. Pregnancy and the necessary conditions imposed by nursing a baby through the first 18 months of life bring impressed forces to bear on the back bones of the mother and the child she is nursing. The bones of the back are designed in such a way that there are curves, four for a mother and two for a new born child-the other two will develop when the child is able to hold his neck without support, and later when he begins to sit down unaided. These curves help the back bone to bear weight 16(sixteen)times the weight that can be handled by a vertebral column without bends—this is in accordance with engineering principles and in concert with Newtonian Physics(Hooks law). The implication is that any attenuation or exaggeration of these natural curves will be amplified into clinical problems the magnitude of which will be modified, depending on several other considerations.

    It has become fashionable for young African mothers to put their babies in slings and place the slings on their necks with the babies spread out turtle posture, in front or back depending on what activities engaged them at the time. This is different from the older African method of carrying babies across the back with clothe belts of specific texture and size . It is also different from the relatively more expensive use of open or hooded wheeled baby carriage where babies are placed in more comfortable positions

    This discussion highlights how the use of baby slings can harm the bones of the back and lead to early degeneration of the inter vertebral joints . For a mother, resulting back problems such as low back pain may not develop immediately, but later when mother is older. For the child, all sorts of problems involving not only the spine and backbone but other parts of the body such as heart, lungs, and even arrest of growth may occur. Mothers find them selves paying frequent visits to clinics because of one problem or the other. Some babies may become very restless and cry endlessly, refusing any methods of pacification, even breast milk, because, they are unable to speak out their ordeal, discomfort and pain

    The problem of low back pain is worse for mothers who celebrate pregnancies with very short periods between pregnancies. In deed multi parous women that have had repeated exposure to the pregnancy hormones relaxin and progesterone( both are associated with excessive joint laxity and increased tendency for joints to sublux) are more likely to encounter probems.

    Older mothers are particularly vulnerable ; their bones are already getting soft (osteoporotic) because levels of estrogen the female hormone responsible for maintenance of strong bones( via estrogen receptors in osteoblasts), begin to go down as from age 38.

    Working mothers who also do much house hold activities such as cooking, washing, floor washing etc. are at increased risks .Also included are Mothers not getting enough sun light(required by custom to shield self and remain indoors), malnourished mothers not taking enough milk and calcium

    Others;

    Tall mothers, height above 1.8meters. Short mothers, height below 1.4m,

    Mothers with huge breasts, and mothers habitually wearing high heeled shoes

    Mothers and babies who are homozygous SS or carry the trait-AS or SC,AC-In these conditions there is abnormal hemorheology(abnormal blood flow pattern) ,such that red blood cells die in large numbers when they try to move across tiny blood vessels of the capillary beds. The consequences arising from the fragile sickle shaped red cells and their markedly reduced deformability manifest in the form of frequent vaso- occlusive sickle cell crises

    Mothers engaged in occupations which require them to stand for more than three hours or more in one or two stretches . In all these situations, the bones and joints of the back and the muscles that link them are engaged in more work than they are bioengineered to do, and the consequences from prolonged exposure to wear and tear will declare themselves sometime in the life of the individual-depending on duration.

    Mothers of old and in fact in rural communities who carry babies on their backs follow some carefully learned procedures, babies are not immediately strapped on the back immediately after meals, during periods of illness and when they are engaged in physical activities which involve much repeated bending and standing——during prolonged periods of standing, sitting, stooping and squatting, babies become quickly uncomfortable and try to draw attention of mothers by crying, squeezing their trunks and trashing, mothers from higher socioeconomic background pay attention and respond affectionately ,others simply carry on

     

    Positioning the babies involves the following

    The shoulders are abducted and laterally rotated maximally, The hips are also in maximum abduction and lateral rotation

    The neck is in extension and rotated in one direction to keep the face and chin away from mother’s upper back. The neck in normal humans has seven flat bones , with slots or holes placed at the extremes of the sides where huge blood vessels pass to and from the brain and skull. The bones of the neck are arranged in such a way as to allow for more nodding(flexion-extension) movements than rotatory/twisting ones. When mothers strap babies across the back, the neck is either allowed to oscillate between rotation, extension and flexion, or held to one side in twisted position with the blood vessels equally twisted ,resulting in narrowing or kinking .The neck bones and muscles provide protection for very important organs necessary for metabolism /growth and immunity of the growing child. These muscles can go into spasm ,and then fatigue with excessive metabolic wastes-the child will be in pain for as long it takes his mother to change his position or someone points out to her that child is in distress.

    For the growing brain, any little disruption will affect something some where within the vast array of neuronal organization.

    With the baby in sling or strapped on the back, thorax/chest region is curved backwards to reduce the normal kyphotic angle and the lumbar/waist region curved forward in excessive lordosis, but the prominent buttock of the African mother immediately limits anterior ward excursion of the baby’s pelvis, and so baby is held like a bow.

    With the baby strapped into position in mothers back, the following changes can be observed —the thighs are held onto the back and sides of mothers abdomen so the legs are effectively prevented from dangling without support. With the baby sling, the legs dangle freely, but blood vessels and nerves are at increased risk of being trapped.

    With the child on mothers back, the normal kyphosis (backward curve ) of the child’s backbone is distorted as it is forced into the hollow of mother’s back.

    Abdominal organs-liver, spleen, intestine, and stomach are pressed into the little space left.

    The lungs, heart and thick muscle of respiration-diaphragm which separates the trunk into the upper thorax and lower abdomen are all closely packed into this space.

    Venous return to the heart may be affected. The bladder which is an abdominal organ up to age six in children is included here . The genitals –testicles particularly in males is also squeezed on the area of the waist of mother. The ligaments which hold the bones of the back together are forced into tension at three points mainly—the neck, thorax and lumbar regions. The ligaments and muscles which holds bones of the shoulders and waist together are also under tension.

    When the sling is adjusted to hold baby close, the abdominal aorta; a huge blood vessels that supplies blood to the internal organs of reproduction, the bones and muscles of the waist , thighs, legs and feet , may be so compressed as to affect blood flow . Baby slides down and there is increased tendency for one group of muscles to slacken while the opposing groups go into exaggerated tension. As is often the case, Baby cries and trashes to draw mothers attention who draws sling tighter— This results in greater tension in the cervical (neck) and thoracic (chest) portions of the back bone. At some point, diaphragm is splint, reducing the thoracic capacity and child may find it difficult to breathe well; chest diseases which mothers cant explain.

    Some mothers prefer to have the baby in front, resting partly on the abdomen within the sling, the resulting problems depend among other issues on whether or not the mother has abdominal type obesity, height and lifestyle, size of the baby etc . Similar to what has been discussed, the head dangles here and there-a condition not very healthy for the growing brain, which in life appears like tooth paste but contains nerve bundles arranged in awesome and sophisticated pattern. Unlike the back, there is no free space when baby is hung in front, and the child’s abdomen presses on that of his mother much like pushing one ball of doughnut against another. Apart from causing great discomfort for the child, his back bone is excessively bent backwards to fit into the sling, – and each time mom tries to adjust baby inside the sling, the joints and the different parts of the back bones which are still soft (fusion not complete until about age six) are jolted and slammed against other parts , the results though similar to what was discussed earlier are worse when baby is in the sling in front of a fat, tall heavily breasted Mom. For reasons that have been explained, there will be episodes of unexplained illnesses every now and then, involving, nearly every system or portion in the growing child. Developmental milestones may not be grossly affected but subtle deviations from normal will be observed often ascribed to growing pains, teething, malaria, seasonal variation disorders, spiritual problems etc

    Suggestions

    Keep babies preferably out of slings

    If you must use baby slings, use the types that are adjustable and have enough pockets to house body segments-don’t use baby slings for extended periods of time –imagine your self in that position.

    Observe, feel and listen to baby-particularly when in the sling—these are easier said, especially when someone else and not the mother is carrying baby in sling, and mother is not around to see how much pain and suffering baby is going through. Some mothers/parents in developed countries install what is referred to as ‘I am seeing you’’ soft ware into home video systems that capture activities in the home and enable them communicate with whoever is nursing their babies while they are away.

    If you can afford it, get the hooded or open baby carriage system which comes in various forms, For those who can not afford such sophisticated products, any other arrangements will do-provided baby is placed to lie as comfortably as possible There are some that can be detached, assembled and placed as desired in cars, floors, tables, in offices and other safe places depending on the size and age of the baby. The bigger ones that can be pushed are now the vogue. Expensive quite alright but with small families, as opposed to large ones, they are affordable to those who plan.

     

  • Woman abandons baby after delivery

    Three days after her delivery, a baby girl has been abandoned by her mother, Mrs. Grace Adipe, at the Osun State Hospital, Osogbo.

    Commissioner for Women and Children Affairs Mrs. Mofolake Adegboyega, said yesterday that efforts to locate the mother by the hospital authorities were unsuccessful.

    The commissioner enjoined the woman’s relations and the public who know her whereabouts to contact the nearest police station or the Director of Social Welfare, Mrs. Grace Adegoke in the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs at the state Secretariat on Gbongan Road.

    Mrs Adegboyega praised the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons and Other Related Matters (NAPTIP) for its efforts in the elimination and prevention of child trafficking.

    The commissioner gave the commendation at the weekend when members of the agency visited her.

    Mrs Adegboyega said the state government had provided a transit home for displaced children as well as other kids who are victims of child trafficking in order to make them comfortable and responsible citizens of the state.

    She implored the people to always alert the government through the ministry whenever they witness any case of child abuse.

  • ‘I never attempted to kill my baby’

    ‘I never attempted to kill my baby’

    The news spread like wildfire. The sight of a new baby and placenta shocked the crowd of staff and students that rushed to Moremi Hall of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State, where a student reportedly gave birth in the toilet. Did the mother attempt to flush her baby down the toilet? No, she says. DHIKRU AKINOLA (400-Level Political Science), OLUWAFEMI OGUNJOBI (400-Level Language Arts) and KEMI BUSARI (400-Level Political Science) write.

    A SHRILL cry shattered the peace of the night at Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    It was Wednesday and some students, who had exams the following day, were returning from studying to their hostels. Others, who had no papers, were relaxing in their hostels.

    At 6:55am, the peace in Moremi Hall, a female hostel, was shattered. Mrs Cecilia Ologbenla, a cleaner, who had come to wash the toilet, found a newborn baby in the water closet. With the body still covered in blood, the cleaner was sure the baby was born a few minutes before her arrival. She raised the alarm, calling the attention of the hostel’s occupants and security personnel.

    The baby was delivered by Oyinlola Rotimi Diana, a student, who was going to write her exam; students rushed to the scene, using their camera phones to take shots of the baby and the placenta. In no time, the news went viral on the social media. Students accused Oyinlola of attempting to “flush” the baby into the sewer because “she did not want people to know she was pregnant”.

    Oyinlola, 22, it was gathered, is in 300-Level Agricultural Extension and Rural Development, and a squatter in Room 103 of Block B in Moremi Hall. She was allegedly impregnated by a 400-Level Engineering student.

    Oyinlola’s friend, Dayo Satope, who was with her at the sudden delivery, wrote in a statement made at the university security unit that she came to the campus on Tuesday evening to prepare for an exam fixed for 8am.

    “Getting to the campus late on Tuesday night, Oyinlola could not immediately get something to eat but she later resolved to buy moin-moin (bean cake) at the hall’s buttery. After she ate the food, Oyinlola complained of running stomach throughout the night, urinating and stooling at regular intervals. She felt she was having stomach turbulence because of the moin-moin she took the previous night,” Shatope wrote in the statement.

    The following morning, it was learnt, Oyinlola’s friends told her to visit the school’s health centre for medical attention. She consented. The story, however, changed when Oyinlola told her friends that she wanted to visit the toilet again. She was ushered into the toilet and told to inform her friends when she was done.

    After waiting for her for several minutes, Shatope wondered what could have kept Oyinlola in the toilet for so long. She then decided to check on her ‘ailing’ friend. On getting to the toilet, Shatope found that Oyinlola had locked herself inside, but saw blood on the toilet floor.

    Scared, Shatope called on Oyinlola to know if everything was alright and she begged her friend to “come inside to assist me”. Shatope could not gain access into the toilet because Oyinlola was “too weak” to open the door, which was locked from behind. At this point, Shatope said she heard the cry of a baby.

    Oyinlola was said to have fainted after delivering the baby whose cry attracted Ologbenla. The baby and the mother were immediately rushed to the university’s health centre.

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited the OAU Health Services Centre, the Director, Dr Adebayo Irinoye, told our correspondents: “The girl and the baby are feeling very fine and the parents of the girl are around to also take care of their daughter and the baby.”

    Irinoye explained that self-labour cases were not new in medical field, saying there were instances of patients delivering babies in the toilet.

    “I guessed it was inexperience because she obviously was not aware of her due date which, medically, would have been July,” Dr Irinoye said, assuring that the baby was not delivered prematurely.

    The university’s Chief Security Officer, Mr Paul Ogidi, debunked the notion that Oyinlola wanted to flush the baby based on Shatope’s explanation.

    He said: “She was not attempting to flush the baby but looking at the circumstances surrounding the birth of the child, one might likely think so. When I visited the Health Centre on Thursday, she was breastfeeding her baby. If she had the intention to kill or flush the baby, she would have aborted the pregnancy a long time ago.”

    Oyinlola denied she wanted to kill the baby. She told our correspondents that her pregnancy was not unknown to her, but she confided only in some of her friends and the father of the baby, a Mechanical Engineering student.

    She said: “Why would I flush or kill my baby after going through pains of carrying it for nine months. I am not heartless and I thank God for my life and for the safe delivery. I know God has the best for me and my baby. I appreciate the cleaner for her help because it was here (health centre) that I understood everything that happened to me when I was in labour.

    “It is overwhelming and unexplainable. I don’t know how I feel, but it is really wonderful. Seeing the baby was terrifying because I was not expecting the baby to come out yet I didn’t know the pain I was feeling was a labour pain because I went into the toilet to defecate. There was a force from within me and I discovered that the baby came out and entered into the closet. I was just there standing and bleeding. That was the last thing I remembered. I am happy that I am alive and my baby is alive too.”

    The Public Relations Officer of the university, Mr Abiodun Olanrewaju, in a statement, also dismissed the rumour that Oyinlola wanted to flush the baby. The statement reads in part: “There was a delivery of a baby boy by an inexperienced mother who, in her naivety, thought she was pressed by the call of nature while she was actually in labour pains. Prior to the child’s delivery, the young, inexperienced mother had experienced the urge, which she thought was to defecate. When she got to the toilet, she gave birth to the baby.”

    A close friend of Oyinlola, who attends the same fellowship with her, said she was surprised on hearing the news. She said: “Oyin is a cool and courteous student. I have been observing changes in her for quite a while. I didn’t want to confront her yet I found it hard to accept she was normal.”

    The Health Centre matron, Mrs Mary Oyeleke, said Oyinlola and her baby were discharged last Friday.

    Efforts to reach Samuel, the baby’s father, were futile as at press time. He was said to be busy with his examination.

  • ‘I never attempted to kill my baby’

    A SHRILL cry shattered the peace of the night at Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    It was Wednesday and some students, who had exams the following day, were returning from studying to their hostels. Others, who had no papers, were relaxing in their hostels.

    At 6:55am, the peace in Moremi Hall, a female hostel, was shattered. Mrs Cecilia Ologbenla, a cleaner, who had come to wash the toilet, found a newborn baby in the water closet. With the body still covered in blood, the cleaner was sure the baby was born a few minutes before her arrival. She raised the alarm, calling the attention of the hostel’s occupants and security personnel.

    The baby was delivered by Oyinlola Rotimi Diana, a student, who was going to write her exam; students rushed to the scene, using their camera phones to take shots of the baby and the placenta. In no time, the news went viral on the social media. Students accused Oyinlola of attempting to “flush” the baby into the sewer because “she did not want people to know she was pregnant”.

    Oyinlola, 22, it was gathered, is in 300-Level Agricultural Extension and Rural Development, and a squatter in Room 103 of Block B in Moremi Hall. She was allegedly impregnated by a 400-Level Engineering student.

    Oyinlola’s friend, Dayo Satope, who was with her at the sudden delivery, wrote in a statement made at the university security unit that she came to the campus on Tuesday evening to prepare for an exam fixed for 8am.

    “Getting to the campus late on Tuesday night, Oyinlola could not immediately get something to eat but she later resolved to buy moin-moin (bean cake) at the hall’s buttery. After she ate the food, Oyinlola complained of running stomach throughout the night, urinating and stooling at regular intervals. She felt she was having stomach turbulence because of the moin-moin she took the previous night,” Shatope wrote in the statement.

    The following morning, it was learnt, Oyinlola’s friends told her to visit the school’s health centre for medical attention. She consented. The story, however, changed when Oyinlola told her friends that she wanted to visit the toilet again. She was ushered into the toilet and told to inform her friends when she was done.

    After waiting for her for several minutes, Shatope wondered what could have kept Oyinlola in the toilet for so long. She then decided to check on her ‘ailing’ friend. On getting to the toilet, Shatope found that Oyinlola had locked herself inside, but saw blood on the toilet floor.

    Scared, Shatope called on Oyinlola to know if everything was alright and she begged her friend to “come inside to assist me”. Shatope could not gain access into the toilet because Oyinlola was “too weak” to open the door, which was locked from behind. At this point, Shatope said she heard the cry of a baby.

    Oyinlola was said to have fainted after delivering the baby whose cry attracted Ologbenla. The baby and the mother were immediately rushed to the university’s health centre.

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited the OAU Health Services Centre, the Director, Dr Adebayo Irinoye, told our correspondents: “The girl and the baby are feeling very fine and the parents of the girl are around to also take care of their daughter and the baby.”

    Irinoye explained that self-labour cases were not new in medical field, saying there were instances of patients delivering babies in the toilet.

    “I guessed it was inexperience because she obviously was not aware of her due date which, medically, would have been July,” Dr Irinoye said, assuring that the baby was not delivered prematurely.

    The university’s Chief Security Officer, Mr Paul Ogidi, debunked the notion that Oyinlola wanted to flush the baby based on Shatope’s explanation.

    He said: “She was not attempting to flush the baby but looking at the circumstances surrounding the birth of the child, one might likely think so. When I visited the Health Centre on Thursday, she was breastfeeding her baby. If she had the intention to kill or flush the baby, she would have aborted the pregnancy a long time ago.”

    Oyinlola denied she wanted to kill the baby. She told our correspondents that her pregnancy was not unknown to her, but she confided only in some of her friends and the father of the baby, a Mechanical Engineering student.

    She said: “Why would I flush or kill my baby after going through pains of carrying it for nine months. I am not heartless and I thank God for my life and for the safe delivery. I know God has the best for me and my baby. I appreciate the cleaner for her help because it was here (health centre) that I understood everything that happened to me when I was in labour.

    “It is overwhelming and unexplainable. I don’t know how I feel, but it is really wonderful. Seeing the baby was terrifying because I was not expecting the baby to come out yet I didn’t know the pain I was feeling was a labour pain because I went into the toilet to defecate. There was a force from within me and I discovered that the baby came out and entered into the closet. I was just there standing and bleeding. That was the last thing I remembered. I am happy that I am alive and my baby is alive too.”

    The Public Relations Officer of the university, Mr Abiodun Olanrewaju, in a statement, also dismissed the rumour that Oyinlola wanted to flush the baby. The statement reads in part: “There was a delivery of a baby boy by an inexperienced mother who, in her naivety, thought she was pressed by the call of nature while she was actually in labour pains. Prior to the child’s delivery, the young, inexperienced mother had experienced the urge, which she thought was to defecate. When she got to the toilet, she gave birth to the baby.”

    A close friend of Oyinlola, who attends the same fellowship with her, said she was surprised on hearing the news. She said: “Oyin is a cool and courteous student. I have been observing changes in her for quite a while. I didn’t want to confront her yet I found it hard to accept she was normal.”

    The Health Centre matron, Mrs Mary Oyeleke, said Oyinlola and her baby were discharged last Friday.

    Efforts to reach Samuel, the baby’s father, were futile as at press time. He was said to be busy with his examination.