Tag: baby

  • Mother of abandoned baby seeks help

    Favour Abdulazeez, who claimed to be the mother of a baby girl that was abandoned at the backyard of an apartment in Kuje, Abuja, has solicited for financial assistance from the public to enable her claim and take care of the baby.

    Abdulazeez told journalists that she abandoned her baby because she was jobless, divorced and had no means of fostering the child.

    She said that when she kept the carton with the baby inside the bush, she did not go away but hid in the bush to know who would pick the baby.

    She stated that she did this to enable her know the person who would pick the baby girl to enable her to do a follow-up.

    “All along, I was monitoring the baby’s situation, I know those who picked the baby and took her to the police.

    “I was listening to their conversation from my hideout, I even followed them from a distance when they were taking my baby away,” she said.

    Abdulazeez, who turned up at the police outpost in Gwagwalada on Friday to claim ownership of the baby, added: “I told the police that I would take care of my baby if only the government would assist me with a job or a trade no matter how small,’’

    Inspector Yahaya Musa, the Police Area Command in Gwagwalada, FCT, had on Friday declined comments on the matter, saying that he was not authorised to speak to newsmen on the matter.

    Musa instead referred newsmen to the social welfare unit of the Gwagwalada Area Council for further enquiries.

    Mrs Hanatu Turu, Head of the Social Welfare Department of Gwagwalada Area Council, said that she was aware of the incident.

    She said police should be allowed to conclude their investigations.

    Abdulazeez was said to have been delivered of the baby girl on June 13 and secretly put her in a carton and took her to a nearby bush behind her house at night, where she abandoned the baby.

    A resident in the area, who pleaded anonymity, told journalists that Abdulazeez is her neighbour, adding that it was the cry of the baby that drew the attention of passers-by who later took the baby to the police outpost.

  • Bolaji Esho’s wife gets first baby

    At the moment, if you ride a horse in the bowels of popular club owner and socialite, Bolaji Esho, you are not likely to miss a step, so the local saying goes. Reason is that the owner of Eldorado Night Club is beside himself with excitement because his wife, Olamide, gave birth to the couple’s first child after many years of marriage.

    The tiny tot arrived penultimate weekend in an American Hospital. Celeb Watch gathered that the baby and her mother are in good shape. Pretty Olamide had waited for five years without an issue. Those who should know told Celeb Watch that family members and friends had been visiting their home to celebrate with them.

    Since Esho opened his night club a few years ago, he has become a part of those who dictate social happenings in Lagos. Early last year, he was conferred with the chieftaincy title of Shobaloju of Epeland. We gathered that an elaborate naming ceremony is in the offing.

  • Five-month-old baby needs N5m for surgery

    Five-month-old baby needs N5m for surgery

    With tears rolling down their cheeks, parents of ailing little Matthew Adewumi Eminirekan Miller, Mr and Mrs. Ajayi Olatunbosun Millier have been pleading with governments at all levels, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and public-spirited individuals to save their little son from dying. The boy is suffering from congenital heart disease (Truncus Arterious) with VSD and ASD.

    The parents are in dire need of N5m in order to carry out a major surgery on the baby who has already been referred from Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, Ile-Ife in Osun State to a hospital in New Delhi, India.

    Matthew, whose parents hail from Akure, the Ondo State capital, was born on August 28, 2012 at the Ondo State Mother and Child Hospital. Two months after he was delivered, the parents noticed that that the little boy had frequent cough, inappropriate breathing and catarrh.

    In a chat with Newsextra, Mr. Miller said: “Immediately we discovered the baby’s unusual health condition, we rushed him to the Mother and Child Hospital in Akure which is very close to our residence.”

    Continuing, Miller who is a farmer continued: “Though, when his mother was three months pregnant, she suffered from chicken pox which was treated before she was delivered of Mathew. After two months, she gave birth to him. Mathew always has frequent catarrh, cough and his breathing is very poor.

    “We rushed him back to Mother and Child Hospital but the doctors there could not do anything about it. They directed us to the State Hospital in Akure where the doctors also directed us to Gani Fawehinmi Diagnostic Centre in Ondo Town. Unfortunately, the experts their claimed that they do not have such equipment to carry out such surgical operation.

    “They referred us to Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching College Hospital in Ile-Ife. The doctors in Ife directed us to a Cardiac Consultation Unit, Biket Medical Centre in Osogbo in Osun State. It was there they discovered that my baby is battling with such ailment.

    “We took the report to OAUTHC and the doctors urged us to wait for some weeks in order to conduct a research if they could treat such disease. They latter sent us a letter signed by one Dr. A.B Ogunrombi, the Consultant Cardiothoracic Surgeon of the hospital that patient (Matthew) already diagnosed with congenital heart disease (Truncus Arterious) with VSD and ASD will need surgical correction abroad. The estimated cost for the surgical correction including travel is about N5m.

    “Although we have contacted the hospital in India through internet and they have replied us through Dr. Ashutosh Marwah, a Senior Consultant and Surgeon-Paediatric Cardiologist, Fortis Escorts Super Specialty Hospital New Delhi, India.

    “In his reply, Dr. Marwah said hospital cost for the treatment is likely to be 10,100 US Dollars, including the cost of the surgery.

    “They cost will also include the 12 days they will spend in the hospital (four days in ICU and eight days in the room), including extra 3300 US Dollars as an amount for extra stay in the hospital (if necessary).”

    In the face of this, Mr Miller said he was financially handicapped, even as he said: “I have spent all the money I have. Every three days will always take Matthew to Mother and Child Hospital for treatment. As at now, I have spent over N500, 000 on the baby and I am broke. We always get a drug for him from OUATHC every day. As a result of this, we have nothing with us again.

    “We are begging government, philanthropists, individuals and corporate organisations to give us some financial assistance. We cannot afford to lose Matthew. We have tried our best. Please, you can reach us through this Bank Account: 2058807833, United Bank of Africa (UBA).”

  • Baby ‘functionally cured’ of HIV

    Baby ‘functionally cured’ of HIV

    MAJOR breakthrough in the anti-HIV/AIDS battle has been announced.

    A baby born with the deadly Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) may have been cured of the condition, AFP reported yesterday.

    The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the American Foundation for AIDS Research.

    The development could help improve treatment of babies infected with the virus at birth.

    There is an important technical nuance: researchers insist on calling it a “functional cure” rather than a complete cure.

    That is because the virus is not totally eradicated. Still, its presence is reduced to such a low level that a body can control it without the need for standard drug treatment.

    The only fully cured AIDS patient recognised worldwide is the so-called “Berlin patient”, American Timothy Brown. He is considered cured of HIV and leukemia five years after receiving bone marrow transplants from a rare donor naturally resistant to HIV. The marrow transplant was aimed at treating his leukemia.

    But in the new case, the baby girl received nothing more invasive or complex than commonly available antiretroviral drugs. The difference, however, was the dosage and the timing: starting less than 30 hours after her birth.

    It is that kind of aggressive treatment that likely yielded the “functional cure”, researchers reported on Sunday at the 20th Annual Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Atlanta, Georgia.

    What researchers call dormant HIV-infected cells often re-start infections in HIV-infected patients within a few weeks after antiretroviral treatment stops, forcing most people who have tested HIV-positive to stay on the drugs for life or risk the illness progressing.

    “Prompt antiviral therapy in newborns that begins within days of exposure may help infants clear the virus and achieve long-term remission without life-long treatment by preventing such viral hideouts from forming in the first place,” said lead researcher Deborah Persaud of Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore, Maryland.

    It appears to be the first time this was achieved in a baby, she said.

    The baby was infected by her HIV-positive mother, and her treatment with therapeutic doses of antiretroviral drugs began even before her own positive blood test came back.

    The typical protocol for high-risk newborns is to give them smaller doses of the drugs until results from an HIV blood test is available at six weeks old.

    Tests showed the baby’s viral count steadily declined until it could no longer be detected 29 days after her birth.

    The child was given follow-up treatment with antiretroviral drugs until 18 months, at which point doctors lost contact with her for 10 months. During that period, she was not taking the drugs.

    Researchers then were able to do a series of blood tests — and none gave an HIV-positive result.

    Natural viral suppression without treatment is an exceedingly rare occurrence, seen in fewer than half a per cent of HIV-infected adults, known as “elite controllers”, whose immune systems are able to rein in viral replication and keep the virus at clinically undetectable levels.

    Experts on HIV have long wanted to help all HIV patients achieve elite-controller status.

    Researchers say this new case offers hope as a game-changer, because it suggests prompt antiretroviral therapy in newborns indeed can do that.

    Still, they said, their first priority is learning how to stop transmission of the virus from mother to newborn. ARV treatments of mothers currently stop transmission to newborns in 98 per cent of cases, they say.

    “Our next step is to find out if this is a highly unusual response to very early antiretroviral therapy or something we can actually replicate in other high-risk newborns,” Persaud pointed out.

     

  • Day-old baby dumped near stream in Jos

    A  day-old baby boy was found yesterday near a stream at Race Course, Jos, the Plateau State capital.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) learnt that the baby was found at 6am opposite the main campus of the University of Jos (UNIJOS) by a mechanic, Malam Abubakar Garba.

    Garba told NAN that he wanted to cross the stream, on his way to a naming ceremony, when he heard the cry of the baby by the bank of the stream.

    He said: “When I heard the cry of a baby at that odd hour, I got scared. But I mustered the courage to peep into the bank where I saw the baby in a basket.

    “The baby was dressed in a sweater while a towel was wrapped around him.”

    The mechanic said he called some neighbours, who took the baby to Sharna Police Station near UNIJOS.

    Garba added: “The police directed us to take the baby to a nearby hospital where a medical check-up confirmed that the baby was healthy.”

    He explained that the baby had been taken to the ward head of Angwan-Rogo, Alhaji Mohammed Sani, for necessary care.

    Police Commissioner Chris Olakpe could not be reached for comments.

    But a senior police officer attached to Angwan-Rogo Police Station, who spoke to NAN on condition of anonymity, confirmed the discovery of the baby.

    The officer said Garba had indicated interest to adopt the baby before it was resolved that he should be taken to the ward head’s house.

    He said the police were investigating the whereabouts of the baby’s mother to prosecute her for cruelty.

  • Expectant  Mercy Johnson shops for baby items

    Expectant Mercy Johnson shops for baby items

    MERCY Johnson and her hubby, Prince Odianose Okojie, are leaving no stone unturned in their bid to give their unborn baby the very best. The couple are said to be shopping for the first fruit of their marriage as they look forward to spoil the baby silly.

    The talented actress who is known to be a red carpet favourite with her curvy hips now has a baby bump and to look good, the husband took her on a shopping spree penultimate week on the Mainland of Lagos.

    Mercy and her charming Prince Odi were spotted in a maternity boutique along Oregun, Ikeja, Lagos. Obviously, the owners of the boutique had to go and shop for more choice designs from a wholesaler as they were kept waiting for a very long time before they left with bags of clothes.

  • Woman, baby injured in Ibadan building collapse

    Woman, baby injured in Ibadan building collapse

    A woman and her baby were yesterday injured when a building collapsed in Agugu, Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    The building reportedly gave way due to old age and lack of maintenance.

    Though some residents said both woman and her baby died in the building, the chairman of the landlords’ association, Mr Tijani Sanni, said the woman was only injured.

    Sanni, who is the association’s chairman in Iyana-Idiobi, Agugu, explained that the woman was on her way to a ceremony in Oke-Ibadan when the building collapsed as she was passing by.

    Sanni said: “We don’t know the woman. All we were able to gather is that she came to Ibadan from Lagos to attend a ceremony at Oke-Ibadan.”

    The chairman said the association, with the family of the building owner, was planning to demolish the structure.

    He said: “At the moment, we are looking at the possibility of demolishing the ruins. We don’t need the government anymore at this stage. We are capable of doing it on our own. We shall call on the government, if we need them.”

    A resident, who identified himself as Adewusi, said he witnessed the incident.

    According to him, the building is over 100 years old and it gave way at 4:30pm.

    He said: “The building collapsed suddenly as the woman, who was just passing by with her child, got to the spot.

    “It was so serious. The building gave no sign. We were all surprised. She was quickly rushed to the hospital. That is the only thing I can say about the incident.”

    A representative of the owners of the building, Mr. Taiwo Adebisi, said: “We are already discussing with the executives of the landlords’ association on the next line of action. We are sure that an urgent action shall be taken.”

    Acting police spokesman, Daniel Oboyim, confirmed the incident.

    He said nobody was trapped or killed in the building.

    Oboyi added: “A woman, who was passing by, was slightly affected as rubbles flew and scratched her on the body. She was taken to a hospital and she has been responding to treatment. It is not a serious accident.”