Tag: mortuary

  • Residents besiege mortuary after fire

    RESIDENTS have continued to troop to the General Hospital, Enugwu-Ukwu, Anambra State, barely a week after the mortuary caught fire.

    Over 50 bodies were reportedly burnt in the December 29 fire.

    Bereaved families wailed on the scene while trying to identify burnt bodies.

    Security agents were under pressure guarding against unnecessary harm.

    Chima Ezeh, who deposited a body two weeks before the incident, said his family was yet to identify the body.

    Ezeh said he was denied access to the mortuary earlier only to receive a call at 3 pm that the mortuary had been gutted by fire.

    He said: “Some identified bodies were taken to Amaku General Hospital on December 30, leaving unidentified ones behind. We were waiting for morticians from Awka to determine what cause of action to take concerning identifying their deceased.”

    ‘’Mr. Sunday Onuorah, whose brother was deposited two weeks ago, lamented that the incident was a double jeopardy.

    “We were still mourning my brother’s death when news of the fire came. We are trying to keep this from getting to our mother for the fear of losing her too as she is hypertensive,” Onuora said.

    The cause of the fire is yet to be ascertained, but the hospital management has been meeting over the incident.

  • Dead man grabs brother’s hands in mortuary

    There was panic yesterday at the mortuary of Plateau Specialist Hospital in Jos, when the hand of the body of a man being prepared for burial suddenly grabbed his living brother’s hand.
    The incident happened as the deceased, identified as Choji Zeng, was being dressed up by his brother, in preparation for burial.
    Family members, who had participated in the washing of the corpse, ran out in panic as they saw the dead Choji Zeng, holding tight to his younger brother Mr. Gyang Zeng.
    The pandemonium attracted mortuary attendants, who came in to separate the two brothers.
    The two brothers had lived together at Ungwan Juma’a Abattoir in Jos metropolis. Zeng, 35-year-old, died after a brief illness, relations said. He was said to have suffered from a liver disease.
    Gyang Zeng confirmed the unusual incident to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).
    He said after bathing his brother, he was dressing him with white cloth, when he suddenly grabbed his hands.
    He said he had to call the mortuary attendant for help. The mortuary attendant forced the dead hands off him.
    Relations and neighbours, who witnessed the incident, also confirmed it to News Agency of Nigeria.
    Gyang revealed to NAN that when the deceased held his hands, he asked him; “Choji, why did you hold my hand, you want me to join you or what?”
    One of the mortuary attendants said it was not the first time such a thing would happen in the mortuary.
    Mr. Benjamin Oche, a neighbour of the two brothers who also witnessed the incident, told NAN that before the demise of the deceased, both brothers had a misunderstanding.
    He said both of them had quarrelled over the land they inherited from their parents.
    But no foul play was being suspected in Choji Zeng’s death.

  • Missing  dismissed policeman’s body found in mortuary

    Missing dismissed policeman’s body found in mortuary

    The body of a dismissed police sergeant, Daniel Iremiren, who was reported missing last April 11, has been found at the Mainland General Hospital Mortuary.

    It was found last Friday after over two months search for the late Iremiren.

    The late Iremiren, who hailed from Sabongida Ora, the headquarters of Owan West Local Goverment Area of Edo State, was dismissed from the police seven years ago. He had left his 25, Suleiman Street in Igando, Lagos home for Cele Bus Stop last April 11 and never returned.

    It was learnt that he usually went there to escort buses.

    Speaking with The Nation last weekend on how she found her husband’s body, Mrs Margaret Iremiren said it was after a long search.

    She said: “I said to myself that even if my husband died, I should see his body. I went with my husband’s friend, Friday to Cele Express again. We met a man I used to know with my husband, we call him ‘Water’, I asked him about my husband, he directed me to a policeman, Collins Adewumi. It took us some days before I could convince my husband’s friend and a family member to approach Collins.”

    Adewumi, The Nation learnt, is also an escort policeman like the late Iremiren.

    Mrs Iremiren continued: “Collins told me that there was a serious incident when my husband escorted a driver. He gave us a vehicle registration number that plies Orile through Oshodi. We got the vehicle, its conductor and the driver with the help of a policeman at Cele bus stop, who took them to Ejigbo Police Station.

    “The driver and the conductor told us that as they were driving from Orile with my husband around 8:30pm, when they were stopped by some hoodlums (Agbero) who asked him (the conductor) for the money they usually collect. The conductor, simply identified as Onyeka, refused to give the Agbero money, the Agbero removed the screen wiper of the vehicle.

    “My husband was said to have got off the vehicle to ask for the screen wiper when the leader of the Agbero hit him three times on his chest, saying ‘Policeman, can you stand us?’ and gave him the wiper. When he returned to the vehicle, Daniel was said to have gasped for breath and died immediately.

    “The driver went to hide the body that night and later dumped it at Oke-Afa in Isolo. The driver is at large with his family. The Agbero was also nowhere to be found. I was told a pastor found his body lying close to the canal and reported to the Ejigbo Police Station.

    “After we made a statement and we were taken to Mainland General Hospital mortuary to see if the man in question was my husband, we were able to identify him, after we paid N13,000 before the mortuary attendant could bring his body out. My husband’s body was among those to be given mass burial this week.”

    The Nation learnt that the bus is in Ejigbo Police Station and the case transferred to the State Criminal Investigating Department (SCID) at Panti, Yaba, Lagos Mainland.

  • ‘If you see the mortuary, you’ll like to die’

    ‘If you see the mortuary, you’ll like to die’

    Tale of ‘wonder’ hospital in President’s home-town

    Have you visited Otuoke Cottage Hospital (OCH)? If you have not, try either a referral to the hospital or embark on medical tourism to the facility located in the hometown of President Goodluck Jonathan in Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State.

    In fact, you would not regret spending fortunes to visit the facility. The board members of the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Yenagoa, who toured the facility on Tuesday did not nurse any regret. They were rather “waoohed”. They could not believe that such a public medical facility existed anywhere in the country.

    Though they embarked on the tour to assess equipment in the hospital before taking over the medical edifice as directed by the Federal Government, most of them dreamed of coming back to enjoy the medical accoutrements which they said could only be seen in public hospitals overseas.

    Indeed, the Otuoke hospital is in a class of its own. It is a world-class cottage hospital constructed with global standard and best practice. The environment alone gives a visitor a breath of fresh air. The surroundings are clearly mapped out with landscaped lawns which are constantly mowed by the hospital management. It is further beautified with solidly constructed network of roads linked to various departments and blocks to allow easy movement of persons, vehicles and equipment.

    The blocks, though simple, are solid. From the reception, a visitor begins to see the difference between a kite and a hawk. The reception located within the Outpatient Department reassures any patient of the hospital’s capability.

    The seats are comfortable enough for patients to relax and get documented before proceeding to the waiting room, which is built separate from the reception with a capacity to accommodate many patients. The Consulting Rooms and Medical Records are also designed to allow for quick response to the medical needs of the patients.

    Within the Outpatient Departments are modern Pharmacy Department, Counseling Room, Compounding Rooms and Drug Store, which are located close to a five-bedded department. Each of the beds is unique. It has an oxygen pipe to enable any patient on emergency have free access to oxygen.

    “This area is called the Triad”, one of the board members said. “It is here that injured patients are brought, sorted out and then sent to their different wards,” he explained. From the Outpatient Department, a roofed walkway opens to the wards. Along the walkway is a sculptural depiction of a caring mother and her child. The wards – male, female, children and maternity – are constructed close to one another. In fact, the wards boast of sophisticated equipment and many live supports tailored to the needs of each category of patients. Unique and perhaps first in the country are automated beds that dot the wards. Each of the wards has 10 automated beds.

    “This kind of bed is the first in the country,” the Medical Director of the hospital and tour guard, Dr. Benjamin Tembowei, said. “It is electronically controlled. It has speakers, audio system and other adjustable buttons,” he added.

    Again, an oxygen pipe is fitted on the wall close to each of the bed. So, it is each patient to an oxygen pipe. The entire wards are piped with oxygen. The hospital has an Oxygen Plant which generates oxygen and distributes to all the wards. Tembowei complained that the Labour Room was small and that the wards lack a call room with an intra- connected communication network to allow for exchange of information.Everything that makes a standard hospital is in OCH. The Laboratory Department is designed with state-of-the-art equipment. It is further divided into haematological and pathological laboratories.

    With experienced manpower, OCH can perform all surgeries in its Theatre and anybody wheeled into the facility has a high percentage of coming out alive. The theatre is made up of two suites, one monitor and an aesthetic machine.

    However, the Medical Director said: “We need more monitors and aesthetic machines. What we have is not enough.The hospital depends mainly on two 350KVA generators for its electricity supplies. “We use three drums of diesel a day”, Dr. Ifeanyichukwu Tembowei said.

    “If you see the mortuary, you will like to die”, one of the senior employees of FMC said jokingly. Though the statement provoked laughter among the tourists, the idea of death nauseated them. They tactically avoided the building. “You see, everybody wants to go to heaven, yet nobody wants to die,” the employee who is a pathologist remarked. Within the compound are two aesthetically designed buildings constructed to accommodate members of staff of the hospital. Tebuwei said 12 persons are living in the quarters. What is this hospital lacking? It has functional water works, laundry and an equipped kitchen. But the hospital has its fair share of the 2012 flood that devastated the state. Two 4D ultra-sound scan machines worth millions of dollars and two digital x-ray machines were damaged by the floods. Also, one of the two ambulances with live support facilities was destroyed by the floods.

    Tebuwei, a Consultant Surgeon, described the facility as a modern hospital with state-of-the art equipment and called for it to be replicated in other parts of the country. He said such facilities established in the country would discourage Nigerians from seeking medical help in other developed countries like Indian, Germany and China.

    “If people can replicate this in other places, it will go a long way in assisting the poor man in the society. These equipment, if we have the manpower to man them, Indians can come here too and be treated,” he said.

    He eulogised the Federal Government for its directive to FMC to take over the hospital, describing it as a welcome development. Tracing the origin of the hospital, he said the foundation was laid by President Jonathan in 2006 during his brief tenure in the state as the governor.

    He said: “Unfortunately, the work could not go on because of logistic problems until the office of the Millennium Development Goals adopted and finished it. The aim of MDGs is to decrease maternal and child mortality. I know the place is far from Yenagoa Metropolis and it is rural, we will achieve the aim when it is taken over by the FG. I am very happy because it will become a federal institution with better funding,” he said.

    He reeled out the problems of the hospital as lack of electricity, lack of potable water which he blamed on the difficult terrains of the state. He recalled that some sophisticated equipment such as two most modern 4D coloured ultra-scan and x-ray machines were destroyed by the 2012 floods. He appealed to the board to facilitate the process of replacing the damaged equipment. He said: “For about three, four months ago, we didn’t have generator. To run this light, we have two 350 KVA generators and to run them every day is capital intensive.

    “We use three drums of diesel a day and it is not easy. Another problem we have is water. In Bayelsa State, the iron content is very high, we need to filter to get water and this equipment is sensitive.

    “We need to also create awareness for people to know that it has been taken over by the Federal Government; that the Federal Government is taking it over is not a new concept. It has been done in Ebonyi State, Bauchi, Lagos and Edo states. We are happy this is happening to us. It will give us sense of belonging.”

    Also, the Acting Chairman of the board, Chief Iroka Lawrence, said he was surprised by the world-class equipment in the hospital. “This is hospital with modern gadgets”, he exclaimed. He said it was a good development that the Federal Government had decided to take it over. He said the takeover would help to maximise the utilisation of the equipment.

    “As it is now, it appears as if some of the facilities are underutilised. We will maximise them and maybe turn here into a referral centre and with time this kind of facility will be replicated in other places.

    “It is a good thing that the Federal Medical Centre is taking it over so that we can maximise the use of the equipment. We are highly impressed. We will address the challenges. It is the first thing that we will do when we sign the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to formally take it over. Furthermore, the Medical Director, FMC, Dr. Lawrence Etebu, referred to the take-over bid as a normal thing. He said: “It is one of these things that happen in the polity. It is a hospital that is virtually built by the Federal Government and being run by the state. But in the state, the health manpower is still not yet well-developed. So, it is a welcome idea.

    “It portends a good thing to Bayelsa State and Otuoke. It is a purpose-built hospital, well-thought out. The facilities are also of international standard. The flood came to destroy some of the sophisticated equipment which I am sure will be replaced very soon. It will complement the Federal Medical centre and take it to greater heights.

    “The board members visited the palace of the Obanema of Otuoke, His Royal Highness, Lot Ogiasa, to inform him of their mission in the community. The board acting chairman informed the monarch that they had come to assess facilities in the hospital before signing the MoU. The monarch before granting his royal blessings to them described the takeover bid as a dream come true.

    “I have always wanted the Federal Government to take over the hospital to ensure its proper management,” he said.

    Describing his reign as a blessed one, he said his tenure had brought good tidings to the people of the community, adding that Otuoke had moved from a rural setting to a city status. He asked the government to rename the hospital observing that it was bigger than a cottage hospital.

    He also appealed to the board to carry the community along in whatever plan they have to reposition the hospital. He said the community should benefit in matters of employment.

    “I am blessed because good things are coming to the community during my reign. Before now, Otuoke was nothing to write home about. But ever since l took over the traditional stool f this community, Otuoke has been transformed from a mere hamlet to a city status, “he said