Tag: Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital

  • OAU clinical workers begin strike over non-payment of salary

    OAU clinical workers begin strike over non-payment of salary

    Clinical lecturers at Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, Ile-Ife, Osun State, under the aegis of Medical and Dental Consultants’ Association (MDCAN), are set to begin industrial action over non-payment of salary.

    The leadership of MDCAN in a statement yesterday said the strike followed a 21-day ultimatum issued to the vice chancellors of universities in the Southwest zone for placement of clinical lecturers on the Consolidated Medical Salary Scale (CONMESS), as obtained in medical colleges in Nigerian universities.

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    The statement signed by its Chairman, Dr Olufemi Ogundipe and General Secretary, Dr. Tajudin Adetunji, said members would begin industrial action on February 3, as directed by the Southwest Zone of the association.

    They said academic activities at the College of Health Sciences in the university involving all clinical lecturers would be shut down.

  • Hospital ‘detains’ indigent patients over unpaid bills

    No fewer than 10 patients of the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, Ile-Ife (OAUTH) in Osun State have allegedly been detained for their inability to pay their medical bills. While about five of them, all women, have been released after paying their bills by instalment, another five are alleged to be currently languishing at the gate of the Wesley Guild Hospital in Ilesa, an annex of the OAUTH, where they are being allegedly detained.

    The women, who had undergone Caesarean Section before they were delivered of their babies and surgical operations for miscarriage, had not, it was alleged, been allowed to leave the hospital for over one month for owing the hospital between N42,000 and N57, 000.

    The patients, who spoke with our correspondent at the Wesley Guild Hospital in Ilesa, said they were unable to pay the hospital bills because their spouses are indigent.

    Sidikat Musa (26) with the card number 271691 is a hairdresser while her husband is a drycleaner.

    According to the patient, her husband had managed to pay N55, 000 out of N97, 000 which the hospital charged them for delivering her of her baby through a Cesarean Section,  leaving the balance of N42,000 to be paid by her husband before she could be allowed to go home and join her family.

    Unlike the four others our correspondent spoke with, Sidikat was lucky to have a baby boy after the operation. Another patient Anifat Tajudeen (29), with card number 271833 is a tailor and her husband is a farmer. She said she had been discharged since June 6 but said the management of the hospital refused to allow her go home because she could not pay the balance of N43, 000 of her medical bill, adding that the hospital management had been kind enough to write off 50 per cent of the cost of the treatment for Caesarean Section. Anifat, unfortunately, lost her child. A tailoring apprentice, Barakat Awolaju (19) with card number 416129, said she had been detained by the hospital since May 18  after her boyfriend, a welder, ran away because he was unable to pay N57,000 which was the balance of her medical bill of N114, 000 despite the hospital writing of N57, 000 because of complications occasioned by miscarriage.

    Also, a 20-year-old hairdresser apprentice, Rachael Ayoku with card number 271324 underwent surgical operation for miscarriage but could not go home since she was discharged on May 12. Rachael’s boyfriend, who is a tiler, has been unable to pay the balance of N43, 000 out of the N86,000 medical bill which the hospital had subsidised by 50 per cent.

    A tailor apprentice, Blessing Ogundipe (24), whose boyfriend is unemployed also could not offset the balance of N46, 000 out of N112, 000 after the hospital had subsidised the cost by 50 per cent. According to her, she had been detained since she was discharged on June 21.

    Reacting, the Public Relations Officer for the OAUTH, Kemi Fasoto, said only the Chief Medical Director could make comment on any issue concerning the hospital.

  • Buhari renews OAUTH CMD, appoints new CMD for UUTH

    President Muhammadu Buhari has renewed the appointment of Professor Victor Adetiloye as the Chief Medical Director, (CMD) Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, Ile – Ife.
    This will be Adetiloye’s second and final tenure.

    Read Also: Buhari, Akeredolu, El-Rufai meet in Aso Rock

    In a press statement signed by Mrs. Boade Akinola, Director, Media and Public Relations, Ministry of Health, Buhari also approved the appointment of Dr. Bassey Emem Abasi as the new Chief Medical Director (CMD), University of Uyo Teaching Hospital for an initial term of four years.
    In their letters signed by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Boss Mustapha, the appointees were urged to bring their wealth of experiences to bear in order to upgrade quality service delivery in the health sector.
  • Why Caesarean Section is becoming popular among Nigerian women – Experts

    Why Caesarean Section is becoming popular among Nigerian women – Experts

    The Caesarean Section (CS)  option  in birth delivery is becoming popular among some Nigerian women,  a NAN survey has revealed.

    Some South West states and Kwara that the increasing popularity of the procedure was hinged on  factors ranging  from medical reasons to social considerations  as well as  unethical  motive  to make profit.

    Dr Ijarotimi Omotade, a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynaecology and Perinatology, Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, Ile-Ife, said  CS  could  be justified whenever it was  deemed that the life of the mother or foetus could be in jeopardy if vaginal delivery was  allowed.

    Omotade, however,  said the CS  rate was  on the increase worldwide and remains a  cause for concern considering the risks associated with the procedure.

    According to her, the risks include  but not limited to maternal death, bleeding, dangerous clot formation in blood vessels, infection and anaesthetic complications.

    She said as  beneficial as CS is , there are risks involved with it just  like other surgical operations.

    The expert maintained that the procedure should only be done when medically indicated.

    According to Omotade, some  indications for CS  include when the passage (pelvis) is too narrow for the passenger (fetus), when the placenta or tumour is blocking the passage  and  when the womb (uterus) is in danger of a rupture.

    Omotade, however, said apart from the  cited indications, many mothers in the country  now willingly  demand  for CS,  hoping to escape the excruciating pains of labour.

    “Mothers  are now also requesting caesarean section because they want to preserve the tone of the perineum and vagina.

    “Mothers,  who want their babies delivered on a particular day like their birthdays, husband’s birthday, wedding anniversary, special occasions like New Year  day, Christmas or other religious occasions are not left out of social factors,’’ she said.

    Similarly, Prof  Ernest Orji, the Head of Department of Obstetrics and  Gynaecology at OAU, Ile-Ife, said  majority of  pregnant women now request  for  CS because they do not want to pass through labour pains.

    Some, he said,  also prefer to have their babies on special days to  mark their wedding or birthday anniversaries.

    He said the trend had changed from the past when women were afraid of CS, adding that the procedure was now attractive with the availability of professionals and modern equipment for successful surgery.

    But Dr Modupe Lawal, a gynaecologist  at Ladoke Akintola University Teaching Hospital, Ogbomoso,  said  CS delivery was  on the rise in Nigeria because doctors make more money from  the procedure than normal delivery.

    According to Lawal,  what  most private hospitals  charge for CS  is higher than normal delivery.

    Another practitioner, Dr Adewunmi Alayaki, however, said  it would be  unfair to believe that doctors who opt for CS were after monetary benefits.

    Alayaki, the Head of Surgery Department, State Hospital, Ilaro, Ogun,  told  NAN  that a doctor’s first and paramount responsibility was  to save lives.

    According to him, several factors could be responsible for the choice of  CS  by  any pregnant woman.

    Some of the factors, according to him, are maternal factors, fetal factor and materno-fetal factors.

    Others factors, he said, are age, body formation (short-statured woman), contracted pelvic and previous surgeries.

    “When we look at it  in the long run, it is what we have in the society and some of the conditions that will make a doctor opt for CS.

    “When we talk of economic gains to doctors, are we talking of doctors who work in public or private sector because for a doctor who works for government, the money is not going into his  pocket,” he said.

    On how popular the procedure is, Alayaki said:  ” Times are changing and a lot of women are more enlightened now,  some of them even request for it.’’

    When NAN spoke with some expectant mothers, some of them expressed  reservations  about  the procedure while some were positively disposed to it.

    Mr Dele Hundeyin,  a father of two,  said  his  wife gave birth to his two daughters through CS.

    “We have good doctors in government hospitals who take on this procedure and are good at what they do while their fees aren’t too exorbitant.

    “It also saves a lot of time and the  agony my wife would have to pass through. So, I think it’s far better than the Hebrew delivery,” Hundeyin added.

    A gynaecologist, Dr Akinola Oladeji, expressed the belief that the increase in rate of  CS had been due  in part to fall out of  emergency cases.

    “A lot of people go to sub standard health facilities or mission houses and by the time they are coming to the hospital,  they already have at least one indication for emergency caesarean section.

    “Another reason for the increase is due to economic factor  in that  some  medical practitioner encourage   it because of the profit to be made; it’s more expensive than normal delivery.

    “In our hospital, the cost of a C-Section goes for about N250,000 to N300,000 and for multiple births,  it is  more.

    “We have up to four C-sections in a month in this facility,” he said.

    He also confirmed  that  the elite sometimes request for CS to avoid labour pains.

    A  middle-aged petty trader, Mrs Florence Adeyemi, who is a mother of three teenagers,  said  she would not refuse a CS  if she were to be pregnant with a fourth child.

    “The major reasons for refusal of a caesarean section is fear of death during surgery, but that fear has since been laid to rest when I saw my friends who have undergone a C- section and came out well.

    “There is enough awareness now of the benefits of a C-section in preserving the lives of mother and child,” she said.

    A 26-year-old pregnant woman said that she was planning  on getting a C-section so as to decide the birthday of her child.

    “It is our first child and my husband and I have decided we want the birthday to coincide with our wedding anniversary,” the respondent, who refused to disclose her name said.

    Dr Ismaila Busari, the Ondo State Chairman of the National Association of Government General Medical and Dental Practitioners, told NAN in Akure that CS offers mothers laxity to reject labour pains.

    “She can fix any date which will be convenient instead of going through labour pains with its contractions.

    “ Normal delivery might also come with vaginal tears which can never happen with CS.

    “The baby doesn’t pass through the vagina with this process;  it is  cut out through the stomach.

    “ CS usually also saves the lives of both mother and child when the labour lasts for a very long time without any progress,  even when the labour is induced,” he said.

    He, however, said that CS has  many disadvantages,  including issues such as cutting of the uterus which could result in cutting the blood vessels accidentally.

    According to him, the bleeding that occurs in CS is also usually much more than that of normal delivery.

    He said that the patient might need blood transfusion due to blood loss, adding that this also has its own disadvantage.

    Busari said that blood transfusion might lead to infections and diseases such as HIV and hepatitis.

    “Even when the blood is screened,  the disease or infection might be in the window period and might not show up during screening,’’ he said.

    “Also,  after CS, the mother passes through pain and stress due to the cut made to the stomach.

    “ It varies, but the pain might last for months and  in some cases  will affect the mother’s daily activities.

    “Infection of the cut from the operation can also occur if the cut is not treated or cleaned adequately.

    “If the person is diabetic, then it won’t heal as fast as someone without diabetes,” he added.

    Inspite of the increasing popularity of the procedure, it is still unappealing to some women.

    A petty trader,  who simply gave her name as  Mrs Adebayo,  said that having a CS  was against her religious beliefs.

    According to her, it is a sin for a Christian to choose the procedure.

    A lecturer also expressed  satisfaction with  vaginal delivery, saying “ I like to experience what it means to bring forth a child by yourself.

    “ The pain you experience is one of   the joys of motherhood.

    “Cesarean Section is a not  for me and  the pain of vaginal birth besides  is just for that moment compared to the lingering pain you experience after the CS,’’ the academic, who also craved anonymity, said.

    The Chief  Medical Director of  Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital, Ado-Ekiti, Dr Kolawole Ogundipe,  said it had  always been  difficult convincing some pregnant mothers to go for  CS in the state.

    He  said this was  inspite of the explanations on the risks of rejecting the procedure.

    But the state Commissioner for Health, Dr  Olurotimi Ojo,  said hospitals in the  state were currently being equipped  with the right type of facilities  and personnel, saying pregnant women and their families had nothing to fear in whatever  circumstances.

    An Ilorin-based matron, Mrs Saratu Bello, also said many had died for rejecting the procedure in Kwara.

    “Giving birth through CS is not a death sentence  and the earlier expectant mothers realised  this  the better for them.

    “’They should know that before medical personnel decide to carry out CS on any pregnant woman, it is to save the life of either the mother or child or both of them.

    “But when you want to remain adamant that you must give birth only through vaginal delivery, caution needs to be taken,” Bello said.

    The matron said she was compelled  to speak out on the development when expectant mothers began to pray against undergoing the procedure during ante-natal sessions.

    “I became surprised that it is now like a norm because they (pregnant women) now pray against it during ante-natal sessions.

    “What they say is that they want to deliver like the Hebrew women, so, I know it’s a religious belief which has cost a lot of women their lives and needs to be tackled.

    “That compelled  me to see it as a point of duty to educate them more  on the need for them to allow things  take its due course,” the matron said.

    Bello said it was surprising that some Nigerians had continued to live in the past regarding  CS  while  some expectant mothers eagerly  opt for it in other countries.

  • World Asthma Day: Awareness, prevention, and control

    World Asthma Day: Awareness, prevention, and control

    I am silently slipping into oblivion; it feels like my lungs have suddenly suffered a traffic jam; I can’t breathe properly, is this happening again? I am in pain and there is no one to help me get my inhaler. These were the words that resounded in my head when I suffered a serious attack that almost took my life.

    Asthma is a lung disease caused by inflammation (swelling) that leads to wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness and coughing. Most people suffering from asthma also have a family history of allergies, such as hay fever, pet allergies etc.

    According, to Merriam Webster dictionary, Asthma is a chronic lung disorder marked by recurring episodes of airways obstruction manifested by laboured breathing accompanied especially by wheezing and coughing and by a sense of constriction in the chest.

    From researches, the exact cause(s) of this ‘life-threatening’ disease is not yet know – this understanding for me is overwhelming! Although, it cannot be cured it can be controlled and managed with medications, and patients can live active and normal lives.

    To trigger your imagination a bit, preponderantly, asthma is diagnosed based on medical and family history of the disease and allergies, physical examinations and test results. The doctor then uses a stethoscope to listen to your lungs and look for signs of asthma such as wheezing swollen lungs (nasal passages) and runny nose.

    According to recent research, if a pregnant woman suffers from asthma, the child in her womb is more susceptible to asthmatic tendencies; this will most likely be manifested when the child is between the ages of 3 to 4 years.

    According Gregory Erhabor, a Professor of Medicine and Consultant Chest Physician at Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, “globally, about 300 million people are currently suffering from asthma. In Nigeria, however, the figure stands at 15million. The implication of this is that one in every 15 Nigerians may have the condition.”

    Sadly, the prevalence has been on the rise as a result of increasing environmental pollution. The cause(s) of asthma is largely unknown, however, two key factors play an important role in determining whether you will develop asthma or not. These are genetic and environmental factors. Research has shown that certain genes are associated with those who develop asthma. These genes are passed from parent to the children. Those who have these genes are more susceptible to environmental pollutants like dust, repugnant smell etc. We can say that “Genes load the gun, but the environment pulls the trigger.”

    One good news about this disease is that it is manageable, the goal of asthma management is to prevent and control the symptoms, this however, depends on which type the person is suffering from. There are basically four stages of asthmatic attacks: mild intermittent asthma, mild persistent asthma, moderate persistent asthma, severe persistent asthma.

    If the individual comes with mild intermittent asthma, in other words no immediate dangers or symptoms exist, the person with this as much as possible avoid the identified triggers in themselves. Although, this is difficult to do since most of these triggers that triggers are present in the environment.

    The most important thing is for the patient to have control over his or her asthma. Experts advise that management can be achieved if the asthmatic patient with his/her caretaker finds the best way to control it with the use of a monitoring device such as ‘Peak flow meter’.

    Finally, it is a truism that prevention is better than cure, therefore, prevention asthma must be attacked from is primal stage of environmental cleanliness. Also, prevention can be achieved on different levels: first is the primary prevention, that is, for people who never had the disease. Another level is secondary, which is for those who had the disease and take measures to avoid exposure to its sundry triggers like smoking, undue exposure to irritants at home or work, use of tiles rather than carpet to avoid exposure to dust, and use of fuels like gas for cooking to avoid indoor pollution.

  • About 7 dead, 11 injured in Osun auto accident

    About 7 dead, 11 injured in Osun auto accident

    No fewer than seven people on Sunday evening died in a ghastly auto crash along Osogbo/Gbongan road while eleven others sustained varying degrees of injury during the accident.

    An eyewitness account revealed that two siblings of the same mother returning to school were among those that lost their lives.

    It was gathered that an 18-seater passenger bus around 5:00pm lost control after a tyre burst and collided with a Toyota Sienna space bus.

    It was also gathered that the passenger bus which had about 16 passengers on board immediately burst into flames after the accident and nobody could tell the cause of the fire.

    The eyewitness recounted: “We manage to remove some of the passengers in the commercial bus but about 6 people were trapped in the vehicle and got burnt. In the other private vehicle involved, one person died on the spot and the other occupant was brought out of the wreckage alive.

    “I can’t confirm what later happened. But those that were injured were taken to Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, OAUTH, Ife for treatment.

    “From what we were told when the corpses were being evacuated, two children of the same mother died in the commercial vehicle. The mother was travelling in another vehicle. She eventually met their dead bodies when she arrived the scene of the crash.”

    Meanwhile, the Osun Sector Commander of the Federal Road Safety Corps, FRSC, Mr Umar Ibrahim, confirmed that seven people died in the accident.

    According to him, the cause of the accident could not be immediately established, saying an investigation is being conducted to unravel the cause.