Tag: quintuplets

  • Kogi quintuplets: One child dies, as doctor seeks to relocate family

    One of the quintuplets delivered at the Federal Medical Centre, Lokoja (FMC) on April 17 is dead, the hospital management has said.

    This is as Dr Taiwo Jones, Head Clinical Services, Federal Medical Centre, Lokoja, seeks to relocate the family from their present abode to a more conducive part of the state capital.

    Dr Jones told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Lokoja that the baby, who had been in incubator, died in the early hours of Monday, April 22.

    NAN reports that the baby, a male was the first to be delivered through Caesarean Section and weighed 1.3 kg at birth, a development which made the hospital to put him in an incubator.

    The quintuplets, three boys and two girls, were delivered by Mrs Uchenna Okeigbo, 42, an indigene of Olokoro Amangbo Community, Umuahia South Local Government Area of Abia.

    Mrs. Okeigbo had waited for 18 years after marriage before giving birth to the quintuplets.

    Jones said the hospital did all it could to ensure that the baby stayed alive, but all to no avail.

    ”At delivery, four out of the five babies were found to be fit and okay, but the fifth baby that weighed 1.3kg was unstable and unfit because of infections. As such, he was isolated and kept in incubator.

    ”The baby was initially presumed sepsis based on elevated C-reactive protein.

    ”Unfortunately, the condition of the baby deteriorated and we eventually lost the baby on Monday at about 5 a.m.

    ”The other four babies are in stable conditions.

    ”We will ensure that all the remaining four babies and their mother are fit and stable before they are discharged,” Jones said.

    The doctor, however, said that the management of the hospital was considering the possibility of relocating the couple to Lokoja city centre.

    “Where the couple are staying at Obajana is full of dust, which may hampered the respiratory system of the babies, which we think may not be too good for them.

    ”We have suggested it to the wife of the governor, Mrs. Rashidat Bello, who visited them on Monday; if it is possible for the government to assist them.

    ”Relocating to Lokoja, where is more safer for them to access the hospital for proper monitoring, after they had been discharged,” he said.

    Mrs. Rashidat Bello had donated N300, 000 baby wears and other items to the babies and their mother.

    She made the donations when she led other top government officials on a visit to Mrs. Okeigbo and her babies at the hospital on Monday.

    Also, Okeigbo told NAN at the hospital on Tuesday that another wife of the governor, Mrs. Amina Bello, also sent N200, 000 to her and the babies.

    She added that Matthew Kolawole, Speaker Kogi House of Assembly, also visited them on April 20 and gave them N100, 000.

    ”The Kogi State Commissioner for Women Affairs, Mrs Bolanle Amupitan, also gave us N25, 000, while the Secretary to Kogi State Government, Dr Folashade Ayoade, donated baby items to us,” Okeigbo said.

    She expressed her gratitude to the governor’s wives, top government officials and individuals that brought succour to her family.

    ”We are very glad and grateful to them for their timely interventions,” she said.

  • Quintuplets, mother held in hospital after delivery

    A 29-year-old woman who was delivered of a set of quintuplets in Nnewi, Anambra State, is yet to be discharged from the hospital three weeks after delivery.

    The woman, Helen Odo, from Nsukka, Enugu State, who put to bed at God’s Mercy Maternity Home in Obiuno Otolo, Nnewi, on July 25,  said she was being ‘detained’ at the hospital due to her inability to settle the medical bills.

    Speaking to newsmen, the 29-year-old woman said she had experienced multiple births, including a set of triplets, two of whom she said she lost three months later before the arrival of the quintuplets.

    She said she feared losing the nine children to hunger due to financial challenges her family was faced with, adding that the proceeds from her business and that of her husband could not cater for them.

    “Feeding, welfare and other issues concerning the babies is presently a challenge. I was undergoing training on how to make clothes before I put to bed.

    “The survival of her babies is in the hands of God as well as the government, public-spirited individuals, politicians.

    “Since the arrival of the baby, my husband has temporarily suspended his keke business to assist me in taking care of the babies,” she lamented.

    The husband, a 40-year-old commercial tricycle operator, had wanted to run away, abandoning the babies to the wife to cater for, but was held back by those present at the hospital when the babies were delivered.

    The man who described the quintuplets as over blessing, said he never hoped for quintuplets as he was struggling to feed the family.

    He said, “I had considered the possibility of running away from the responsibility of taking care of them.

    “I’m not running away because I don’t appreciate the blessing, but I had wanted to run because I don’t know where to start raising them from.

    “I’m a Keke rider. The keke is my own but it is very old. I never expected that my wife would deliver quintuplets. In fact, I was expecting one baby and that was my prayer.

    “I don’t have means to take care of one in addition to the number we have already let alone additional five babies at a go. I’m shocked. This is over blessing.

    “I wanted to run away the day my wife delivered but people held me back not because I am not happy for the gift of the babies but because I have nothing to take care of them with.”

    He appealed to government, corporate organisations, spirited and privileged individuals in the society to come to their aid as they cannot cope with feeding nine children.

    The couple can be assisted through the following bank account details: Odo Helen Ndidi, Union Bank account, 0048081828.

     

  • Quintuplets parents get N500,000 monthly for a year

    The lucky parents of the first set of quintuplets born in Lagos State this year will get N500,000 monthly for one year, courtesy of the governor’s wife, Mrs. Bolanle Ambode.

    Mrs Ambode announced the donation of her monthly allowance to Mr and Mrs Augustine Obiefuna when she visited the babies at Lagos Island Maternity Hospital yesterday.

    Mrs Obiefuna give birth to the babies – three boys and two girls – on Tuesday.

    Mrs. Ambode also promised free supply of diapers, milk and other essentials for the babies for one year.

    She came to the hospital with two bus-loads of beds, mattresses, diapers, boxes of cloths, socks, pants and caps, among others, for the babies.

    Her husband, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, gave an undisclosed sum of money, for the care of the babies, who weighed between 1.5kg and 2kg at birth.

    Speaking during the visit, Mrs. Ambode hailed their mother for regularly attending ante-natal while pregnant.

    She urged expectant mothers to shun quacks and self-medication and attend ante-natal in government hospitals for standard medical care.

    Mrs. Ambode said: “You can all see why it is good to register in a government hospital where standard medical care is guaranteed. This woman registered early and regularly attended her ante-natal clinics. The result is that all five babies were safely delivered to the glory of God”.

    She praised the medical team, especially the consultant, Dr. Ogungbemile Babalola, for their professional service, stressing that the government would always prioritise healthcare services for expectant mothers, to eradicate maternal and infant mortality.

    Obiefuna, thanked the governor and his wife, for their gesture, which, according to him, transcended ethnic considerations.

    He said: “We are surprised that despite being non-indigenes of Lagos State, the governor and his wife could show us so much love and kindness. They are just wonderful. We never imagined that Her Excellency could personally come here to see our new babies. We cannot stop praying for them and their children, for God’s favour, protection and wisdom at all times.”

  • Couple get quintuplets 10 years after marriage

    Couple get quintuplets 10 years after marriage

    It was joy at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH) in Cross River State as a woman was delivered of quintuplets on Monday.
    The parents of the babies – Dr Ekpo Edet and Mrs Esther Edet – who work at UCTH, described having five children at once after 10 years as a wonderful blessing from God.
    They are three girls and two boys, whose birth is seen by the father as ”a miracle.”
    He recalled that he had been married for 10 years without a child, before the five children came..
    Dr. Eket said the children only come from God and he was thankful to Him for the precious gifts.
    He added: “I want to thank God Almighty. He’s a faithful God. The first time in the history of Cross River State, the first time in the history of UCTH; five at a go! God has been just been faithful as we have concluded the first phase and the doctors have confirmed that the babies are kicking. We are entering into the second phase and I know it’s not going to be easy but I solicit for support from all well-meaning Nigerians, all my friends and well-wishers.
    “I want to thank God almighty for this precious gift of five children. He is a faithful God; the children are kicking and in good condition.
    “God has been faithful to my family; five children at a go is indeed a wonderful blessing to me and my wife.
    Prof. Thomas Agan, the Chief Medical Director of UCTH, told NAN that it was a moment of joy for the couple because they had hoped on the Lord for the fruit of the womb.
    “I am very excited to see one of my staff in a happy mood. The Lord has done it for them. Five children at a go is a very big blessing to the couple.
    “This is the first time in the history of the state that a woman is delivering five children at a go and all the babies are perfectly in good condition.
    “I am happy that the UCTH has also set a record of delivering five children safely from one mother.
    “The quintuplets are weighing between 1.45kg and 1.75kg. There are currently in the Special Care Babies Unit of the hospital,’’ he said.
    Wife of Governor Ben Ayade, Linda, , visited the couple, saying that the quintuplets were a blessing to the state and Nigeria
    Mrs Ayade donated N1million to the couple and another N500,000 to the medical experts who took delivery of the babies. She also donated an incubator machine to the hospital on behalf of the state government to enhance their activities and service delivery.
    Commissioner for Health Dr. Inyang Asibong , congratulated the couple for the gift of the quintuplets, saying that those who hope in God will never be left empty.
    Asibong commended the Obstetrics and Gynaecology team of the UCTH for their professionalism in ensuring the successful delivery of the babies.

  • Mother of quintuplets seeks help

    Mother of quintuplets seeks help

    A 43-year-old woman, Mrs Ifeoma Nnamani, is seeking help to pay the $20,000, debt she incurred on delivering four of her quintuplets at the Providence Parazana Medical Centre in California, the United States.

    Mrs Nnamani travelled overseas on referral, after losing one of the babies during delivery in Nigeria  due to complications.

    She said: With the help of a Reverend Father in “the United States (US), we were linked with the hospital where I delivered the remaining four babies in California. After the delivery, many people in the Diaspora that got the news rallied round us and through the help of an insurance company and some other individuals, my babies stayed in the incubators. But because of their medical concerns, the support we were receiving could not match the debt incurred”.

    Recalling how she incurred the debt, she said: “My children spent two months in incubators, last year. For every day, we were billed 300 dollars. We still owe the hospital $20,000. This is why we are begging the government and Nigerians to come to our aid.”

    Mrs Nnamani said she practised exclusive breast feeding, adding that her children did not fall ill after they were discharged and allowed to come back to the country after an undertaking to settle the bill.

    She continued: “Taking care of the children has not been an easy task”.

    Founder, Colostrum International, Mrs. Bunmi Ogundimu said her organisation visited the parents after the arrival of the babies to advise the mother on the importance of breast feeding. And pleasantly enough,she heeded it.”

    Contributions can be made to the FirstBank account of Mrs Utoh Nnamani Ifeoma with number 3021277563. She can also be contacted on 08033481255 08037461445,  ifeomautohnnamani@gmail.com

    Mrs. Ogundimu said her organisation appreciated the effort made by the mother to breast feed the babies exclusively.

    The babies’ father, Mr Nnaemeka Nnamani, said some Nigerian hospitals rejected his wife during labour, saying they could not help the situation.

    He said: “They told us that they can only save my wife and two or three of the babies but I wanted all my five children alive. This made us seek for fund to travel abroad.”

    Nnamani said his shop got burnt four years ago and he has been without any source of livelihood since then. He said he depended on his wife’s salary as a level seven worker to feed.

  • MUSWEN’s Foundation for Ibadan quintuplets

    MUSWEN’s Foundation for Ibadan quintuplets

    Is it they (human beings) who would share out the mercy of Allah (to others)? It is We (Allah) who share the possession of those bounties among them as their means of livelihood in this temporal world. And it is our duty to elevate some of them over others in ranks and in statuses. So that some of them can be masters while others are servants. Definitely, the blessings apportioned to you by your Lord are by far better than those which the ignorant ones are struggling to amass” Q.43:32   

     

    Preamble

    Human life in the midst of other creatures is a paradox. And the paradox is due to the reasoning faculty with which man is endowed.

    However, rather than using that exclusive grace to gratify Allah for honouring him with leadership and control of the environment, man seems to have turned that endowment into an instrument of competition with Allah.

    But for the undeniable reality of death as the main determiner of the limit of life, man would have proclaimed himself God.

    Unfortunately for him, however, death is not an attribute of God. Thus, it is impossible for anybody who might have tasted or can taste death to be God. No living organism, animate or inanimate, has ever escaped the dragnet of death and none can ever do. That shows one of the manifest distinctions between the Creator and the creatures. As humans, our passage through this ephemeral world is a mere transit just as our imagination of God is far from the reality of His being. We only live to die as against feature of God who neither sleeps nor dies.

     

    Breaking News

    On Monday, February 15, 2016, virtually all Nigerian local electronic media throbbed with the news of the birth of a set of quintuplets at the University of Ibadan College Hospital (UCH), the first of its type in Nigeria (Quintuplets are five children born at once by the same woman). Within a few hours, the news reverberated across the continents of the world through the cable network and newspapers.

    The mother of the bountiful gifts, Mrs. Shakirah Razaq Yusuf, a woman in purdah, is a 28-year-old wife of an Ibadan born Alfa by the name Abdur-Razaq Yusuf Ewenje. Both the wife and her husband are of very humble backgrounds who are forced to live an ascetic life by virtual penury. That confirms the promise of Allah in Qur’an 42 verse 50 thus:

    “To Allah belongs the kingdom of the heavens and the earth. He creates whatever He wills. He bestows female children upon whoever He wills and bestows male children upon whoever He wills. And He bestows both male and female children upon whoever He wills even as He renders whoever He wills a barren. Verily, Allah is all-knowing and capable of doing all things”

    Madam Shakirah and her husband had had two children before the birth of the quintuplets. Their immediate reaction to the birth of those unexpected quintuplets was one of dilemma and confusion.

    Yes, they prayed for safe birth of a healthy child or children from Allah, but they never dreamt of such unimaginable Allah’s blessing that came to be too much of a divine largess.

    Thus, the gift that would have ordinarily brought an aura of joy immediately turned into a mixture of threat and fear. How to settle the hospital bill and how to feed and clad the quintuplets as well as the older two children that became a foremost matter of concern for the couple.The children have since been named. The three boys are named Ahmad, Muhammad and Mustapha respectively. The girls were named Hamidah and Hamdalat.

     

    Other quintuplets

    In the olden days, bearing more than one child was perceived as a demonic aberration which some people considered as a taboo. Thus, children like twins, triplets and others were seen as a shame to the family which must be disposed of immediately.

    Such children were therefore secretly killed or openly offered as sacrifice to the then gods. This situation was not peculiar to Africa. It was global. With education and advancement of civilisation however, the world came to realise that birth of multiple children was rather a blessing than an aberration.

    In modern times, the first publicised quintuplets were reportedly born on April 29, 1896 in the United States of America. Called the Lyon quintuplets, they were the first American quintuplets born alive. The last survivor among them died on May 14, 1896 barely two weeks after birth.

    Later on, in 1934, another set of quintuplets was born in Ontario, Canada. The children were all girls and identical. Born to the family of Dionne, this set was known to be the first quintuplets to survive to adulthood.

    Many other quintuplets have since been born in different parts of the world with various traits and characteristics. But the lack of records about them does not help their exposure through the mass media.

     

    Paradox of Life

    Of all treasures in the life of man, there is one that cannot be legitimately purchased with money. That treasure is children.

    Children are a special natural gift from Allah that cannot be replaced or exchanged with any commodity or chattel. Those who have the stupendous means of caring for children may not have the grace of bearing children.

    Those who have no means of nurturing children may be divinely favoured to bear them in abundance. The paradox is evident in the case of the Yusuf family that is now grappling with a dilemma and confusion over the upbringing of the quintuplets with which it is blessed.

    A Yoruba musician once succinctly captured this situation in a rhythmic and captivating song that vividly described the value of children thus:

    “No moneybag can legitimately purchase them; no royal fiat can fetch them legitimately without the will of Allah; which commodity on earth can be likened to children? Is there anything that is comparable to children in human life?

    “Children are the ultimate treasure whose value cannot be measured in terms of diamond, gold or silver; they (children) are like a sharp sword in the capable hand of a strong warrior; they (children) are owned at early age but they grow up into adulthood to own almost everything  that can be purchased….”

     

    MUSWEN @ UCH

    Moved by the milk of humanity and kindness, as usual, last Sunday, the Muslim Ummah of South West Nigeria (MUSWEN) paid a purposeful visit of joy and glorification of Allah to UCH.

    The objective was to rejoice with the family of Alfa Yusuf Ewenje whose wife delivered a quintuplet penultimate Monday. Three of the children were males while two were females. All the children were said to be responding very well to medical care and pediatric nurture.

    The news of these Allah’s wonderful bounties had been in the media for some days as it was the first time that UCH, in its 59 years, of existence, was having an airy but joyful feeling of such a divine gesture.

    While holding its Central Working Committee (CWC) meeting in Ibadan last Sunday, MUSWEN decided to establish a foundation for the upkeep and education of the quintuplets to the University level. Thus, led by its President, His Excellency, Alhaji (Dr.) Sakariyau Olayiwola Babalola OON, a team of MUSWEN representatives broke out of the meeting to pay a visit to the quintuplets in appreciation of Allah’s bounties and in assuring the poor parents of the Ummah’s support and solidarity.

    After seeing the condition of the quintuplets and their parents, the President of MUSWEN announced a foundation in the name of MUSWEN to see the five children’s education through the University. This means that MUSWEN has taken up the finance of the children’s education from the primary school level to the University degree level.

    MUSWEN President also made an instant personal donation of a handsome amount to the couple and prayed for the survival of the children and Allah’s wherewithal to enable the couple take proper care of them.

    Alhaji Babalola then called on all goodhearted Nigerians to join hands with MUSWEN in maintaining the proposed foundation for the well-being of the quintuplets.

    Meanwhile,a special bank account has been earmarked for the foundation pending the inauguration of a committee of trusted people who will manage it. Those who are interested in lifting their brother’s load and tilling the holy land may request for the account details. God bless you all!

     

    Variety of motives

    Before MUSWEN’s visit, quite a number of individuals and groups (Muslims and non-Muslims), had rushed to see the quintuplets at UCH with different motives.

    Some had been there to adopt some of those children; some had cunningly attempted outright purchase of the children while some others had seen that divine gesture as an opportunity for undue evangelism.

    But as the umbrella body and ultimate mouthpiece for all Muslim individuals and Organisations in the South West, MUSWEN decided to act promptly not only to save the young couple of any embarrassment (financial or psychological) but also to give a sense of spiritual coverage to the concerned family.

    This further confirms the fatherly role imbibed by MUSWEN as a responsible umbrella of the Muslim Ummah in South West region. Bravo! God bless MUSWEN.

     

    UCH’s gesture

    Contrary to the general impression about UCH by members of the public, the famous teaching hospital displayed a unique gesture.

    Following the naming of the quintuplets at the children’s ward of the hospital last Monday (February 22, 2016), the authorities of the UCH announced a free medical and pediatric treatment for the mother.

    According to the announcement made by the Public Relations Officer (PRO) of UCH, Mr. Deji Bobade, the authorities of UCH decided write off the bill incurred by the poor couple as their own contribution to humanity.

    They thus returned the amount so far deposited for medical care and treatment of the children saying the outstanding balance would not be collected from the poor couple. Thus, the quintuplets would remain in the custody of the hospital at no cost until the children are mature enough to be discharged.

    This humanitarian gesture is highly appreciated and commended by Nigerian public who see it as a new dawn in UCH’s administration.

     

    Brief History of UCH

    The idea of establishing a teaching hospital for a proposed University in Nigeria was first nursed in 1943 by the colonial government which set up a commission headed by Sir Walter Elliot.

    The Commission consisted of 14 members three of whom represented the British West African colonies. They were Reverend I. O. Ransome-Kuti of Nigeria, K. A. Korsah of the Gold Coast (Ghana) and E. H. Taylor of Sierra Leone. Soon, another Commission of 11 members was set up to complement the one headed by Elliot and to determine the principles that would guide the proposed higher educational institutions in Nigeria. The latter Commission was led by Mr. Justice Cyril Asquith. Following the submission of reports by the two Commissions in 1945,

    The University College, Ibadan was established on November 17, 1948 with three founding faculties; Arts, Science and Medicine. Although the  construction of the four and a half million pound sterling (£4.5m) Teaching Hospital had not been completed in 1956 when Queen Elizabeth II visited Nigeria, she nevertheless commissioned it in anticipation of its completion in 1957. Thus, the UCH was officially opened on November 20, 1957 with its imposing architectural masterpiece to the delight of all and sundry.

     

    Today’s situation

    Today, however, while the UCH remains an intimidating architectural edifice, the needed services therein remain a sorry case due to lack of befitting maintenance. Most of the equipment have become antiquated even as the necessary modern facilities are not provided. It is unbelievable that the eight-storey structures in that hospital are without functioning lifts.

    On inquiry, yours sincerely learned that only two lifts are available for use in the entire complex of the 800-bed hospital out of which only one is functioning haphazardly.

    Even the only lift said to be functioning is worse than a bakery oven. A rechargeable table fan has to be put inside the lift not as a relief from a possible effect of suffocation but as a mere decoration to show the members of the public that ‘we care’.

    The implication of this is that patients who may be rushed to that hospital on emergency who need to be conveyed to upper floors for immediate medical attention may face terrible difficulty in reaching their destination within the complex.

    The appalling situation of UCH requires an urgent attention of the Federal Ministry of Health. This once great institution was one of the best four Teaching Hospitals in the Commonwealth. Today, it is probably the worst. In such an environment, it is even difficult for the medical personnel to function as expected. Nigeria deserves a better place to be called a Teaching Hospital for our country’s Premier University.