Recent protest at LUTH
hehehehe.....The Accident, Emergency Unit of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital is on lock-down as aggrieved families attack staff.
The building housing the Accident and Emergency unit at Lagos
University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) in Idi-Araba, Lagos, is currently
under lock and key, SaharaReporters reports.
The building was shut down yesterday after some furious family
members stormed the hospital to beat up workers in reaction to the death
of their loved ones.
SaharaReporters reports that, within less than 24 hours, two
separate groups forced their way into the Accident and Emergency unit
and assaulted staff they accused of inhumane disregard leading to the
death of their relatives.
On Thursday, June 8, 2017, angry relations of a young man who died
after the hospital failed to attend to him attacked workers at the unit,
beating the doctors and nurses on duty. Then, around 1 a.m. on Friday,
June 9, 2017, another group rushed someone to the hospital. When told
that the hospital had no bed for the patient, the crowd forced their way
into the Accident and Emergency building, removed a patient from a bed
and placed their dying relative on it. Once the group found out no
doctor was willing to attend to their relative, they turned on the
staff, indiscriminately pummeling anybody in sight, including security
personnel.
According to SaharaReporters, a source revealed that the young man
(whose name was not released) who was rushed to the Accident and
Emergency Department of LUTH on Thursday was stabbed during a fight in
the Mushin area of Lagos. He added that the nurses at the hospital
demanded the patient’s family pay N50, 000 before he could be treated.
As the distraught family pleaded with the medical staff, the young man
died, triggering the family’s furious attack on workers on duty at the
hospital.
A LUTH staff who witnessed the attack said that the young man who
died was rushed to the hospital bleeding, admitting that those who
brought him watched helplessly as the groaning young man breathed his
last.
“The boy was rushed to the emergency but was transferred to the
Private Public Partnership (PPP) emergency building. The people that
brought the boy were asked to lay the boy on the floor and directed to
pay an advance fee of N50, 000 before he could be admitted for
treatment. Some of his people went to look for money while those who
stayed with the boy had to watch him die because they could not do
anything and the nurses on duty refused to admit the boy for treatment
despite the plea of the people,” the LUTH employee said, asking for anonymity.
The second incident, which happened in the early hours of Friday,
was even more heated as besieged doctors and nurses took to their heels
to escape the boiling anger of a patient’s family.
“On confirming that the person they rushed to the LUTH was
dead, those who brought the patient launched an attack on staff. Some of
the attackers used machetes to threaten staff. They beat the security
[personnel], doctors and nurses. Some of the doctors and nurses had to
take off their gown and run far from the building,” an eyewitness at the hospital, the relative of another patient disclosed.
A doctor at LUTH blamed the hospital’s management for the crisis at
the hospital. According to him, the selfish interests of the
administrators at the teaching hospital accounted for the incessant
death of patients and emergency victims rushed to the hospital.
“It is a pathetic situation because the people at the helm of
affairs at LUTH have opted to turn LUTH into an institution for making
money. They are focused on making money and not concerned about people’s
lives. A hospital is a place where lives should be saved, but LUTH has
been known to be a place where 80% of patients that go in don’t come out
alive and that is very pathetic,” the doctor, a surgeon, said.
According to SaharaReporters,a source said that, after the two
latest attacks, the staff of the Accident and Emergency unit demanded
that the building be locked until the management implemented security
measures to safeguard their lives and property. He said the staff would
insist that the management at LUTH deploy more security operatives to
the unit.
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