The siblings
The brother of a Benue doctor who died of Lassa fever has told the story of how his sibling died. Fidelis Dzuana is the elder brother of the late Dr Philip Dzuana, 34, a resident doctor with the Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi, who died recently after contracting Lassa fever. He tells JOHN CHARLES about his brother’s struggle before he died
You recently
lost your younger brother to Lassa fever, believed to have been
contracted from one of his patients, was it always his dream to become a
doctor?
Yes, that was always his dream. He died
at the age of 34. Because he wanted to become a doctor, he wasted
almost five years after his secondary education. He had to go to many
universities, seeking admission.
When he got the required examination
score, he went to Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Kaduna State and was
rejected because he was not an indigene of Kaduna. From there he went to
University of Jos, Plateau State and they also rejected him. He
continued to seek university admission until I told him to apply to the
Benue State University, Makurdi. I told him that if he applied to the
state university, we could assist him and that was what happened. I was
able to render necessary assistance and he was given admission.
How did you feel when he graduated from the college of medicine?
I was very happy; the entire family was
extremely happy when he graduated. He was determined to succeed so his
death is very painful.
What were some of the sacrifices he made to become a doctor?
Dr. Philip Dzuana was a promising young
man. Sometimes when he came to me and I asked him why I never saw him
with girlfriends, he would say he didn’t have time for girlfriends and
that he was pursuing his educational career. He died without a
girlfriend. No girlfriend cried for him because he didn’t have any.
How did you hear about his death?
He died in my hands. It happened on a
Wednesday morning. He was staying with one of his colleagues. I was
called around 5am and told that he was sick so I went to get him. I took
him to Bishop Murray Hospital, Makurdi. They admitted him there but
later that night, they transferred him to the Benue University Teaching
Hospital, Makurdi. They ran some tests and started treatment
immediately.
We slept in the hospital that night and
his treatment continued the following day. When they suspected that it
was Lassa fever, they put him in a separate ward. After spending two
days in the hospital, they referred us to a specialist hospital in Edo
State. They gave us a referral to Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital. We
left on Sunday morning for the hospital in an ambulance belonging to
the Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi, in company with a nurse and a
driver.
When we got there, their doctors and
nurses started running up and down to give him treatment. In fact, those
doctors never gave up when they discovered that he was also a doctor.
They said I would not be able to sleep with him as it was Lassa fever
but I insisted that he was my brother and that anywhere they put him, I
must be there with him. So, we slept in the Lassa ward together.
Two days later, after I bathed him, a
male nurse came to give him drugs. Shortly after, he started convulsing.
The nurse started running away. They felt it was death sentence to be
there with him. So I asked the nurse why he was running away. In fact, I
shouted at the nurse. I held my brother tightly. Assuming I was not
there, what would have happened? It could have been a worse death. This
was someone they said one could not touch or get close to; I slept in
the isolated Lassa ward with him till morning and bathed him. So when I
shouted at the nurse and asked him to assist me, do you know my boy
came back to life, thinking that he was the one I was shouting at?
Later, he started convulsing again and his breathing became heavy. The
doctors said he had to go for another dialysis.
They conducted first one (dialysis),
second one and third one. After the dialysis, his breathing was still
heavy and he was moved to another ward. At that point, they prevented me
from joining him but I could see him through the glass. They tied his
legs and hands to the bed. I felt they didn’t want him to continue to
struggle. I kept watching him and after some time, he never struggled
again. Later, a doctor came to tell me that my younger brother could not
make it.
If you believe in God, you can overcome
every situation. So, I quickly pulled myself together and went straight
to the ward to see his corpse. There was nothing I could do again. So,
I called people in the village to tell them to put necessary things on
the ground for his burial. As a matter of fact, the hospital
management did their best because they made effort to ensure he
survived. But I have noticed that when health workers see patients in
such a condition, they are always afraid. But it could make the
situation precarious as the patient is left with nobody around them. He
died around 5am that Wednesday.
He was put in a body bag and I drove
straight to my village in the Katsina-Ala Local Government Area of the
state where the corpse was buried that same day in the presence of some
doctors from the Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi.
Do you think it is good for health workers to be running away from patients?
It is unfortunate that people do that
because it means they don’t believe in God. If you believe in God, you
will not be too afraid of things like that. If you don’t have a father,
how do you exist? If you don’t have God, you will continue to run but I
have God and that is my own power. They discouraged me from going near
him. They explained that there were people who brought their loved
ones to the hospital and contracted the disease in the process, and
that the patients were treated and they survived, but those who brought
them didn’t survive it.
It was a sad experience to see a medical
worker who ought to care for my brother running away from him. Even
when he was convulsing, the nurse ran away to the extent that he
stumbled because he saw death coming. They (medical personnel) don’t
need to run away; they should have faith in God because they are
offering a service and it is only God that can protect them.
What was the first thing that came to your mind your mind immediately your kid brother gave up the ghost?
It was terrible. Like I said, God has power to make you feel as if nothing happened.
How difficult has this period been for you and your parents?
In fact, it is a very difficult
situation for the whole family. But for me, who witnessed everything
till he died, it was a terrible and unimaginable experience. Before he
died, I was the one running errands, buying medications and so on. It
was hell. I believe no family will pray for that kind of situation; no
one expected it.
What are the fond memories you have of him?
He was a very nice person; he never
bothered me. After he got university admission, he came and told me
about school fees he had to pay. I said okay. In fact, he never bothered
me, just like others. I have trained three of them up to university
level. They were not bothered about social life. What my brother wanted
was to qualify for his medical profession, which he did. He was very
determined and courageous. You know that studying medicine takes up to
six years in some universities but at the Benue State University, they
spent 10 years.
During his time in the university, there
was no scholarship for them and he did not receive any assistance from
the state government.
He loved me so much; he was always waiting to hear what I would say. He was a nice child.
Did you ever think his job could put him in danger?
I know the hazards associated with their
job. I am an herbalist and everyone in the family, including the late
Dr Dzuana knew this. It is sad that he fell ill this time, he thought
it was just fever and as a medical doctor, he and his colleagues were
treating it until it went out of hand. That was when he came to the
hospital.
Would you have preferred if he was never a doctor than to die in the process of helping others to survive?
No, I wouldn’t have preferred him not to
be a doctor. When it is your time, you will go. It is good to do a job
that allows you to help people and there are so many ways of doing
God’s work. Medicine is one of the ways by which you can do God’s work.
Did he know initially that it was Lassa fever?
I don’t know because we didn’t discuss
it before he died but I believe his colleagues must have mentioned it to
him when they were treating him. I don’t think he knew he had
contracted Lassa fever.
Do you think his case was well managed when he became a patient?
His case was well managed because his
colleagues never gave up. At the teaching hospital in Makurdi where he
was, the medical director came there to see him and said we should not
pay a kobo. His colleagues took care of other things. If it had to do
with treatment, they would have done it.
And when we went to Edo, we had a rebate
of N100,000. That is to tell you how they cooperated. Those hospitals
managed things very well. At Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital, he
was unable to make it because we brought him there late.
What advice do you have for doctors treating similar ailments?
Some countries take care of their
citizens but it is not so in some others because of corruption and lack
of provision of adequate facilities for the protection of medical
personnel. There is no place without professional hazards even in
developed countries but the difference is that developed countries
provide personal protective equipment for doctors.
So you leave a doctor unprotected when
you know that they can be infected by a contagious disease. Sometimes,
young doctors are not very experienced in protecting themselves against
deadly diseases. They are eager to help and have a lot of energy. My
kid brother contracted it from a patient.
Assuming he was still alive, would you have liked him to be treating COVID-19 patients?
Why not? He was a doctor; I would gladly
allow him to help society. The mistake I made was that when COVID-19
pandemic came, I should have called him to come for medicine which would
take out any bad thing in his system. I thought about calling him but
it slipped my memory. Assuming my brother took that medicine, nothing
would have happened to him by the grace of God.
Government should provide adequate
protective equipment for doctors and pay them good salaries and
allowances and not owe them. Sometimes, doctors complain about being
owed salaries and not being paid well. But these are people who on a
daily basis risk their lives to save others.
***Source: Sunday PUNCH
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