Anxiety as patients protest poor food, sanitation at ESUT teaching hospital

Ugwuanyi

Patients and their relatives , on Wednesday, protested against alleged poor food offered to patients and the poor sanitation at the Enugu State University Teaching Hospital at Park Lane, Enugu.

They also protested against alleged nonchalant attitude of medical workers in the way they attend to patients, especially those on emergencies, which had caused many death at the hospital.

The parents of a 15-month-old girl, Daniela, Mr and Mrs Leonard Onuchukwu, were said to have sparked the protest when they refused to pay the bill given to them, insisting that they would not pay the entire bill, because of the meals, which neither they nor their child ate because they were not fit even for dogs.

It was gathered that Daniela was discharged to continue her medication in Abuja, where her parents came from for a burial in Enugu, but Leonard and his wife decided to forcefully take away their child, but the security men at the hospital tried to prevent them, which led to an uproar that led to the police being invited in as relatives of other patients joined the Onuchukwus to protest against the alleged poor meals being served at the children’s ward.

It was gathered that the relatives of the other patients said they too would not pay for the meals, which the hospital authorities allegedly force on every patient.

Addressing journalists before he and his wife were whisked away by the police, Leonard, who had earlier insisted that he would not pay for the meals, said his daughter was admitted to the hospital on Saturday.

He said if he did not create a scene, the medical personnel would not have attended to his child, who was frequently passing stool and vomiting.

Leonard stated, “When we were admitted to the hospital on Saturday, neither the doctors nor the nurses were willing to attend to our child. Nobody cared to look our way, but when a family rushed in with their child, who was my daughter’s age, with bullet wounds and was turned back because there was no space, it was then I started shouting that they should discharge us so that we could look for another hospital. It was then that they started attending to my child and I thank God that she is recovering.

“I am not pleased with all they wrote in the bill, which is N29,500, but the one I am insisting that I’ll not pay even if all the policemen in the state are brought to the hospital, is the bill for food.

“The food they gave us was too poor. The tea looked like a goat’s urine; the rice and other meals they offered were not even fit for domestic animals and we did not touch them even when they were shouting each time they came that whether the food was eaten or not, it must be paid for.

“I told them that I would not pay and they have brought the police to force me to pay and we will not pay.”

The Chief Security Officer of the hospital, Fidelis Onuduagu, told newsmen that it was the rule in the hospital that meals offered to patients on admission must be paid.

“It is the rule in this hospital that meals offered to patients must be paid for whether taken or not, and today must not be an exception. They must pay because this is how others have been paying,” he insisted.

Other relatives of patients left their sick ones in the wards in solidarity with the Onuchukwus and to also register their dissent over the poor condition of food and other services. Punch

 

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