Mr Olu Koye (The Man that brought Ebola to PH) |
As Nigerians are confused to why a practicing doctor would take such a risk to treat and EVD patient knowing fully well that there is no cure for it and adequate care,trained health/care givers and proper environment are a necessity to combat this deadly disease. Well hopefully the spread will be contained as it was expertly done in Lagos. Read below an article by Arnold Obomanu culled from Sahara reporters
Why would a
practicing medical doctor hide an Ebola case? Why did the patient who
was treated in secret conceal the fact that he had exposed the doctor?
More importantly, how are we going to ensure these leaks do not happen
again? These and more are the kinds of questions Nigerians are asking as
the Federal Government announces the spread of the Ebola virus beyond
Lagos and into Port Harcourt.
The quick and hard answer to these questions is that human behavior
remains the weakest link in the control and resolution of the Ebola
outbreak. According to the Rivers State Commissioner for Health, the
private medical practitioner who secretly treated a diplomat who had
been exposed to the Ebola virus knew what he was getting into but we can
only guess what motivated him to do such a risky thing. His patient,
the diplomat, having escaped surveillance in Lagos was eventually
tracked down and quarantined but did not fully disclose his activities
probably for fear of rebuke.
These instances continue a most dangerous
pattern of non-compliant behaviour which sneaked the virus out of
Liberia and into Nigeria in the first place, briefly took it to Enugu
and now has called in Port Harcourt and we need to address this squarely
if we are to halt the Ebola spread within Nigeria, in Port Harcourt.
It is obvious that in this recent outbreak across West Africa, people
have escaped quarantine either in disbelief of the potential risk and
impact of the disease or in distrust of available treatment. However, we
cannot stop at blaming these people else we will not improve the
situation considerably.
When you are asked to entrust your life to government authorities who
have not always previously shown sufficient evidence of competence or
professionalism in the handling of their duties, you are likely to doubt
the course of action. But when the issue at stake is a disease that
some publications say has a death rate of up to 90%, it is easy to want
to seek other options and take your destiny in your hands.
That appears to be what Patrick Sawyer did - if you believe the
theory that he came to Nigeria to seek superior help (whether spiritual
as some say or medical as his widow says). That is what the diplomat who
has visited Port Harcourt with the Ebola virus has done. Interestingly,
that is also apparently what has lead to the severity of the outbreak
across West Africa. According to a recent scientific study reported on
August 28th, 2014 in an NBCNews.com article titled “Where did Ebola Come
From? Likely One Person, Gene Study Finds”, the virus started in Sierra
Leone with a traditional healer who was treating Guinean patients and
spread to fourteen people who handled her corpse after the disease
eventually consumed her. That is the same way some more people in our
society might react unless we change the dialogue around Ebola in
Nigeria.
I am personally very impressed with the relative success our medical
and administrative professionals have recorded in tackling this virus.
The reduced death rate in Nigeria has become a testimony that
contracting Ebola does not have to be the death sentence we have
previously thought it to be. Yes there is still no cure or vaccine, but
it now appears that early identification and supportive treatment of
symptoms can save more of our people and give the rest of society and
the world for that matter, confidence that Ebola can be overcome.
We need to share this good news with everyone around us and let them
know that seeking proper medical attention early presents our best
chances of surviving. To do this successfully, we need to involve
religious and traditional leaders in the dialogue. At the same time, our
medical professionals need to continue to save themselves and their
patients in order to reinforce the confidence that will make more
infected people entrust their lives to their care.
We are in crisis but this is also a season of heroes as we celebrate
Dr Adadevoh and others who are daily putting their lives at risk for our
collective safety. This is my dream Nigerian spirit in action and I
want to see it not only get through this Ebola crisis but transfer into
other areas of our lives. Let us change the dialogue around Ebola in
Nigeria so that it is contained in Port Harcourt.
5 comments:
This horrible and pathetic
This man is worst than Patrick Sawyer
The heart of Man......Only God can save us all
Na wa ooo. Waht has he achieved now
Another calamity..God pls help them contain it in Jesus name
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