My ordeal, by National
Hospital staff
By MURPHY GANAGANA, Abuja
Monday, April 14, 2008
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•Dr
Ajuwon
Photo: Sun News Publishing
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Doris Chinasa Iyabo Ihuoma, a nurse at the National Hospital
Abuja, looked traumatised. She alleged that she had been subjected
to severe pains, mental torture and humiliation for several
months.
Her present predicament is the result of an alleged gang up
against her by the Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the Hospital,
Dr Olusegun Ajuwon, and the top echelon of the hospital.
In a 29-paragraph affidavit deposed to in an Abuja High Court
by the 32-year old lady who hails from Mbaise, Imo State,
on January 30, 2008, Doris is accusing Ajuwon and the hospital
management of labeling her a psychiatric patient.
She is also accusing them of threat to her life, criminal
intimidation, unwarranted harassment, gross abuse of her fundamental
human rights, invasion of her privacy, attempted murder and
sundry sins.
In an oath to sustain her claims against the hospital management
team, made available to Daily Sun, the Nursing Officer 11
said her predicament started on the February 23, 2007, when
she was summoned to the office of the CMD while on an afternoon
duty at the Neo-natal Intensive Care Unit of the hospital.
In the office of the CMD, she said, she was asked some questions
she considered personal, like where she lived, the direction
to her house, and her position in the family. “I thought
the Chief Medical Director wanted to help me with my accommodation
problem,” she said.
According to Doris, the CMD had asked her to withdraw a personal
letter she had earlier written to him as well as the reply
to a query served her in 2005. “I refused to withdraw
the letter, and explained that the letter is personal and
the CMD has an option to dispose of it as he deemed fit. And
as for the withdrawal of the reply to the query, I maintained
that the time lapse makes any withdrawal non-effective,”
Doris said.
At that point, she alleged, the CMD called in some other doctors
and nurses, including the head of department of nursing. One
of the doctors, whom she later learnt was a psychiatric consultant,
allegedly came in with an already drawn injection, filled
with an unknown substance.
"I was then threatened to withdraw my letter and the
reply or be injected with the unknown substance. At this point,
I felt my life was in danger. I was then asked to surrender
my mobile phone by the Chief Medical Director. I removed my
SIM-card. Consequently, he destroyed the mobile phone stating
that he wanted the SIM-card and not the mobile phone.
Doris alleged that her persecutors asked her to co-operate
or be man-handled and be injected with the substance. According
to her affidavit of claims, the CMD had snatched the drink
she was still holding and informed her that she had been relieved
of her job.
"I was man-handled, assaulted, psychologically abused,
and accused of being mentally-ill by the Chief Medical Director
as I refused to be injected with the substance,” she
claimed.
According to her, “I was then carried above head by
at least ten security men through the hospital grounds, from
the Chief Medical Director’s office, through the labour
ward, through emergency pediatric unit, until the security
men were confronted by some nurses who demanded that I be
left alone.
"At a point, the security men were also confronted by
a house officer who demanded that the security men put me
down… the house officer and the psychiatric consultant
had a confrontation and I was eventually set on my feet.”
She further alleged that the psychiatric consultant had boasted
that the house officer would lose her job for challenging
her. At this point, she said, relatives of patients who were
witnessing what was happening got angry and almost mobbed
the psychiatric consultant. A patient’s relatives and
his wife volunteered and took her home.
Claiming that until that day, she had never met or seen the
consultant before. Doris said she had never been a psychiatric
patient, adding that “on National Hospital behest, I
have undergone two separate psychiatric/medical fitness evaluations
after the incident, all proving me medically and mentally
fit respectively”.
According to her, the house officer who had intervened on
her behalf was relieved of her appointment before she resumed
work. “I resumed work March 12, 2007 and some days later,
the hospital management made a public announcement by the
National Hospital public address system that no patient should
be attended to by me, and staff of the hospital should stay
clear from me because I was mad,” she stated.
Describing the action of the CMD as irregular, she declared:
"I believe that the action of the CMD and the psychiatric
consultant fell short of the required level of professional
ethics and conduct expected of their respective posts.
"The way and manner I was manhandled by them not only
infringed upon my rights and person, but also my professional
competence", Doris averred in her affidavit.
Daily Sun gathered that following the alleged gang up and
the subsequent forcing of Doris to see a psychiatrist as a
condition for retaining her job, the traumatized young lady
visited several hospitals but was denied attention.
Sources close to the CMD, revealed that Ajuwon allegedly made
wide contacts nation -wide, to make it difficult for the innocent
lady to obtain a psychiatric examination as demanded by the
NHA management, which could prove them wrong on their accusation.
This effort was said to have been quite fruitful, as no hospital
was willing to attend to any body that identified herself
as Doris Chinasa Iyabo Ihuoma, from the National Hospital,
Abuja.
However, Doris was said to have been advised to visit hospitals
other than those earlier visited, but never to disclose her
identity, no matter the pressure, to facilitate her medical
and mental evaluation.
The advice, Daily Sun learnt, was successful and enabled a
mental status examination to be administered on her on January
11, 2008, by a consultant psychiatrist, with the Federal Medical
Centre Owerri, Imo State. The test absolved her of any form
of insanity, while declaring her fit to undertake any public
service appointment.
On her return from the mental status examination, through
a letter dated January 14, 2008 and addressed to the CMD,
Doris had applied to resume for work, to practice her profession.
However, despite an authentic medical report, which gave her
clean bill of health, the trained midwife and nurse still
knows no peace and rest of mind, as the CMD and his management
team are allegedly bent on proving by any means, their accusation
of mental instability against her.
The lady had enlisted the assistance of the Legal Aid Council,
which in a letter dated January 25, 2008, forwarded her medical
report to the CMD, demanding that she be allowed to pursue
her career in a favourable and conducive atmosphere.
Despite the intervention of the Legal Aid Council in the matter,
the CMD, Daily Sun learnt, is still bent on frustrating Doris,
vowing that he would never live to see her around the hospital.
In view of the CMD’s alleged hostility and non-readiness
to handle the matter fairly, Doris was said to have approached
several legal firms to help her enforce her rights through
the court.
Lawyers, who contend that she has a good case, Daily Sun gathered,
have sent several correspondences to the hospital authorities,
all to no avail. It was further gathered that Doris had petitioned
President Yar’Adua over her plights in the hands of
NHA management, a matter which the office of the Secretary
to the Government of the Federation (SGF), was directed to
investigate.
Daily Sun learnt from top civil servants that the management
of the NHA has no power to take any decision against Doris,
without securing approval from the SGF, whose care the president
had left her.
In spite of these positions, the CMD had gone ahead in a letter,
NHA/PER/1064/1/100, dated February 27, 2008 and signed by
the Head of Department, Human Resource Management, S. K. Obawede,
directed Doris to remain absent from work "until further
notice with full pay and rights."
The hospital management in the fourth paragraph of the letter,
dished out serious note of warning, which are apparently threatening
and intimidating on a person protected by the law.
"As you can observe that the management has gotten the
supports of men of police force both in uniform and plain
dresses all over National Hospital, Abuja, to purposely arrest
you when you are seen around/close to the hospital premises
and that injection you had earlier refused to collect, the
management will be forced to commence treatments on you in
the first instance,” it read.
Daily Sun gathered that prior to this, Doris had petitioned
the Inspector General of Police, Mike Okiro, over an alleged
assassination attempt on her at her residence in Abuja.
When contacted over the matter, none of the hospital management
team wanted to comment , as they continued to shift responsibilities
from one person to another.
The hospital’s spokesman, Yahaya Sadiq, an assistant
director, bluntly refused to speak on the matter, claiming
that only the CMD had powers to comment.
However, he arranged a meeting between Daily Sun and the CMD,
who refused to see the reporter, but directed that the matter
be taken to his deputy. Perhaps sensing a trap, the deputy
declined and directed that the HOD Human Resource Department
carry the cross.
An apparently frustrated Sadiq told Daily Sun that he could
say the little he knew about the matter, but insisted he must
not be recorded. However, when it became apparent that every
discussion had to be recorded, he denied that the hospital
ever labelled Doris a psychiatric patient.
He claimed that the hospital only made an observation in that
direction, and was insisting that she face a medical board.
He claimed ignorant of the documents on Doris’ case,
emanating from the hospital, including a 35 paragraphs court
affidavit sworn to by the CMD, over the matter.
Ajuwon, in his affidavit sworn to in a High Court of Federal
Capital Territory on February 25, 2008, denied that the depositions
in the affidavit "by Miss Doris Ihuoma are not true."
However, in subsequent paragraphs, he admitted inviting Dr
(Mrs.) Ephraim Oluwanuga, a consultant psychiatrist with the
NHA, to examine the mental status of Doris and forward report
on it.
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