A resident of Gbazango Extension, Kubwa, a satellite town in Abuja, Nkechi Okonya, who gave up the ghost after giving birth to a set of triplets died due to loss of blood and mismanagement of the pregnancy, a medical inquiry has revealed.
The inquiry which was carried out by the medical personnel at Bwari General Hospital where she died indicated that the pregnancy was not properly managed by the Primary Health Centre where she had the first child before she was rushed down to the General Hospital.
Okonya, 32, died on April 20, 2018 after undergoing a Caesarian Section, leaving behind her triplets, and two older children, who are now being catered for by family members.
The Medical Director, Bwari General Hospital, Dr Osayande Osagie, deflected blame for the death, stating that his workers went beyond the call of duty while attending to the deceased.
Though she was referred to the hospital by the PHC after she failed to deliver the other babies after the having first one, the doctor explained that the patient did not get to the BGH until after four hours.
Osagie said, “She was referred at 11am, she got here at 4pm and by 5pm, she was already in the theatre. This is someone who was not our patient, so we had to stabilise her, get blood because of her condition.
“We delivered the second and third child and the first had to be admitted at the neo-natal unit. Throughout this time, the husband was drunk; we could not obtain any information from him. We could not get him to donate blood, up till the next morning, the husband was still drunk.”
He added, “Because of the amount of hemorrhage she had had, she was still bleeding, we gave a total of three pints of blood that Friday night before she died.
“The case has been discussed; we invited the primary referral centre to talk to them about management of multiple pregnancies which are high risk pregnancy that cannot be managed by the PHC.
“Even in this hospital, there are some patients that we preferred that they should be managed by a tertiary health centre, there is division of care. We have an existing maternal prenatal death response; every patient that dies in the hospital, the case is reviewed.”
The MD said the hospital did not demand for money from Okonya, adding that her family did not pay for the surgery and other consumables that were used, noting that the deceased family went away with the babies without settling the medical bill.
“They (Okonya family members) took the baby from the neo-natal and left; they didn’t pay a kobo. We only discuss payment after the patient has started recovering, that is why we didn’t demand money from them.
“We knew the case was bad immediately they brought her in; twins are high risk pregnancy, we are now talking of triplets. The patient did not come in time. We have invited the head of health unit in the area council and the PHC where this mismanagement started and we have discussed with them, there are some patients that should not be handled by the PHC,” Osagie explained.
The doctor said after the inquiry, the head of health departments in area councils were also invited to a meeting and advised against admitting women with multiple pregnancies.
He disclosed further that everyone that took part in the management of Okonya’s case participated in the review to educate them in order to prevent a recurrence.
When contacted for reaction, a cousin to the deceased, Chinwendu Ekwunife, said she needed her husband’s permission to talk to the media, but she failed to respond to subsequent phone calls.