Epileptic convulsion???
According to a report by Punch, a
woman named Afusat Jimoh’s some years back, fell into boiling oil while trying
to fry meats. The report has it that at that time, she was helping an aunt
living in the Ejigbo area of Lagos State to fry some pieces of meat when she
suddenly had epileptic convulsion and fell into the sizzling oil.
Read her sad story after the cut…
While battling with the burns she
sustained in the incident, her six-month-old child fell ill and died, followed
by the death of her husband. Punch Metro learnt that after many years of trying
to find solutions to her woes, her mother also abandoned her and fled. The
Lagos State Government, which promised to foot the bills for a face-lift
surgery, was said to have defaulted on its pledge.It was learnt that Afusat now
begs for alms in order to raise funds for her surgery.
Punch Metro visited Ijeshatedo
Street in the Surulere area of Lagos, where the Kwara State indigene resides
with an uncle, Abdullahi Ayinla.She had a veil on her body with which she
covered her injuries.
She said,
“I was helping my aunt to fry
some pieces of meats. There was nobody at home that day and I didn’t know when
I felt dizzy and unconsciously fell into the hot oil that I was using to fry
the meat.“People came late to my rescue, by which time the oil had damaged my
face, arm and neck.”
Afusat said she was rushed to a
nearby hospital, where she spent four months before being transferred to the
Burns Unit of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja.While the
hospital doctors were battling to restore her health, her baby, Fatai, died.
She said,
“My child died because I could
not breastfeed him. After his death, my husband was no longer coming to the
hospital to check on me and that gave me some concerns. After several months,
we decided to look for him at their family house. I was told that he had died
and his family did not want to compound my woes, which was why they left me in
the dark.
“Right now, I also don’t know
where my mother is. She has left me for years and I have lost all contacts with
her. The only person I have around me now is my uncle and my old father who
visits once in a while.
‘’I was selling ready-made
clothes, but people were afraid of patronising me because of my looks. This was
why I started begging to complement the little my uncle provides.’’
It was learnt that the family’s
efforts to raise funds for her to undergo a surgery, had not yielded any
result.
A document, purportedly issued by
an Indian medical facility in Mumbai, Wockhardt Hospitals, dated July 2012,
showed that the cost of the surgery was N3m, excluding her cost of travel. A
non-governmental organisation, Dot Human Development, was said to have written
the Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola, requesting support for the victim.
The state’s Ministry of Health,
in another letter by the then Permanent Secretary, Dr. Femi Olugbile, directed
LASUTH management to do the surgery free of charge.
The letter, dated April 2013,
reads in part,
“Afusat accidentally fell into
boiling oil during an epileptic attack six years ago. She sustained a third
degree burns to the face that healed with scarring and disfigurement of the
face.
“Following a request, she was
referred to LASUTH for assessment and recommendation. The plastic surgeon and
the Ophthalmologist both confirmed that the corrective surgery can be done in
LASUTH.
“In view of the above, you are
kindly requested to carry out the surgery on the victim on compassionate
ground. Please forward the details of cost of management to the Ministry of
Health for consideration.”
A reaction to the letter, dated
July, 2013, however, said,
“The initial procedure in this
patient will involve the insertion of tissues which will be procured from
outside sources.”
The victim’s uncle, Ayinla, said
the LASUTH doctors explained to the family that they needed funds from the
state government to procure the tissue and without it, they would not be able
to do anything.
“We started going to the state
secretariat to see how they will give the LASUTH doctors the money, but they
kept directing us from one desk to the other. We were frustrated and we had to
leave the hospital,” he added.
When contacted, the Lagos State
Commissioner for Health, Jide Idris, did not pick his call. A text message sent
to his phone had also yet to be replied to as of the time of filing this
report.
So pathetic....
ReplyDeletethings dey happen for Noja sha....may God save his people....evil men every where...even in ur village
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