*** Frankly speaking, I don't know what is wrong with doctors and hospitals these days. Their compassion has committed suicide out of disregard and they have not even noticed.
They gleefully line up now to receive 'The Most Care-less Award of the Year', each year.
So, sad wAllaah :'( ***
By Randy Joe
Sa'ah BBC Africa, Douala
Mobile phone
footage of a woman without medical training cutting open the belly of a dead
woman in a desperate attempt to save her unborn twins has provoked an outcry in
Cameroon.
The impromptu
surgery was done in the open air by a family member with razorblades outside
the maternity ward of Douala's Laquintini Hospital, because medical staff
refused to help.
One of the
babies was dead, but witnesses said the second baby was still alive when it was
removed, though it died shortly afterwards.
As the hospital
staff refused to help, this has not been corroborated by medical officials.
Marie Sen, Ms
Koumateke's mother:
"The
mortuary attendant even came and said the babies were still kicking inside the
stomach"
About an hour
earlier, Monique Koumateke, 31, was nearly full term when her family rushed her
to hospital in a taxi after she had become ill.
The midwife on
duty told her relatives she was already dead and should be taken to the
mortuary.
Then an attendant,
Monga Luc, noticed the twins might still be alive.
"The
mortuary attendant even came and said the babies were still kicking inside the
stomach," her mother Marie Sen told the BBC.
"We went
to the maternity ward [again] but they chased us away."
However, when
they went back to the main hospital, they were told no-one would help.
This is when a
relative of Ms Koumateke's partner, Takeh Rose, rushed to find some razorblades
to see if she could rescue the twins.
Onlookers at
the hospital two weeks ago filmed the scene and the footage was shared on
social media.
'Hospital not to blame'
In the
subsequent uproar, police arrested the midwife and nurse on duty that day, as
well as Ms Rose and the mortuary attendant. All four have been released on bail
as investigations continue.
Hospital
officials have not commented, but Health Minister Andre Mama Fouda, speaking
after the arrests, said the staff at the state-run institution had done nothing
wrong.
A Supreme Court
judge has also become involved in the heated debate about the issue online.
Justice Ayah
Paul Abine posted on
Facebook that the minister's exoneration of the hospital staff
needed to be investigated.
Protesters in
Douala have been calling for Mr Fouda to resign.
"Hospitals
now are just money-making businesses," one resident told me.
Image copyright
AFP Image caption Opposition leader John Fru Ndi said the case highlighted the
problems in Cameroon's healthcare system
Cameroonians do
not receive free health care and have to pay for consultations as well as
medicine, which can be costly.
According to
the UN, 28% of Cameroon's population live below the income poverty line.
'Pay first, treatment later'
The recent
death of a pregnant medical doctor in Douala caused similar outrage.
Dr Helene Ngo
Kana had an ectopic pregnancy and was unable to pay for medical assistance -
and so died in Douala's General Hospital without getting any help.
"This is a
regime of shame. You have to pay before they deliver you; pay before you are
treated," said opposition leader John Fru Ndi, condemning the poor
treatment of patients at state-run hospitals.
He made the
comments after visiting the Koumateke family at their run-down house in
Douala's Mboppi slum. Ms Koumateke leaves behind her partner and two children
aged three and five.
More than a
dozen lawyers have now clubbed together to fight for justice for those who came
to Ms Koumateke's aid.
They are
offering their services free of charge to help win compensation for Ms
Koumateke's children and her partner, as well as defending Ms Rose and the
mortuary attendant.
"We are
first of all humans, then lawyers. This sad incident could not leave anyone
indifferent," said attorney Guy Olivier Moutin.
"It's a
fight for the widower and the two children left behind. And we will defend two
of the four arrested… we will fight for their total freedom."
And civil
society leaders in Doula, like Ferdinand Ndifor, are calling for a full
investigation into Cameroon's health system.
"Are the
hospitals equipped? Are there enough doctors on duty?" he asked.
"We want
to know - will this happen again tomorrow?"
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