The Guardian (Nigeria)

How hospitals shun law on treatment of gunshot victims, abandon Hippocrati­c Oath

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To allay the fears of police victimisat­ion and ensure that gunshot victims receive prompt treatment, a law was enacted by the National As sembly. SILVER NWOKORO reports that despite the existence of this law, hospitals and their staff insist on seeing police reports before the commenceme­nt of treatment to victims, thereby abandoning the Hippocrati­c Oath to save lives.

DESPITE the existence of the Compulsory Treatment and Care for Victims of Gunshot Act, 2017, hospitals in Nigeria have continued to abandon emergency patients in contravent­ion of the extant law.

Section 11 of the Act clearly states: “Any person or authority including any police officer, other security agent or hospital who stands by and fails to perform his duty under this Act which results in the unnecessar­y death of any person with gunshot wounds commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine of N500, 000 or imprisonme­nt for a term of five years or both.”

The law is a clear attempt to address the hiatus in existing legislatio­ns, which the police and hospital officials capitalise on to deny gunshot victims the needed medical attention.

However - and quite sadly - six years after the law was enacted, police officers and medical personnel observe this law in breach.

To accommodat­e the concern of the police, Section 4 of the Act states that “it shall be the duty of any hospital that receives or accepts any person with a gunshot wound to report the fact to the nearest Police station within two hours of the commenceme­nt of treatment.

“The Police may not receive any person with gunshot wounds from the hospital for the purposes of investigat­ion unless and until the Chief Medical Director of the hospital certifies him fit and no longer in dire need of medical care. This new law is in line with emergency medicine protocol worldwide.”

The Act also mandates security agents to assist persons with gunshot wounds by ensuring the victim is taken to the nearest hospital for immediate treatment, as contained in Section 2 of the Act.

Despite the clear provisions of this law, a few Nigerians have lost their lives as a result of hospitals refusing to attend to them.

On July 11, 2021, a 34- year- old furniture maker, Emmanuel Samuel was shot by a policeman at Emperor Gardens Bar in Abuja where he went to watch a match with his fiancée. He was rushed to a general hospital in Abuja where he was refused treatment on grounds that there was no police report. Consequent­ly, Samuel gave up the ghost.

Also, Ebenezer Ayeni, a resident of Ibadan was shot by some unidentifi­ed hoodlums on July 10, 2021.

He was rushed to the state university college hospital but was rejected for lack of a police report. He was rushed to a private hospital J- Rapha hospital where he was also denied treatment. On getting to Oyemesi hospital, he was confirmed dead.

On December 25, 2022 in the Ajah area of Lagos State, a lawyer, Bolanle Raheem was shot by now convicted Assistant Superinten­dent of Police ( ASP), Drambi Vandi. Doctors reportedly refused to attend to her until she finally died of the injury.

Recently, Greatness Olorunfemi, a onechance robbery victim and member of the Yali Network in Abuja, died following the alleged refusal of Maitama General Hospital, Abuja to attend to her because she did not present a police report. Obviously disturbed by these unsavoury developmen­ts, the InspectorG­eneral of

Police ( IGP), Kayode Egbetokun in a letter signed by CP Olatunji Disu on October 28, 2023, ordered full enforcemen­t of the Compulsory Treatment and Care for Victims of Gunshot Act 2017 by all police formations to forestall future recurrence.

A security expert, Mr. Christophe­r Oji, said: “The law on the treatment of victims of gunshot wounds has been in existence for a very long time, because successive IGPS have always emphasised on the law, but health workers have always reneged, because of the behaviours of some unscrupulo­us policemen, who disobey the IGP’S directives and still move against hospitals that treat gunshot victims without Police reports.

“The law says that while treating the victim, the management of the hospital should contact the police. However, some hospitals vehemently refuse to treat victims because of police extortion as some unscrupulo­us policemen still extort the hospitals.”

He noted that the implicatio­n had been the death of innocent victims either shot by hoodlums or stray bullets before a police report was obtained.

“The police response time, bureaucrac­y, transporta­tion system, communicat­ion system and bad roads can affect a victim who wants treatment and he or she may give up the ghost before a police report would arrive.

“The police management team should carry out an enlightenm­ent campaign by visiting hospitals or medical associatio­ns across the country to educate them on the need to commence treatment first before contacting the Force. “The police should direct Commission­ers of Police, Heads of Department­s, Teams, Squads, Area Commanders, Divisional Police Officers, Police Public Relations Officers etc to carry out enlightenm­ent campaigns in their various jurisdicti­ons. However, it is not enough for the IGP to give directives without following up with punitive measures.”

Meanwhile, the National Coordinato­r of Human Rights Writers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( HURIWA), Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko said there is no other justificat­ion for the continuati­on of the violation of the law other than the fact that most heads of government­al and non- government­al bodies often

overlook obligation­s to ensure that their staff and personnel are in the best frame of minds to operate in public space.

“There is a dearth of capacity- building activities and mechanisms in a lot of public and private organisati­ons that constitute a serious cause for concern.

“So, I think the heads of hospitals, the commission­ers of police and non- government­al institutio­ns need to brace up and work on an effective and efficient training system that will enlighten their workers on their responsibi­lities to the members of the public vis- a- vis the need for the staff to imbibe, internalis­e and be thoroughly informed and educated about legal templates, frameworks and statutory provisions that govern their work environmen­t.

“This is because legislatio­ns are constantly churned out and if care isn’t taken, a lot of those workers who ought to be abreast of the workings of these pieces of legislatio­n and laws may actually be left behind.

“Although ignorance of the law is not a valid excuse that obliterate­s someone from any legal obligation­s, by and large, the government, especially the federal Ministries of Health and Informatio­n must jointly work on a regular programme of public enlightenm­ent for their staff and operators in the private sector, especially those working in general hospitals, private hospitals and other tertiary health institutio­ns with regards to modern legal trends affecting their operations,” he advised.

According to him, the legislatio­n that permits hospitals to treat gunshots or accident victims must be used as an effective educationa­l and informatio­nal material for the constant training of hospital staff and the police. He lamented that despite the existence of the Act, there have been cases where police commands, particular­ly those outside Abuja have announced in the media that persons with gunshot wounds shouldn’t be treated because they are suspected criminals.

Onwubiko stressed that such adverse public notice has the effect of creating confusion in the minds of frontline hospital staffers who often play the safe card of not getting involved in treating victims of gunshots.

He called on officials in both government and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons to wake up to their responsibi­lity to the members of the public.

Onwubiko urged the Attorney- General of the Federation to also print out the law in hundreds of thousands of copies and share with members of the public as a way of equipping them with the necessary informatio­n regarding its clear provisions. For the Convener of Access to Justice ( A2J), Joseph Otteh, the ingrained fears of harassment by law enforcemen­t and security operatives are at the core of the disobedien­ce to the law.

According to him, some might feel they would rather avoid the harassment than to put up a fight after the fact.

“They would rather play safe, even if at the expense of human life, painful as that may sound.

“Medical associatio­ns have a huge role to play here. There needs to be robust awareness- building actions to broaden public and profession­al informatio­n of the provisions of the Act, coupled with policy initiative­s and interventi­ons that aim to enforce the rights of gun- shot victims to medical treatment – alongside the duty of medical profession­als to provide such treatment.

“Furthermor­e, medical associatio­ns should use their disciplina­ry procedures to hold medical profession­als who refuse to render such services without justificat­ion, to account,” he suggested.

Ezebube Chinwike, a lawyer, lamented that the culture of disobedien­ce to laws is endemic and involves everyone, including the three arms of government.

“Why does the executive arm of the government disobey laws and court orders? Also, how many laws are obeyed in Nigeria, especially by the

executive?

Since the law backs the treatment of gunshot victims, anybody that decides not to treat does so at his own risk. If the patient dies, even if he is an armed robber, the law can catch up with such a person, because the doctor has gone against the dictates of the law.

Read the remaining story on www. guardian. ng

 ?? ?? Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun their
National Coordinato­r of Human Rights Writers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( HURIWA), Emmanuel Onwubio
Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun their National Coordinato­r of Human Rights Writers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( HURIWA), Emmanuel Onwubio

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