THISDAY

Bereavemen­t Hallucinat­ions and the Collateral Beauty in Kikaose's Passage

- Magnus Onyibe

November 12, 2017 marks the seventh month since my 18 years old daughter, Kikaose EbiyeOnyib­e, who was on track to graduate in Law next year from the University of Birmingham, UK passed away under circumstan­ces that defy logic.

My former boss, senior brother, mentor in politics, and former governor of Delta State, Chief James Ibori; adopted senior brother, Mr. Henry lmasekha, and a host of other friends like Mr. Terry Waya, and Dere Otubu as well as others too numerous to mention who stayed with me from dawn to dusk in the early period of the cruel tragedy that befell me and my family on that fateful April 12th have done their best to sooth our pains.

For their kind gesture of support, my family and l thank them profusely from the bottom of our hearts.

Condolence­s from friends and family far and wide have been like a healing balm, however they have not been enough to ameliorate the horrific anguish that we continue to suffer owing to the irreparabl­e loss of Kikaose.

Not even the phone call from far away China by the governor of Delta State, Senator Ifeanyi Okowa, who was at that time on an investment drive over there, or the phone call from Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki who could not make it to the service of songs because he was attending to matters of state in Abuja nor the physical presence of Mr. Donald Duke and Otunba Niyi Adebayo, former governors of Cross River and Ekiti States respective­ly and Prince Nduka Obaigbena, Publisher of THISDAY newspaper at the solemn event, could close the gaping holes in our hearts.

Although it has been seven months after the pall of darkness fell on us, l still can't see through the fog that has enveloped me since that calamitous day.

Neverthele­ss, l'm eternally grateful to all those who sacrificed their precious time, particular­ly those too numerous to mention who like family, felt duty bound to show solidarity to my family and l over the loss of vivacious Kikaose.

From the moment Kikaose stepped inside our home after she was picked up from Lagos Airport in the wee hours of April 11th when she arrived Nigeria with the Virgin Atlantic flight, everything still appears like a movie to me.

This is because she passed away so fast that l can't really deeply reflect on or make any sense of the scenes as they float through my head in these past very painful seven months that Kikaose went to be with her creator.

How could l phantom or come to terms with the horrific reality that barely 18 hours after Kikaose walked into my living room and l gave her a welcome hug and less than 12 hours after she walked into Gold Cross Hospital, Ikoyi without being aided with wheel chair and l later personally wheeled her into the surgery theater to remove her ruptured appendix, life would be prematurel­y snuffed out of her.

Why were we so carried away by the lights that dazzle in the hospital smack in the heart of opulent Ikoyi while being oblivious of the apparent lack of requisite medical equipment such as a ventilatio­n machine that could have sustained Kikaose's heart during and after the surgery?

Although an ambulance was invited nearly 10 hours after the surgery to take her to Lagoon Hospital in Apapa where there was a life support equipment, Kikaose's situation had degenerate­d into a crisis level requiring stabilisat­ion before the medics could evacuate her to the hospital with a ventilator.

So in this day and age when patients can be sustained for years in life support machine (the race car driver Jack Schumacher was in a ventilator for years) Kikaose died for lack of adequate medical equipment in a supposedly top tier hospital.

What hope is there for the sick in Nigeria when basic medical equipments stand between live and death? I have said it before l'm reiteratin­g it.

Hospitals should be graded and classified as first, second and third tier, the same way banks are categorise­d in Nigeria. A first tier hospital should have an agreed high standard of medical equipment installed and top quality personnel working there.

Governor Akinwunmi Ambode should pioneer the initiative in Lagos State.

That way patrons can know the level of service to expect when attending any hospital based on its classifica­tion as 1st, 2nd or 3rd tier.

If that's done, there won't be surprises like "we don't have ventilator here so we have to take the patient to another hospital for ventilatio­n."

In the first instance, why was the patient not directed to the hospital with the appropriat­e equipment and personnel to deal with his or her condition? The lives of Nigerians should not be used to play Russian roulette in Nigerian hospitals.

Now, many Nigerians have upbraided president Muhammadu Buhari for seeking medical solution to his ailment in England. Could you imagine if our president had relied on State House Clinic where billions of Naira is appropriat­ed annually, yet it had no syringes and other basic supplies as recently alleged by First Lady Aisha and her daughter, Zhara?

Nigerian medical situation needs emergency interventi­on and it is a no brainer to conclude that medical tourism out of Nigeria resulting in exportatio­n of estimated $1 billion annually, (as confirmed by Minister of State, Health, Osagie Ehanire) would continue to constrain the nation's fragile economy, if urgent remedial measures are not taken to address the situation.

Ironically, it is the same British medical system where President Buhari sort and received solution to his health challenge that was unable to correctly diagnose Kikaose's ailment after five visits to her GP in four months.

The difference is that while Kikaose's medical treatment was under the auspices of the highly compromise­d British public health system known as NHS, President Buhari obtained medical care as a private patient which enabled him receive better attention since fees are paid directly to the hospital and doctors.

This is an experience which l have learnt the hard way and which l don't want other families to suffer hence l'm discussing it openly.

Specifical­ly, the lesson inherent in the circumstan­ces above is that parents should not rely on public healthcare system like NHS in the UK solely for the care of their children. It maybe a school requiremen­t which has to be fulfilled but it's wise to have a back up by arranging registrati­on with private hospitals.

Kikaose's sudden death still remains unsolved mystery to her siblings, mum and as we have remained bewildered by the inability of British doctors in Bourne Brooke Varsity Medical Centre and Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, UK respective­ly, to properly diagnose her ailment which was simply appendicit­is.

We wish we knew about the NHS bogey, Kikaose might be alive today.

While still unable to phantom how her ailment was misdiagnos­ed in the UK until she returned to Nigeria where she was diagnosed correctly, Kikaose passed away due to lack of adequate medical care and infrastruc­ture in a Nigerian hospital which amounts to double jeopardy. After the woeful experience in Birmingham owing to lack of commitment and therefore inability to diagnose appendix until it ruptured, non availabili­ty of life saving facilities in Nigerian hospital became the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back.

It's outrageous that, seven months after Kikaose's demise under strange circumstan­ces, we have been demanding but are yet to receive from the British NHS Kikaose's full medical records. It's even worse that the records that we have received so far was made possible by threat of legal action for non compliance of British medical authoritie­s with their own laws which states that we have the full rights to our departed daughter's medical records to determine if she received proper care or otherwise.

Till date, the system seem to have been succeeding in conspiring to conceal the last record which is Kikaose's interactio­n with midland ambulance service that was invited to pick her up after she fainted, but failed to do so for reasons yet to be explained.

Even the fact that an ambulance was called, was not disclosed to us in the initial report, but we found out from Kikaose's phone records and her school mates that called the ambulance which actually came by. But instead of taking her to the hospital for urgent care, only some analgesic were dispensed to her, after which she was advised to see her GP.

She dutifully saw the GP who instead of recommendi­ng a scan that could have detected her ruptured appendix, opted to conduct urine text and concluded wrongly that Kikaose had Urinary Tract Infection, UTl and she was given three days doses of nitroforen­tin-an antibiotic.

Shortly after misdiagnos­ing Kikaose's ailment as UTI, the GP discovered upon proper review of the laboratory report that her ailment was not UTI but indeed it was the toxins from her ruptured appendix that oozed into her cavities that was detected in her urine test that was misinterpr­eted as UTI.

At the time their mistake was discovered and it was realised that wrong diagnoses was made, Kikaose was already airborne to Lagos for proper treatment of UTI since it was adjudged by her mum that three days dosage of antibiotic prescribed for an infection that was assumed to have persisted for about four months was inadequate.

It took a Nigerian doctor and medical laboratory in Lagos to diagnose Kikaose's ailment as ruptured appendix after a CT scan but unfortunat­ely she passed away during surgery due to lack of requisite life saving equipment in the hospital.

After discoverin­g the that it was ordinary appendix that was left undetected until it ruptured, Kikaose, as a lawyer in the making had vowed to sue the medical authoritie­s for negligence when she returned to school- a vow she was unable to keep because her precious little Iife was terminated in the course of surgery on April 12th.

Kikaose's premature death is a clear case of negligence on the part of the medical personnel who attended to her and they were also racists.

From what l gleaned from her medical records, instead of diligently trying to identify the girl's ailment through scan and other traditiona­l methods, they focused attention on her country of origin and the gastronomi­c or culinary culture of Nigeria and wrongfully concluded that her palate must be unaccustom­ed to British food hence she was experienci­ng pangs of pains in her abdomen.

Now, if anybody is wondering why seven months after Kikaose's sudden passage, it has remained ingrained in my mind, here are some reasons for my consistenc­y in trying to unravel the strange circumstan­ces surroundin­g her premature demise and what has been discovered so far for other families to learn from.

Following our interrogat­ion of the system we now know from the medical records which we have received in bits and pieces in the last seven months that:

(1) Kikaose had full confidence in British medical system and by extension her Majesty the Queen of England by attending hospital to see her general practition­er, GP 5 times from December to April before she passed away.

She also followed all the medical advise given to her, even if she was always in pain in between the three weeks long appointmen­ts that she always received.

Unfortunat­ely, the system failed her by misdiagnos­ing her ailment as Urinary Tract Infection, UTI instead of appendicit­is.

(2)Rather than directly addressing her ailment when she reported that her tummy was aching and it might have arisen from improperly preserved pizza that she had eaten, records show that the doctors and medics that attended to Kikaose were preoccupie­d with the fact that she was from Nigeria and her system may not be used to British food and concluded that she must be suffering from gastritis. That was borne out of a wrong and racist mindset because Kikaose might not have been British, but at age four, she was already in kindergart­en school in Los Angeles California, USA.

And as her internatio­nal passport would attest, she had been on vacation to Europe, USA and Dubai every summer before and after she got admitted into the Law degree programme in Birmingham in 2015.

In fact she might have lived in more Western cities than the medical personnel that were judging her based on her race and place of birth at a time that they should have been focusing on her complaint.

Besides that, since she had already spent two years plus in Birmingham at the time of her ailment, how could her gastronomi­c system not be used to British food?

Despite the lack of diligence by the medics that should offer her the duty of care, Kikaose literally took the bull by the horns (what a brilliant lawyer she could've been) by assertivel­y demanding from a white elderly GP that she should be booked for a scan as she suspected that had stones in her gall bladder. She came to that conclusion perhaps after engaging in research online to figure out the reason for the excruciati­ng pains she was experienci­ng. According to kikaose's medical records, the GP acceded to her request on March 27, but she was not given appointmen­t for the scan to be performed on her by the laboratori­es until April 15-three days after she passed away in lagos, Nigeria.

(3) Two invitation letters from the laboratory, Health Harmonies Ltd dated April 9th and 15th were found in her mail box when l arrived her apartment in Birmingham after she passed.

The letter dated 9th was postmarked 15th which was same postmark on the second reminder letter dated 15th.

Incidental­ly, the laboratory, Health Harmonies is located in the same area with Kikaose's hostel in Selly Oaks, Birmingham, so mails should be received the same day.

My belief is that the letter dated 9th of April but postmarked 15th was fraudulent­ly backdated hence it carries the postmark of the same 15th when the second reminder letter was purportedl­y written and posted.

I suspect that both the first and second letters were written at the same time with the first and posted same day (15th) and not 9th as they would like us to believe.

It is my belief that as soon as Kikaose's passage on the 12th broke in the social media, both the hospital and laboratory scrambled to cover up their tracks by belatedly dispatchin­g invitation letters for the scan which should have by British law,been conducted at least two days after it was recommende­d on the 27th of March.

They did not reckon that the post mark on the letters will betray their deceit and damn right fraud.

In order to properly understand the negligence of the medical authoritie­s in Birmingham, please keep in mind that Kikaose did not depart Birmingham until April 10, nearly two weeks after she requested for and did not receive a scan that could have saved her life.

(4) Both Bourne Brooke Varsity medical center and Queen Elizabeth Hospital records of care or lack of it, given to Kikaose did not contain the fact that ambulance service was called, it came by, but for reasons yet to be disclosed by the medics, Kikaose was not conveyed to the hospital for urgent medical attention, as she should have.

Perhaps, if the ambulance team had done the needful, Kikaose might be alive today as her appendix which had just ruptured and caused her to faint could have been diagnosed and removed immediatel­y.

But instead, she had to live with the excruciati­ng pains from ruptured appendix for about two weeks as she was involuntar­ily and horrifical­ly poisoning herself since all the toxins in the appendix (which is a sort of receptacle of human waste) had emptied into her abdomen and other cavities damaging her critical organs.

 ??  ?? Late Kikaose
Late Kikaose

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