Business Day (Nigeria)

Hope rises for patients as UBTH gets $500,000 ICU centre

- By Churchill Okoro, Benin

PATIENTS with life-threatenin­g conditions can look to some relief, as the University of Benin Teaching hospital (UBTH), edo State, backed by the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) has inaugurate­d a 15-bed Intensive Care Unit (ICU) for emergency care.

Speaking at the launch of the unit on Tuesday, Darlington Obaseki, the chief medical director of UBTH, said the project was part of the Nigeria LNG hospital-support programme geared towards ameliorati­ng healthcare challenges of patients in critical conditions.

Obaseki, who said the initiative was as a result of a memorandum of understand­ing (MOU) signed with NLNG, noted that it would complement the existing seven-bed ICU and cater for the hospital’s growing number of patients.

According to him, “We are one of the busiest hospitals in this country. every week, we see close to 6,000 patients; each week, we admit about 450 patients and we see about 430 emergencie­s.

“This connotes that we are oversubscr­ibed as a hospital, which is an indication of the quality of services we offer. Unfortunat­ely, over the years, we have only a seven-bed ICU which is almost always oversubscr­ibed.

“So, when the opportunit­y came for us to benefit from this Nigeria LNG hospitalsu­pport programme and they asked us to identify a problem, we remembered that we needed to open up a space to accommodat­e more physically ill patients. Then we offered that we wanted our ICU to be upgraded and expanded. We are here today, thanks to the NLNG,” Obaseki said.

he noted that the ICU incorporat­es facilities such as anti-microbial epoxy coating, central monitoring system, oxygen alarming system, ventilator­s, infusion pumps among others.

Philip Mshelbila, managing director/ceo NLNG Limited, on his part, said the hospital- support programme was conceived in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic to assuage the envisaged pressure that medical institutio­ns would experience in managing ill patients.

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