The Guardian (Nigeria)

Lamentatio­ns as passenger dies over poor emergency response

• Case not reported, Police say

- By Eniola Daniel

LAMENTATIO­NS, yesterday, trailed Nigeria's poor response to emergency and lack of empathy for those in need.

This followed the sudden death of a male passenger, who had a seizure along the Ilorin- Ogbomoso expressway on Saturday.

A co- passenger, Abeni Okin, who was in the same bus with the man had raised the alarm after he began to display difficulti­es in breathing and sought for medical help, but none arrived on time before he unfortunat­ely breathed his last.

“I need help please. I’m around Ilorin and Ogbomoso expressway, our car broke down along the road. There's an old man on the bus. I don’t know what’s wrong with him, he has been shaking for 20 minutes," she said.

The Federal Road Safety Corps ( FRSC) got to the scene of the incident late but the Police were nowhere to be found.

Okin said: “The most heartbreak­ing thing about this case, is that a nurse was inside the bus and she checked his blood pressure but she was scared to do Cardiopulm­onary Resuscitat­ion ( CPR) and I wish I could do more but God knows best.

“For Nigerians, we should have redress in finding our core values, which the number one value should be the readiness to help those in need.

“Help came late. I wish we got the ambulance or cab very early. May God forgive the dead and have mercy on his soul." Speaking on what Nigerians need to do in such a case of emergency, Bobby Egemba popularly known as Aproko

Doctor said: “Get the affected person out of the vehicle first. Remove that seat belt and any tight pieces of clothing around him. Lay him flat, preferably on his left side. Make sure there's space around him, don't crowd. Time exactly when this started, it should not be more than 30 minutes." Lamenting the lack of quick response, Godwin Ukeje, said: “This incident is a stark reminder of the chronic issues in Nigeria's healthcare system, which sadly, I'm all too familiar with. I lost my dad in similar fashion.

“Seizures lasting almost three hours, would suggest something severe like status epilepticu­s, where the brain is in a state of continuous seizure activity. This is lifethreat­ening and needs immediate medical interventi­on, which he tragically didn’t get.

“The lack of a timely ambulance and police support is not surprising but remains deeply concerning. This scenario illustrate­s the larger systemic problems plaguing emergency medical services in Nigeria, poor infrastruc­ture, inadequate resources and sometimes, a lack of trained personnel ready to respond.

 ?? ?? Victim
Victim

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria