A two-year-old boy who was allegedly
refused treatment for snakebite at the Upper West Regional Hospital in Wa has
died.
The boy was bitten by a snake in a Bambara
beans farm at Boli in the Wa municipality Saturday, and the mother had to carry
him on her back to trek more than 3 kilometres to a CHPS Compound in the area
where he was given first aid before being referred to the regional hospital.
He was then carried on a motorbike together
with his mother and aunt for about 45-minute journey from Boli to Wa.
They arrived at the regional hospital at
about 2:00 p.m. but health workers there allegedly asked the boy’s mother to get
a folder before treatment could be administered.
Workers in charge of the folder room were,
however, said to have abandoned their duty post at the time.
The distraught relatives of the boy went
back to inform nurses at the emergency ward about the development, but they
allegedly insisted on their demand for a folder before any treatment could be
given to the boy.
Boy ‘refused’ medical attention
According to relatives and an eyewitness,
the nurses refused to admit or even give the little boy any form of treatment
or attention because they could not get the folder.
“We were asked to go for a folder if not we
wouldn’t get treatment. We went to the folder room but there was nobody there,
and the nurses insisted they will not attend to us until we have the folder,”
Salia Abudu who transported the boy and his relatives to the hospital told
3news.com.
In their desperation, Abudu said they went
to inquire about the whereabouts of persons in charge of the folder room from a
nurse at the OPD department but the said male nurse got angry.
“One big man who was at the OPD taking
vital signs got even angry at us when we asked the whereabouts of the people in
charge of the folder room so we sat at the Hospital up 6:00 p.m.” he claimed.
According to Abudu, they were scandalised
by the attitude of the health workers on duty at the time, noting both the
boy’s mother and aunt became helpless after waiting for four hours without
getting any treatment for the boy.
“We were advised to go and unfortunately,
the boy died upon arriving at the CHPS compound,” Abudu told 3news.com
Residents who got wind of the incident are
reportedly angry and are demanding heads to roll at the hospital for the
alleged negligence.
When contacted, the acting director of the
Regional Hospital, Dr Emmanuel Steve Blankson, said the matter had not come to
his attention but assured he will investigate to “know what actually happened
on the ground”.
He explained that the hospital has put in
place measures to take care of all emergency cases at the facility including
snake bites.
Dr Blankson indicated that even in
situations where victims with emergency cases are brought in unconscious
without any relative, they are given treatment by health workers, and cited a
similar incident where an accident victim brought in Saturday was rushed to the
theatre.
On the issue of a folder, he said the
practice has been that where a patient requiring emergency care is brought in
without a folder, they pen down the patient’s information on a sheet of paper
until such a time his or her folder will be ready and the information
transferred unto it.
He assured that he will look into the two-year-old boy’s case to know “whether at any point because of folder somebody didn’t get care”.
BY: Pearl Abaidoo-Abbam