For Dr. Ada Igonoh, one of the doctors who had contact with
the late Patrick Sawyer, the Liberian-American importer of Ebola Virus Disease
to Nigeria, at the First Consultants Hospital, Obalende, Lagos, she was only
separated from death by her faith, knowledge and resolve to live beyond the
most deadly strain of the virus.
She was infected with the Zaire strain after she helped
Sawyer to hang his intravenous (I.V.) fluid bag on a metal stand from his bed
when Sawyer wanted to go to the bathroom to stool.
She did it with her bare hands not knowing that Sawyer, who
had shielded information from the hospital, actually had disease.
The doctor, who explained in a lengthy article published by
online news portal, Bellanaija, how the hospital staff, including the late Dr.
Ameyo Stella Adadevoh, handled Sawyer’s case before and after the result of a
test showed he had Ebola, said Sawyer died in the bathroom in his ward and that
she was the one who certified him dead.
But after Sawyer’s death, the reality of contacting the
disease dawned on all of them, especially when some government officials met
with them and gave them thermometres to always measure their temperature.
She explained that a week before Sawyer’s death, she had
gone to her parents’ house on a visit and was still there when she started
having symptoms beginning with sore throats and joint pains.
When initial anti-malaria drugs could not help her fever and
she started vomiting and stooling, she called the emergency number they were
given and some officials came to take her sample for a test. She said at this
stage, she started isolating herself from her parents and siblings.
“The following day, Sunday 3rd of August, I got a call from
one of the doctors who came to take my sample the day before. He told me that
the sample which they had taken was not confirmatory, and that they needed
another sample.
“They came with the ambulance that afternoon and told me that
I had to go with them to Yaba. I was confused. Couldn’t the second sample be
taken in the ambulance like the previous one?
“He said a better-qualified person at the Yaba centre would
take the sample. I asked if they would bring me back. He said ‘yes’. Even with
the symptoms I did not believe I had Ebola. After all, my contact with Sawyer
was minimal. I only touched his I.V. fluid bag just that once without gloves.
It was when she got to the Infectious Disease Hospital, Yaba
that she met Dr. David, a caucasian, who confirmed that her test was positive.
“I had no reaction. I think I must have been in shock. He
then told me to open my mouth and he looked at my tongue. He said it was the
typical Ebola tongue.
“I took out my mirror from my bag and took a look and I was
shocked at what I saw. My whole tongue had a white coating, looked furry and
had a long, deep ridge right in the middle.
“I then started to look at my whole body, searching for
Ebola rashes and other signs as we had been recently instructed. I called my
mother immediately and said, ‘Mummy, they said I have Ebola, but don’t worry, I
will survive it. Please, go and lock my room now; don’t let anyone inside and
don’t touch anything.’ She was silent. I cut the line,” she further wrote.
Dr. Ada said she met one of the ward maids at the First
Consultants Hospital at the centre. The woman who always had smiles for her
could not smile this time as she had been stooling all day.
Later Dr. David, she said, brought bottles of water and ORS,
the oral fluid therapy which he dropped by her bedside.
“He told me that 90 percent of the treatment depended on me.
He said I had to drink at least 4.5 litres of ORS daily to replace fluids lost
in stooling and vomiting,” she said, adding that the man warned her against
taking a drug to stop the stooling as the virus would replicate the more inside
of her.
“That evening, the symptoms fully kicked in. I was stooling
almost every two hours. The toilets did not flush so I had to fetch water in a
bucket from the bathroom each time I used the toilet. I then placed another
bucket beneath my bed for the vomiting.
“On occasion I would run to the toilet with a bottle of ORS,
so that as I was stooling, I was drinking.
“The next day Monday 4th of August, I began to notice red
rashes on my skin particularly on my arms. I had developed sores all over my
mouth. My head was pounding so badly. The sore throat was so severe I could not
eat. I could only drink the ORS.
“I took paracetamol for the pain. The ward maid across from
me wasn’t doing so well. She had stopped speaking. I couldn’t even brush my
teeth; the sores in my mouth were so bad. This was a battle for my life but I
was determined I would not die,” she said further.
She embarked by daily meditating on Psalm 91 while her
pastor, a medical doctor, would call at intervals, pray and discuss researched
materials about the disease with her. He also brought her reading materials and
CDs which she played with the gadgets she took with her.
She also said the Chief Consultant of her hospital was also
sending every necessary materials to make them comfortable.
She said despite being in the throes of death, she was not
scared and even started encouraging others.
While there, the late Justina Ejelonu, the pregnant nurse
who contacted the virus on her first day at work, was brought in. She died days
later.
Miraculously, five days after she was admitted, the
diarrhoea ceased. “I was overwhelmed with joy. It happened at a time I thought
I could no longer stand the ORS. Drinking that fluid had stretched my endurance
greatly,” she said, adding that she soon started eating well.
She suddenly got ill again, but this time, her sample was
tested and it came out negative just 14 days after she was admitted. She said
she was overjoyed at the news.
Dr. Ada, who commended the Lagos State Government, the World
Health Organisation and the Federal Government and all those who prayed for
her, was discharged after she had a chlorine bath and was advised to leave
everything she came to the centre with.
No comments:
Post a Comment