A Delta State-based fashion
designer, Godswill Echenim, has appealed to the state government in southern
Nigeria, and the general public to help prevail on the management of Group
Christian Medical Centre, Asaba, to release his wife and a set of triplets
allegedly detained by the hospital over N723,100 unpaid medical bill.
Echenim, a resident of Owa-Alero, a
local community in Ika North East Local Government Area of the state, whose
wife was delivered of the set of triplets in July, alleged that their
predicament was a fallout of the nationwide strike declared by the Nigerian
Medical Association (NMA).
He said the strike by doctors in
government hospitals made his wife, who had remained jobless five years after
graduating from Ambrose Alli University (AAU), Ekpoma, Edo State, to patronise
the private hospital.
Echenim lamented the continued
detention of his wife and the triplets at the hospital because of their
inability to pay the bill charged by the hospital management for the delivery
of their babies.
The distraught father who said the
triplets were their first set of children since they got married over five
years ago, said the medical bill was too high for his family to pay.
He appealed to the government and
good spirited individuals to come to their aid.
“For about seven weeks since the
kids were delivered we have been at this hospital. I registered my wife for
ante-natal at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Asaba, but because of the
strike by doctors, I brought her here for the delivery.
“The kids were delivered through
caesarean section and were taken to the incubator where they spent over one
month before their discharge. Now the bill has come up to N723,100 and still
running because we are still here.
“So I am appealing to the government
and the general public for help so that I would be able to bring up the babies
in the way of God. We have spent over N60,000 on the nurse who was taking care
of the babies at night.
“I have started buying food for them
and they take a full can in three days. We buy pampers for N1,500 which last
for just three days. This is besides the drugs we have been buying. It is just
too much for us, we need help from the public,” Echenim appealed.
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