The University
of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH) has denied a viral claim on
social media that 14 babies died in its special care baby unit due to a power
outage
A viral post on
social media claims that not less than 14 babies died in incubators at the
University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH) due to a power outage.
In a tweet thread, which has now been deleted, Chijioke
Ekwulu, a Twitter user, said the irregular power supply at the hospital also
disrupted surgery procedures.
“No less than 14 babies have died at the incubator of the
University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital, UPTH due to power outage. This
is as some patients at the hospital said some surgery procedures have also been
suspended due to irregular power supply,” the tweet read.
The tweet, posted on July 1, gathered over 3,100
retweets, 1,120 quotes, and over 3,000 likes before it was deleted.
Standard Observers, a news publication, also published the
claim.
The report archived here referenced a
mother who lost her twin babies to the power outage, after being childless for
seven years.
“A medical officer at the hospital who spoke to
Standardobservers on the conditions of anonymity said among the dead babies
were the twin babies of a woman who had been looking for the fruit of the womb
for seven years,” the report read.
Lucky Onotai, professor and chairman of the medical advisory
committee, UPTH, was
contacted to confirm the veracity of the story.
He dismissed the claims and said, “nothing like that
happened”.
“I don’t know why
people like to thrive on fake news. I have said this before, nothing like that
happened. People just want to tarnish the hospital’s name,” he said.
He, however, confirmed there were some “transformer issues”
but insisted it did not affect the special baby care unit, where the incubators
are kept.
“Yes, there was a power outage, but there are special
departments that have dedicated generators on standby. One of them is the
special baby care unit. It is impossible for power to go out that long. If
anyone died, why haven’t the mothers come forward?” he said.
According to Onotai, “the hospital’s PRO has also confirmed
that it is fake news. We receive hospital statistics every day, but nothing of
such has happened. People like to spread false news like a wildfire in a dry
harmattan.”
Best Ordinoha, a professor and doctor at UPTH, also refuted
the claim.
In his statement, he said: “There has been an irregular
power supply in the country, our hospital is not exempted.
“Some administrative
departments are the ones that suffer it most, but there are some units that can
never be affected,” he said.
“Let me tell you, the special baby care unit has its own
generator. If the power goes out, the generator comes on immediately. Before
the babies die from temperature irregularity, it will take hours. Do you think
it is possible for health care professionals to sit and fold their hands for
hours and watch the babies die?
“It is not even the
hospital’s responsibility to provide power but we do it anyway. We deserve some
credit here, it’s not fair.”
The BBC Pidgin visited
the special care baby unit in Port Harcourt.
In its report,
a mother, Peace Marcus, whose baby is still in the incubator receiving care
said she has been on admission for over a month with her preterm baby.
According to her, she has not seen a dead child in the baby
care unit since she got admitted.
“I’ve stayed here over one month because I have a preterm
baby. I’ve never heard of any babies dying here. No babies have died here,” she
said.
Nigeria’s national
grid collapsed more than four times in 2022 resulting in power
outages across the country.
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