Cosmas Butunyi
What happens to people who work in public health facilities? It almost
seems as if being rude and arrogant and rough is a qualification for
being hired.
From the security guy and the nurse to the cleaner and the cashier, the
attitude that is
served in hospitals is on another level – it runs on
steroids.
A genuinely nice person in these places, who is happy to help,
is an exception, rather than the rule. Sometimes, one even needs to
‘know’ people to be treated fairly.
One would expect that by virtue of handling ailing people, these
individuals would be humility and niceness personified.
That witnessing
the suffering of others would make them a lot more in touch with their
mortality, picturing themselves on the other end of the equation
sometime. But alas!
Is it the constant encounter with pain and suffering day-in-day-out that
has made these people who work in hospitals have such stone-cold
hearts?
They just do not give three hoots. No wonder, only a few days
ago, a man - father, fine writer, respectable member of society, and
easily recognizable having been a news anchor – reportedly lay in pain
at the country’s premier referral facility. Maybe he was writhing and
moaning, we will never know, but this went on for 14 straight hours (the
Hospital insists its medics did their best) until he eventually
breathed his last.
All this while, medics and paramedics and all those
other people who work in hospital probably went back and forth, while he
lay there. Shifts probably changed, and a new set of hands showed up,
fresh from home, to take charge of the facility but even they just
ignored this injured guy.
Like he was a piece of furniture they always
see at the ER on any normal working day. Or maybe he was invisible, they
could not see him all this while and only got to hear about his sad
demise from the news like the rest of us. Whatever happened to
compassion and humanity and empathy!
SEE ALSO: Coronavirus takes toll on cost of inputs for companies
This
is a sad time to be alive. The healthcare system grossly failed this
individual and many others who have ended up dying of cases that could
have been easily prevented if anyone cared.
Probably such cases happen quietly every other day in health facilities
across the country, escaping notice of the rest of us. We only got to
know of this particular one because the deceased happened to be a man in
the public eye, a darling of the people.
How many more people are
ignored, literally left for dead even after getting into hospital where
help is supposed to be?
Not that this started happening in this terrible year of Coronavirus.
Remember that other gentleman a few years ago, survived a bad accident
with really bad head injuries. Still, no one thought it was an emergency
when he was rushed to the major hospital that he had been referred to
for specialized attention.
The said attention was not yet available and
he had to be kept in the ambulance that brought him in, parked outside
for 18 hours. Apparently, there was no bed in ICU to admit him so the
hospital would not accept him. By the time it became available, he slid
into a coma and eventually passed on after gallantly fighting for his
life for a few days in what can be called a solo battle. The shame!
Surely, of what use is building all these hospitals across the country,
ostensibly taking healthcare closer to the people, if unwell people will
get there in time and still not be attended to the point that they
succumb? Why bother spending on such facilities?
Why do we even waste
our breath going on and on about delivering universal healthcare
coverage when preventable deaths happen right under the noses of the
so-called experts?
Of course, this is not to downplay the role of healthcare workers in
fighting ill-health, particularly in these times of the pandemic.
Could
they just try to at least meet our expectations? Of course we will still
rise up and clap in appreciation for them and other frontline workers.
Let it be deserved though. Of course we will agitate on the streets of
Twitter.
SEE ALSO: Panic buying follows coronavirus across the globe
Is
it too much to ask that healthcare has a human face? Is it an
unrealistic expectation for medics and their colleagues in health
facilities to diligently discharge their duties with a human face and
positive attitude?
Pages
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
No comments :
Post a Comment