Chitika

Showing posts with label doctor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doctor. Show all posts

Monday, 4 August 2014

Breaking: Nigeria records another case of Ebola virus disease

A fresh case of Ebola virus disease has been recorded in Nigeria.


One of the doctors that attended to the Liberian, Patrick Sawyler tested positive to the virus.

Result of the second doctor who was symptomatic is being awaited — this the Minister of Health said would be made public this afternoon.


Seventy of those that also travelled along with the Liberian are under surveillance. Eight are already under quarantine.

Airlines have also been directed not to bring back dead bodies from the countries with Ebola virus.
Government agencies have also been directed to ensure that borders are properly checked to ensure that dead bodies from such countries are not allowed in.

Besides, the government has also set up six member treatment and research committee as part of the efforts to contain the disease.

Friday, 1 August 2014

Heroic American doctor stricken with Ebola forgoes treatment for gravely ill colleague(Nurse)

Two gravely ill American medical workers in Liberia who were infected with the Ebola virus are said to be in stable condition as the humanitarian organization Samaritan’s Purse works to bring them back to the U.S. for treatment.

Dr. Kent Brantly, the second American stricken by the disease, was offered an experimental serum Wednesday but only one dose was provided.“

Dr. Brantly asked that it be given to Nancy Writebol,” a nurse working with him who also infected, Franklin Graham, president of Samaritan’s Purse said in a press release.

“However, Dr. Brantly received a unit of blood from a 14-year-old boy who had survived Ebola because of Dr. Brantly’s care. The young boy and his family wanted to be able to help the doctor that saved his life.”

Sources confirmed to Fox News on Thursday that a medevac plane with the Centers for Disease Control's aeromedical biological containment system onboard was headed for Liberia. There was no scheduled return time for the medevac plane's return.

Also on Thursday, Emory University Hospital announced its plans to transfer a patient with Ebola to a containment unit within the next several days. However, the Atlanta hospital did not say specifically that that patient was one of the two infected Americans.

Samaritan’s Purse is working with the government to bring Brantly and Writebol back to the U.S. for treatment.

Graham told Fox News that all agreements are in place and that he hopes they will be on a specially-equipped aircraft back home in a few days. He also noted that the plane will likely have to make a stop for refueling.

The North Carolina-based missionary group ordered the evacuation of all their non-essential personnel from Liberia on Tuesday.

In a statement from Brantly’s family, his wife, Amber, asked for privacy at this time. Amber and the couple’s two children are currently staying at an undisclosed location while they are under “fever watch.” They have not shown any signs of the virus.

“We appreciate so much all the words of comfort and acts of kindness extended to our family,” Amber said in the statement. “This isa challenging time for our family. Wewill not be speaking to the media at this time. We ask that you respect our privacy.”

In a press conference Thursday, CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden stated that, for a patient who is infected, travel may be unsafe.


“There’s the potential that actual movement of the patient could do more harm than befit of more advanced, superior care outside the country [of infection],” he said.

According to Frieden, the decision whether to move infected patients is a “complicated question” the organization that has hired and placed the person must make.

“We would certainly work with them to facilitate whatever operation they wish to pursue,” he said.


With regards to the experimental serum and blood treatment administered to two American patients, Frieden said the CDC does not know the details of what was given.

The CDC have not found any evidence that any treatments are effective against Ebola.“There are no proven treatments, no proven vaccines and there is not likely to be one for at least a year, even in the best case scenario,” he said.

The Ebola outbreak in West Africa is worsening and is the largest known in history and it will take at least 3-6 months, if everything goes well, to manage the outbreak, Frieden noted.“It’s not going to be quick, it’s not going to be easy, but we know what to do,” he said.

“This is a marathon, not a sprint.”For a patient who contracts Ebola and is able to recover, once their blood tests normalize and after they no longer show any symptoms, they no longer need to be in isolation.“It’s a viral infection and viral infections generally, eventually clear,” Dr. Joseph Rahimian, infectious disease specialist and assistant professor of clinical medicine at New York University Langone Medical Center, told FoxNews.com. “So once they’ve made it through their symptoms and their symptoms resolve, within a short time after that, there’s little reason to think they’re going to have an ongoing risk of infection to other people.”

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2014/07/31/humanitarian-group-arranging-to-bring-american-ebola-patients-to-us-for/

Ebola toll tops 700; U.S. nurse to get experimental treatment

Security forces went house-to-house looking for Ebola patients and others exposed to the disease Thursday in Sierra Leone's capital as the death toll from the worst recorded outbreak in history surpassed 700 in West Africa.

U.S. health officials urged Americans not to travel to the three countries hardest hit by the medical crisis: Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.

Two Americans are sick with Ebola in Liberia. Their colleagues said Thursday they were in "grave" but stable condition, and one of them was to receive an experimental serum.

"There was only enough for one person. Dr. (Kent) Brantly asked that it be given to Nancy Writebol," said Franklin Graham, president of Samaritan's Purse,an aid organization that has been working in Liberia during the Ebola crisis.

Brantly, though, did receive a unit of blood from a 14-year-old boy who had survived Ebola because of the doctor's care, Graham said in a statement.

"The young boy and his family wanted to be able to help the doctor who saved his life," he said.

Giving a survivor's blood to a patient might be aimed at seeing whether any antibodies the survivor made to the virus could help someone else fight off the infection.


This approach has been tried in previous Ebola outbreaks with mixed results.No further details were provided on the experimental treatment.

There is currently no licensed drug or vaccine for Ebola, and patients can only be given supportive care to keep them hydrated.


There are a handful of experimental drug and vaccine candidates for Ebola and while some have had promising results in animals including monkeys, none has been rigorously tested in humans.


Authorities in Sierra Leone are vowing to contain the disease's spread by quarantining all those at home who have refused to go to isolation centres.


Many have kept relatives at home to pray for their survival instead of bringing them to clinics that have had a 60 per cent fatality rate.

Those in the throngs of death can bleed from their eyes, mouth and ears.

The disease has continued to spread through bodily fluids as sick people remain out in the community and cared for by relatives without protective gear.

People have become ill from touching sick family members and in some cases from soiled linens.


The World Health Organization on Thursday reported 57 new deaths in recent days, almost half of which occurred in Liberia.

Liberia's president on Wednesday also instituted new measures aimed at halting the spread of Ebola, including shutting down schools and ordering most public servants to stay home from work."It could be helpful for the government to have powers to isolate and quarantine people and it's certainly better than what's been done so far," said Dr. Heinz Feldmann, chief of virology at U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

"Whether it works, we will have to wait and see."Dr. Unni Krishnan, head of disaster preparedness and response for the aid group Plan International, said closing schools could help as they bring large number of children together, which can amplify infection rates.

"Door-to-door searches are not going to be easy," he said. "What will help is encouraging people to come forward when they see symptoms and seek medical help."


The U.S. Peace Corps also was evacuating hundreds of its volunteers in the affected countries. Two Peace Corps workers are under isolation outside the U.S. after having contact with a person who later died from the Ebola virus, a State Department official said.In Moberly, Missouri, Liz Sosniecki said she got a call from her 25-year-old son, Dane, a Peace Corps volunteer in Liberia. He had not been exposed to Ebola and expressed disappointment about leaving just six weeks after he arrived."He said, 'I'm coming home.' Sorry," she said, beginning to cry. "I'm a little emotional. It's a relief."

The last time the CDC issued such a travel warning during a disease outbreak was in 2003 because of SARS in Asia.

Ebola now has been blamed for 729 deaths in four West African countries this year, and has shown no signs of slowing down particularly in Liberia and Sierra Leone. The 57 deaths that WHO added to its totals include 27 in Liberia, 20 in Guinea, nine in Sierra Leone and one in Nigeria.The organization is launching a $100 million response plan in Guinea's capitalon Friday, it said. The new plan calls for the deployment of several hundred additional health workers to help the strained resources in deeply impoverished West Africa, where hospital and clinics are ill-equipped to cope with routine health threats let alone the outbreak of a virulent disease like Ebola.Among the deaths announced this week was that of the chief doctor treating Ebola in Sierra Leone, who was to be buried Thursday.

The government said Dr. Sheik Humarr Khan's death was "an irreparable loss of this son of the soil." The 39-year-old was a leading doctor on hemorrhagic fevers in a nation with very few medical resources.


Ebola cases first emerged in the nation of Guinea back in March, and later spread across the borders to Liberia and Sierra Leone.

The outbreak is now the largest recorded in world history, and has infected three African capitals with international airports. Officials are trying to step up screening of passengers, though an American man was able to fly from Liberia to Nigeria, where authorities say he died days later from Ebola.

Experts say the risk of travellers contracting it is considered low because it requires direct contact with bodily fluids or secretions such as urine, blood, sweat or saliva.

Ebola can't be spread like flu through casual contact or breathing in the same air.Patients are contagious only once the disease has progressed to the point they show symptoms, according to the World Health Organization.

The most vulnerable are health care workers and relatives who come in much closer contact with the sick.


In Liberia, authorities say 28 out of the 45 health workers who have contracted the disease so far have died.


Source: http://www.ctvnews.ca/world/ebola-toll-tops-700-u-s-nurse-to-get-experimental-treatment-1.1940013

Monday, 21 July 2014

Nurses fault doctors strike

Nurses in the country have condemned the ongoing strke by the medical doctors.They urged government to stop all doctors on it’s pay roll from establishing private clinics.

Besides, the nurses under tbe umbrella of National Association of Nigeria Nurses andMidwives (NANNM) also condemned what it described unethical behavior or practice of Medical Practitioners whereby in-patients are compulsory discharged against their wish whenever Nigeria Medical Association calls for industrial action.

The Nurses in a statement issued on Sunday and made available to newsmen inAbuja expressed displeasure over the strike, stressing that NMA always wants to make it appear that the patients left the hospital because doctors are on strike.

The statement which was signed by Mr. Yusuf-Badmus, General Secretary, NANNM stressed that, “the public at large must be made to know that most in-patients are in the hospital for comprehensive healthcare (physical and psychological) and are being taken care of by the nurses and other health professionals, except those that have been booked for surgical procedures or surgical operation.”

The medical practitioner therefore, has no moral nor ethical justification to compulsorily force them (in-patients) out of the hospital to make the hospital empty because doctors are on strike.”

He explained further that “Ante natal care, deliveries and post natal cares are handled by skilled nurses or midwives even where we have or do not have medical practitioners. Most hospitals or health facilities in Nigeria are run today without medical practitioners especially in the ruralor semi urban areas where the medical practitioners have distained and refused towork.“



The public are therefore encouraged to attend and patronize the hospitals because other health professionals such as skill midwives, the accident and emergency (A& E) Nurses, intensive care nurses, orthopedic nurses pediatric nurses etc. including the medical laboratory scientists, medical record officers, the radiographers the physiotherapists and pharmacists etc are on ground to attend to their health needs.”

He further stated, “All government health workers should have a unified salary scales. Difference should be entry/exit points and professional/peculiar allowances of the different cadres of workers. This will go a long way in checking.and prevent unhealthy rivalry and end to the incessant strike action, that leaves the innocent patient to suffer.”

Source: The Nation

Sunday, 27 April 2014

Why a former doctor decided to start an online supermarket in Nigeria



Dr Olumide Olusanya is a former medical doctor who started an online supermarket in Nigeria, Gloo.ng. Originally called BuyCommonThings.com, Olusanya decided to change the name last year in an effort to make the brand catchier and “stick” with its customers.With his wife as his business partner, today Olusanya employs 12 people and operates out of 1,800m² warehouse in Lagos. Although the company is still in its startup phase, Olusanya’s vision for Gloo.ng is to “do to supermarket shopping in Africa what Amazon did to book shopping in the world”.


How we made it in Africa spoke to Olusanya to find out why he decided to start an online supermarket brand in Nigeria, the challenges he faces, and his future expansion plans.

Q: Why did you decide to move from a career in medicine to business?


I actually didn’t move straight from medicine to business. I have always been a lover of technology and so had wanted to study computer science or engineering in university but was coerced to study medicine by my dad. After practicing for a while, I went back to my first love – technology. I became an Oracle database administrator and AIX systems administrator. It was from these that I evolved into the business and entrepreneurial side of technology.

Q:What was the inspiration behind starting Gloo.ng, and how did you go about funding it?



The idea occurred to me while watching my extremely loving and dutiful wife combine keeping a happy home with holding down a full-time executive role. Gloo.ng is an outpouring of affection to my wife – and by extension, to all our target users – to try to relieve her, and our valued Gloo.ng users, of the stress of this balancing act, partnering with them to build the happiness they want to build into their homes and families, by saving them the precious time, the valuable money and the needless stress spent on the very unnecessary inconvenience of supermarket visits, which they can better spend on activities that promote their happiness, such has spending quality time with their family.

Seed funding came from an investment vehicle in which I had a very significant majority holding. Later up the line, friends and colleagues acted as angels to fund the business up to its present stage.

Q: Who are your customers?

The urban and sub-urban busy homemaker i.e. any active, employed, engaged, swamped person who takes care of – or manages the taking care of –his/her or someone else’s family, home and children in an urban or sub-urban area.


Q: Tell us about some of the challenges you face in running Gloo.ng, and how you plan to overcome them?

[Establishing] a trusted, efficient, secure and cost-effective means of receiving electronic payments for goods and services. I am sorry I cannot reveal our plans for dealing with this.

Q: What has been the best business decision you have made for Gloo.ng so far?

My choice of co-founder. I asked my wife after about three months of [running] Gloo.ng to resign from her executive role to join me in building Nigeria’s biggest supermarket place as a co-founder. She has not looked back since then – a daughter of consolation, a rock of support, and a treasure trove of advice. There would not have been a Gloo.ng as you now know it without this woman – either in idea or even in execution. She isas much a celebration of Gloo.ng as all our treasured Gloo.ng users are.


Q: Any expansion plans?

We have just signed an agreement for an[undisclosed amount] fund raise that we will use to blanket the whole of Lagos State with our service this 2014, once the funding closes. Next year, we start blanketing Nigeria. The long-range vision is to be the Quidsi.com of Africa.

Q: Describe three traits that make a good business manager in Nigeria.

Three traits are not enough in Nigeria. In Nigeria, you need all the following: tenacity, resilience, ability to work hard, passion, risk-tolerance and a good name/reputation.

You can visit Our New Page

Friday, 7 March 2014

E-CLINIC LAUNCHED IN ABUJA.

An online portal for health, EClinicNaija, has launched in Nigeria in hopes of providing healthcare over the internet. The portal, run by Tagged Technologies andToplink Global, hopes to use information and communication technology to eliminate stigma, discrimination and social exclusion and increase uptake of healthcare services, said Omofoman Daniel, managing director of Tagged Technologies.Eclinicnaija.com.ng’s wellness clinic provides a database of registered pharmacies, reminders and alerts for antenatal through pregnancy for women. It also offers direct lines to consult a doctor, schedule an appointment or call foran ambulance over the phone.Its electronic library allows health workers in need of continuous professional development update and collaborate on research.“Leveraging on increasing internet access in Nigeria and high mobile phone penetration of over 81.7 per cent our diagnostic and management room will provide Nigerian medical professionals practicing abroad with virtual access to the healthcare delivery system,” said Daniel. By bringing the health sector to Nigerians’ fingertips, the portal hopes to retain foreign exchange in a bid to stop medical tourism.In 2012, some 18,000 Nigerians on medical visas to India alone spent over N42 billion, said Daniel. “Our solutions will encourage qualitative health care delivery and increase confidence in the Nigerian healthcare system,” he said. The portal’s listing of only registered professionals and facilities to make them easier to reach could also help fish out quacks, Daniel said.

Friday, 28 February 2014

Ondo FMC boss jumps over fence to escape EFCC arrest

There was a mild drama at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Owo local government area of Ondo state this Tuesday, when the Chief Medical Director(CMD) of the institution, Dr Abiodun Olufemi Omotosho went into hiding to escape from being arrested by the officials of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) during their visit to the Centre.

DailyPost has gathered that it was the third time security operatives would have visited the FMC, but failed to arrest Omotosho.

EFCC had been trailing the FMC boss following an alleged mismanagement of funds meant for the purchase of CT scans and other medical equipment worth millions of naira.
It was gathered that, the security officials were acting on a petition written by some Medical Doctors of the hospital against the CMD led management team over alleged diversion of the money meant for the purchasing of the equipment.


Sources at FMC revealed that the anti-graft agency who went straight to the CMD’s Office did not meet him on seat but met his secretary who claimed the Director was in an important meeting.

It was gathered that the EFCC operatives became suspicious of the secretary’s claims and threatened to arrest her if she failed to tell the truth. Read more from the source