LEKMA Hospital – Adomonline.com http://34.58.148.58 Your comprehensive news portal Tue, 23 Jul 2024 09:39:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 http://34.58.148.58/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-Adomonline140-32x32.png LEKMA Hospital – Adomonline.com http://34.58.148.58 32 32 Electricity restored at LEKMA Hospital after MP’s intervention http://34.58.148.58/electricity-restored-at-lekma-hospital-after-mps-intervention/ Tue, 23 Jul 2024 09:39:44 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2424747 Electricity supply to the LEKMA Hospital has been restored after it was cut off on Tuesday, July 16, 2024, due to unpaid bills.

The hospital had to rely on its standby generator throughout Wednesday, July 17, 2024, until the intervention of the Member of Parliament, Benjamin Ayiku, led to the restoration of power at the facility.

In March, the Ministry of Health issued a statement to address fears of potential electricity disconnections at 91 health facilities across the country.

Despite these assurances, staff and patients at LEKMA Hospital experienced power cut due to a debt of approximately 3 million cedis.

Although the hospital tried to repay the debt in installments, the Teshie office of the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) insisted that the payments were insufficient. The power disconnection nearly halted hospital operations, posing a significant threat to patient care.

Sources at the hospital revealed that relying on the generator was unsustainable, costing over 20,000 cedis a day and rapidly depleting the hospital’s resources.

Staff were advised to reduce power usage in non-essential areas, and open windows for ventilation.

Many windows were opened at the hospital at the time the facility was running on power from it’s stand-by generator

Electricity was restored on Thursday morning after the MP intervened, engaging in negotiations with the Teshie ECG office.

Mr Ayiku emphasized the critical nature of the situation for human lives.

“We were there about for 30mins, and we were told they were not going to reconnect until they paid. We were told there owed about 3million Ghana cedis.”

“After my intervention with the manager, he even told me it’s beyond him, so he called his regional director and he said that is their policy and I told him this is about human lives and if someone dies, we can’t do anything about it. I even knelt down, It was very critical”, he added.

Mr Ayiku also urged the hospital’s management to reevaluate the facility’s metering system to reduce high electricity costs.

“Even for the monthly bills, they struggle to pay. They should get a dedicated fund to manage the debt while concentrating on current bills. Separating meters will help manage the costs,” he said.

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Dr Okoe Boye donates bus to LEKMA Hospital http://34.58.148.58/dr-okoe-boye-donates-bus-to-lekma-hospital/ Wed, 22 May 2024 18:32:25 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2398516 Health Minister Dr. Bernard Okoe Boye, has donated a bus to the Ledzokuku-Krowor Municipal Assembly (LEKMA) Hospital at Teshie in Accra.

The bus presented on Monday is meant to support staff movement and transport consignments for the hospital.

May be an image of 5 people, ambulance, van and text that says '크도 Η E 40-23 보심 TOLEKMAHOSPITAL LEKMAHOSPITAL HOSPITAL TOLEKMA DOB fo fODrOkoeBoye D Okoe oyB'

The gesture forms part of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) Parliamentary Candidate for the Ledzokuku’s efforts to uplift healthcare facilities.

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It is also to ensure that medical professionals have the necessary resources to perform their duties effectively.

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At a short ceremony, Dr Oko Boye who has a long standing relationship with the hospital  expressed his commitment to improving healthcare services.

“It is always a privilege to support the Lekma Hospital, this time with a bus. This vehicle is meant to support staff movement and transport assignments for the hospital.

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“As I mentioned earlier, I am in this leadership business to make the world a better place. Which sector is better positioned for my attention than my own health sector? Together we shall build the Ghana we desire,” he stated.

Residents and hospital staff have welcomed this initiative as a positive step towards improved healthcare delivery.

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LEKMA Hospital sued! http://34.58.148.58/lekma-hospital-sued/ Wed, 23 Jun 2021 10:54:07 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1977452 The alleged negligent removal of the womb of a 30-year-old patient of the LEKMA Hospital, without her consent, has landed the medical facility in trouble.

The woman, now childless, was at the Teshie-based Municipal Hospital to be delivered of her first baby, which came out successfully after a caesarean section.

But the victim, Ms Doris Oppong, who has sued the hospital, later complained of severe abdominal pains due to post-partum hemorrhage, for which she was rushed back to the theatre, where her uterus was removed, allegedly without her consent, making her barren for the rest of her life.

Ms Oppong and her husband, Thomas Addai, alleged in their suit at the Accra High Court that the healthy male infant she had been delivered of and who had been placed under the care of the medical officers of LEKMA was negligently and wrongly fed by a nurse, causing him to suffer from asphyxia neonatorum – a condition that affected his ability to take in oxygen, resulting in his death three days after he was born.

According to a writ of summons filed by Ms Oppong, the loss of her womb could have been avoided had the medical team at the LEKMA Hospital applied best practice of care.

It is her case that the doctors at LEKMA allegedly failed to inform her of the situation that necessitated the urgency of the second surgery and also failed to obtain consent from her or her family, in accordance with the Patients’ Charter of the Ghana Health Service, neither did they do so after the procedure.

Response of LEKMA

The Administrator of the LEKMA Hospital, Charles Banafo, when contacted, stated that the hospital followed all the relevant protocols of best practice in attending to their patients.

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“LEKMA is doing everything humanly possible to give the best of healthcare, as enjoined by the Ghana Health Service,” Mr Banafo said.

“We do not compromise on quality, and for that matter the interest of our service clients is always protected, as stated by the slogan of the Ghana Health Service: ‘Your health, our concern’,” the hospital administrator emphasised.

Uterus in bucket

In her suit, Ms Oppong alleged that officers at LEKMA failed to disclose the loss of her uterus to her until a nurse distastefully came to her bedside and unexpectedly beckoned her to have a look at her removed uterus in a bucket, a situation she was not aware of and unprepared for, which traumatised her as a result.

“The plaintiff’s left ovary has been removed without her knowledge or consent, an action which officers of the 2nd Defendant neglected and/or failed to disclose to her, and the reasons for that ovary removal are still unknown”, the suit stated.

Ms Oppong alleged in her statement of claim that the grossly negligent conduct of the medical officers at LEKMA had plunged her into premature menopausal conditions, decades ahead of her time, coupled with the perpetual anxiety of a permanent loss of procreation ability.

“The plaintiff has lost the very existence of her relevance in society as a woman and has been deprived of the joy of motherhood at such a young age, compounded with the post-traumatic stress disorder she has been subjected to,” the suit stated.

Negligence

It is the case of the couple that LEKMA Hospital either failed or neglected to apply the requisite skill and care that was reasonably expected in managing the post-operative hemorrhage of Ms Oppong.

The officers of the hospital, according to the plaintiffs, chose to perform a total hysterectomy (a procedure to remove womb) without recourse to other preventive measures, considering Ms Oppong’s reaction within 24 hours of the surgery.

They also argued in their suit that the failure of the hospital to apply the requisite standards of neonatal care, especially those applicable in feeding babies, resulted in the condition that killed their baby.

Reliefs

The couple are, therefore, asking the General Jurisdiction division of the Accra High Court for compensation for the loss of Ms Oppong’s uterus due to the alleged negligence of the hospital’s medical team.

They are also asking for compensation for the injury that negligently caused the death of their baby, as well as compensation for the loss of their child due to negligence, allegedly, on the part of the hospital’s nurses.

Additionally, they are asking for compensation for the pains, anxiety and the post-traumatic disorder they are going through for their loss.

Background

In their statement of claim, the plaintiffs averred that they went to the health facility on June 17, 2019 and Ms Oppong was admitted in anticipation of safe delivery.

According to them, the victim delivered a healthy male infant the following day and was subsequently moved from the operating theatre to the recovery ward in a presumably stable condition.

In the suit, Ms Oppong said that a few hours after her movement from the theatre to the recovery ward, she regained consciousness but complained of severe abdominal pains arising from the operation, which were followed by bleeding.

She further claimed that she was in excruciating pain, to the extent that she was unable to breastfeed the baby, who was then in the care of the nurses of the hospital.

Rushed back

Ms Oppong said on June 19, 2019, she was rushed back to the theatre due to the “overwhelming abdominal pain” and hemorrhage, where she was diagnosed of an iatrogenic infection arising from the caesarean section procedure which resulted in the loss of her womb.

Again, Ms Oppong claimed that through the negligence of the officers of the hospital, she suffered the loss of her uterus at a very budding age of 28 years, a situation which, she argued, deprived her of reproductive ability for life.

She argued that the “irreparable damage” she suffered could have been prevented had the officers of the hospital applied any of the best practices of standard of care owed her.


Ovary

Again, Ms Oppong’s left ovary, according to the court suit, had been removed without her knowledge or consent, an action which officers of the hospital either neglected or failed to disclose to her.

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