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Archive for October 22nd, 2009

A quack doctor killed my baby

Posted by jambonewspot on October 22, 2009

BY JUDIE KABERIA

NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct 22 – “My unborn child died because the ‘doctor’ opened my womb,” the distraught girl tells me. The man who had performed the operation had said that her pregnancy was developing outside her uterus – commonly known as an ectopic pregnancy.

“I did not have an ectopic pregnancy as he had said,” she charges. “All he did was to cut my skin and open my womb; he left my baby to die… Why did he open my womb and leave the baby to die? He should have removed it because he knew what would happen.”

This is how 17-year-old Angela Kwamboka recounts her sad episode in the hands of a medical quack.

Despite the shock and frustration of teenage pregnancy, Kwamboka found herself in the very incapable hands of unscrupulous doctors, who for a long time have been fought by the government, unsuccessfully.

Kwamboka remembers rushing to an estate dispensary when she realised she was bleeding barely a month into her pregnancy.

“I started bleeding when I was four weeks pregnant, I was terrified! My insurance does not cover pregnancy, which meant digging into my pockets. I am a student and my boyfriend is financially unstable, he could not take me to a good hospital, so we went to an estate dispensary,” she recalls, describing the encounter with a quack in Nairobi’s Umoja II estate.

Without even a scan or any form of an x-ray, the doctor told her it was an ectopic pregnancy.

“It was a Friday. I had acute pain and a lot of bleeding. In the hospital we were told it was an ectopic pregnancy. He injected me in the stomach and removed some blood, then he injected me again still on the stomach with some medicine,” she narrates.

An ectopic pregnancy is a complication in which the fertilized ovum is developed in any tissue other than the uterine wall. According to medical experts, the survival chances of such a foetus are low.

The doctor told Kwamboka that he had to cut her left fallopian tube to remove the foetus.

“They walked me through the stairs to the theatre despite the pain I was in. In the theatre I don’t know what kind of medicine they gave me. The anaesthesia they used had a problem. I woke up in the middle of the operation! It was like hell, the pain was unbearable; then they had to inject me again,” she says.

Despite the agonising process of removing the alleged ectopic pregnancy, Kwamboka felt happy at last! She was free to go back to school though with a caesarean mark of a baby she never had.

But that was not the end of her long painful journey. What followed was even worse.

Two weeks after returning to school, the initial pains she had before the operation returned, only this time accompanied by a heavy flow.

“Normally I have a light flow, but this day the flow was too heavy, it was like pouring water out of a jug. I used two packets of sanitary pads within a day,” she says.

The school had to involve her parents since she required urgent medical attention. Her mother was double shocked, not just because of the heavy bleeding but because her adolescent daughter was pregnant.

Even worse, was the news from the doctor.

Kwamboka was carrying a dead foetus in her womb. The quack at the Umoja II dispensary did not remove any foetus, and neither did he cut her fallopian tube to remove the supposedly ectopic pregnancy as he had alleged.

“I was rushed to a good hospital and after the ultra sound the doctor said I was six weeks pregnant! I was in shock and confused!”

Doctors explained that the quack had interfered with her womb giving it an ‘M’ shape. The scans showed that the baby was in the correct position and could have survived had the womb not been opened.

Kwamboka was lucky to get proper medical attention to correct the damage caused by the quack doctor. She also had to go for counselling after the long torture of dealing with a teenage pregnancy that was never to be – in such a cruel manner.

When Capital News visited the dispensary, not even the most essential medical appliances were available. Not to mention the personnel that could barely communicate in English.

The dispensary was closed down after another girl died while procuring an abortion in the hands of the same quack.

Source: Capital FM

Posted in Kenya_Health | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off

UK Nursing home residents knit blankets for kids in Kenya

Posted by jambonewspot on October 22, 2009

RESIDENTS at a nursing home in Aughton are doing their bit to help villagers living in Africa.

People living at Springfield Court on Springfield Road have been putting their knitting skills to good use by making blankets.

Liz Wynne, activities co-ordinator at the home is travelling to western Kenya to Bukayni village.

She started a charity called Malaika about two years ago after visiting the village with the Cottage Lane Mission in Ormskirk.

She said: “Malaika is Swahili for ‘angel’ and people in the village know that we mean well. We have made strong links and good friends.

“Our residents have been knitting blankets for children and the babies in the village. We went there with the mission and decided to try and raise money on a bigger scale.

“We have started various projects and collecting clothes to take with us.”

Liz, 58, has worked in fundraising for different charities in the past including Action Aid

“All the residents have worked very hard to knit even with arthritis. This is helping the residents as well as families in the village because it keeps them occupied and they love to help.”

Source: OS Advertiser

Posted in Diaspora News | Tagged: | Comments Off

Kenya police kill kidnap suspects

Posted by jambonewspot on October 22, 2009

BY BERNARD MOMANYI

NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct 22 – Three suspected men believed to have kidnapped a businessman in Nairobi’s Dandora estate were shot dead by police on Wednesday night as they allegedly went to collect ransom.

The men in their late twenties or early thirties were accosted on Thika Road as they drove in a saloon car near the General Service Unit (GSU) headquarters at about 9 pm.

Police believe they were headed to Juja or Thika town where they were scheduled to meet a family member of the trader for ransom payment.

“Our officers acted on a tip off, we had information that they were part of the kidnappers who were headed to collect money they had been demanding. They must have realized they were being trailed and that is when they opened fire at the police,” said Leonard Omolo, police chief for Kasarani division.

“The fourth suspect fled and officers are looking for him,” he added.

Another senior officer who was involved in the operation told Capital News they were tipped off that the men were part of well-coordinated ring of kidnappers who have been holding the trader since Tuesday night while demanding a ransom of Sh 3 million.

“The initial plan was to trail them to the spot where they were headed to collect part of a ransom they had been demanding, but they sensed danger and attacked the officers who were trailing them, that is how they ended up being killed,” the officer said.

Mr Omolo said detectives had launched an investigation to establish the whereabouts of the rest of the kidnappers who were still holding the trader on Thursday.

The investigation was being coordinated by the Flying Squad and detectives from the Special Crime Prevention Unit (SCPU).

SCPU’s Richard Katola said an investigation had shown the trader was being held “somewhere in Dandora but the exact location was still unknown.”

It was the first time police shot and killed suspected kidnappers, several months after the new trend of crime was introduced in Kenya.

Police have previously arrested suspected kidnappers in a series of security raids conducted both in Nairobi and upcountry.

Some senior police officers were reported to be furious about the killing of the suspects, and advised that at least one could have been detained to help unravel the intrigues in the kidnapping ordeal and even direct them to their hide-out.

And with the killing of the suspects, police went back to the drawing board on Thursday to begin fresh investigation and the search for the abducted trader.

Source: CAPITAL FM

Posted in Kenya Law | 1 Comment »

Fairfax Group helps Kenyan Children Hear

Posted by jambonewspot on October 22, 2009

By Kali Schumitz
Fairfax County Times
Thursday, October 22, 2009

Andrew Dickson Mungai’s second trip to the United States was a whirlwind of doctors’ appointments, galas, speeches and visits with new and old friends. His first was to get a life-changing procedure.

In 2007, Tomi Browne brought Mungai to the U.S. for a cochlear implant, an electronic hearing device implanted in the ear to produce useful hearing sensations for people who suffer from severe to profound hearing loss.

Mungai, now 14, lost his hearing at age 9 because of complications from meningitis, HIV and herpes.

Browne, a McLean audiologist, first met Mungai in 2005, when one of her patients, the Rev. Angelo D’Agostino, convinced her to take her family on a trip to Kenya. Physician and Jesuit priest D’Agostino, now deceased, was the founder of the Nyumbani Children’s Home in Nairobi, Kenya, which was the country’s first facility for HIV-positive children.

The Brownes arrived with about $50,000 worth of donated computers, medicine and school supplies they had collected from family, friends and colleagues.

When Browne met Mungai, a resident at Nyumbani, she was able to communicate a bit with him by using sign language, so “they developed a bond right away,” said Sister Julie Mulvihill, one of the nuns who helps operate Nyumbani.

Teachers at Nyumbani were starting to worry that Mungai, an intelligent kid who was able to cover up his hearing loss by teaching himself to read lips, also was going to lose his ability to speak. Browne thought he would be a good candidate for a cochlear implant and began working to bring him to the U.S. for the procedure.

“He was just very special to me and we knew we had to do something,” she said.

The catch was that Browne had to agree to continue to travel regularly to Kenya to make the necessary adjustments to Mungai’s implant. Upon returning to the U.S., she formed a nonprofit, Heart of the Village, to raise funds to help Mungai and other Nyumbani children.

Browne now travels to Kenya several times each year to provide ear care for the children in the Nyumbani program; she left for her most recent visit earlier this month. She also arranges for audiology students and other volunteer doctors to provide care in the clinic she set up with donated equipment. The nonprofit also has set up a computer lab for the home.

In Kenya, an ear examination is not part of a regular checkup, Browne said.

“As a result, we’ve got a lot of kids with serious, chronic ear problems,” she said. “Chronic ear infections, if left untreated, can go into something worse.”

Mungai, who is able to better communicate since receiving the implant, is “our poster boy,” Browne said. The energetic, smiling teenager talked with congressmen, students and many other people during his visit to the U.S. last month, attending a gala for Nyumbani and a fundraiser for Heart of the Village.

He proudly introduced himself to new friends with a handshake, talked about how he wants to be a pilot when he is older and discussed how he might go to college in Pennsylvania, where he received his cochlear implant.

To hear Mungai tell the story, you might get the impression that a cochlear implant is magical.

“I was hearing well. I was playing, playing, playing even in the car,” he said, describing coming home from the hospital after his surgery.

Browne explains that Mungai lived with her family for months in 2007 after receiving the implant, to monitor his progress and make adjustments to the device.

“It takes time for the brain to learn the signals” that the cochlear implant produces, she said.

Aiding Kenyan children has now become a major focus of the Brownes’ family life.

Browne sold her audiology practice to work for the nonprofit fulltime, and her husband, Jeff, a political consultant, is now on the Board of Directors for Nyumbani USA, one of six groups worldwide that supports the Kenyan village.

“I wouldn’t change a thing,” Tomi Browne said.

SOURCE: Washington Post

Posted in Kenya_Health | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »