Ebola: The Ripple Effect (PROTECT YOURSELF)
Ebola Virus in Nigeria.
Based loosely on current Happening Events
20-07-2014
A tear dropped from his left eye as he thought about Anna again. How
could she be dead? How? Anna, the best sister anyone could ever have.
Anna, his only sister … who made so many sacrifices to ensure he went to
college and become the man he is today.
Anna. Dead.
What is this life?
“Tea or coffee sir…?” Munachi – the air hostess – asked, snapping him
out of his reverie. He dried his eyes and gestured towards coffee. He
nodded his thanks as she gave it to him and went about her business.
He took a sip of the scalding hot beverage and didn’t even flinch.
All he could think of was Anna and how he wept over her cold dead body.
He had flown to Monrovia immediately he was told that she was seriously
ill. The doctors had initially refused to allow him see her, saying it
was unsafe, but one look at them and they obliged. Patrick was a big
man. In Liberia and other African countries, big men always had their
way.
That all seemed like years ago though. He had given her a quick
burial and was now on his way back to Nigeria. He took another sip of
the coffee and this time he felt as it burned his tongue. He let out a
tiny whelp and dropped the mug. It shattered, spilling its content
everywhere. He quickly made to pick up the shards, but cut his
forefinger in the process. He put the finger in his mouth and sucked the
blood as Munachi came to his aid.
“So sorry sir,” she apologized. “Are you alright?” she gestured
towards his forefinger. He nodded, stood up, and went to the restroom.
The cut wasn’t too deep, but he had plenty
of blood in him, so the red liquid flowed. He picked up a Kleenex and
pressed on it. It became bloodied in seconds. He dropped the tissue in
the toilet bowl and collected another. After the third Kleenex, the
blood had almost stopped flowing. He pressed the knob and watched as the
toilet flushed. He did not notice the tiny drops of blood he left on
the knob. He turned on the tap, washed his hand and turned it off. He
did not notice the blood he left on the tap head either. He dried his
hand and left the toilet. Munachi had cleaned up when he got back to his
seat. She offered another cup of coffee but he declined and, suddenly
cold, he asked for a blanket instead. She obliged him – some of the
perks of not flying economy class.
***
Bishop Samuel Ndah of Royal Diadem Ministries had gone to Monrovia to
minister at the Liberian branch of his church. It was a power packed 3
day crusade that ended with miracles, signs, wonders, and some extra
dollars in his off-shore bank account. He was going to Australia in two
weeks to set up another branch there.
The ministry was seriously moving. The Lord is good.
He used the toilet a few minutes after Patrick did. Of cause he
washed his hand thoroughly. One of his favorite quotes was ‘Cleanliness
is next to Godliness’, and as a Bishop of Christ, he always practiced
what he preached. When he turned the tap head to close it though, he did
not notice the drops of blood his fingers collected. He ate Kentucky
Fried Chicken and Chips a few minutes later; chicken so good he licked
his fingers afterwards, and washed it down with a bottle of the cold
orange juice Munachi served him.
Two other business-class passengers used the toilet during the 165minutes flight.
***
Patrick was sweating when the plane landed at the Murtala Muhammed
International Airport, Lagos. He was sweating and shivering slightly.
Munachi wanted to call the airport paramedics but he refused. He
explained that he’d just buried his only sister and the past week had
been hectic. It was probably fever with a shot of jet-lag. She obliged,
called Aisha, her colleague, and they helped him disembark. He almost
fell when they made to leave him on the tarmac. He steadied himself and
told them he was fine. They left him and went back into the plane. He
sort of staggered to the customs area and gave the immigration officer
his passport.
The officer scrutinized Patrick’s travel papers and returned them to
him. The Liberian was walking into the arrival lounge when he collapsed
in a heap. It was like a joke. For a few seconds nobody reacted. Then
somebody yelled and all hell broke loose.
“What happened to him? Who is he? How did it happen?” Everybody
seemed to be asking at the same time as a small crowd gathered around
Patrick. Jemila, an Airport security woman pushed her way through and
asked everyone to back off. She checked his pulse and proceeded to give
him CPR. She was doing the mouth to mouth resuscitation thing when
paramedics arrived and put him on their stretcher. They took him
straight to the Airport clinic, while somebody checked Patrick’s wallet
for his ID. They found he was a Liberian and worked in the Liberian
Embassy. They called the consulate and informed them that their
countryman had collapsed in the Airport. The Liberian high commissioner
immediately had him transferred to First Consultant Clinics, a private
hospital at Obalende.
***
21-07-14
Dr Abdullah Isah, the Chief Medical Officer of First Consultants
Hospital had just begun a complex 7 hours marathon surgery on a 13 year
old boy’s lungs when Patrick was wheeled in. After the successful
operation, he had taken a 6 hour break. When he came back, he started
his usual ward rounds with Dr Abiye – the doctor on duty. They got to
the Liberian’s ward and Dr Abiye gave his boss the man’s case file. A
quick glance at it and he had an idea what was ailing the man. He pulled
Dr Abiye to one side and told him in confidence what he suspected was
the cause of Patrick’s ailment.
Ebola Virus.
Dr Abiye’s jaw dropped. “Jesus,” he exclaimed. “Jesus!” He had been
at the waiting room when Patrick was wheeled in. He had checked his
vitals and placed him on drips and stabilizers pending when a proper
diagnosis was carried out. He had been in close contact with a probable
carrier of the deadliest disease on earth at the moment. “Jesus!”
Dr Abdullah immediately had Patrick quarantined in a private ward. He
also had every member of his staff who had been in close contact with
the Liberian quarantined in another ward. He didn’t want to start a
panic so he didn’t say why he was taking those measures. He just
instructed the other staff not to go into those two wards without face
masks, surgical gloves and disposable gowns. He called the Lagos State
Ministry of Health and informed the receiver he might have a case of the
Ebola Virus in his hospital. He was transferred to the commissioner of
health himself who asked what had been done so far. He brought the big
man up to speed and was told to maintain the status quo while the
minister of health himself was informed.
Unfortunately Dr Abdullah was working with smart people. Someone put
two and two together and the word ‘Ebola’ was mentioned. Less than
twenty minutes later, the normally full waiting room was almost empty.
Family and friends of patients who heard the rumors came and retrieved
their wards. Non-Medical staff who didn’t want to risk being around a
virus that dangerous suddenly became ill and asked for permission to go
home. They had no plan to return until it was safe to do so.
The three nurses and two porters who were on duty when Patrick was
wheeled in had gone home to their families before Dr Abdullah made his
analysis. In the midst of the chaos, nobody remembered them.
Someone tweeted about the incidence, someone else retweeted it, and in minutes, the news went viral.
Ebola Virus was in Nigeria.
22-07-2-14
Munachi woke up with a nagging headache; very unusual because she
almost never fell sick. She glanced at the clock, 7:19am. How did she
wake up this late? She was supposed to be on the 11am Kenyan flight, and
by Lagos traffic standards, she was late.
She jumped out of the bed, then fell right back in. Her head felt
like someone was pounding yam in it. She waited a few minutes, then
stood up again, slowly. She went through her morning routines at that
pace and was ready to leave by 8:30. Nduka, her cabman had been waiting
for her since 8am, the time she’d asked him to come.
“Nne, ogini…?” he asked her in igbo, when he noticed how much pain she seemed to be in.
“Onwe gi,” she replied and forced a smile, as he collected her bag and helped her into the car.
They were halfway to the Airport when she knew for certain she would
be unable to fly. She called her supervisor and told him her condition.
He almost yelled at her bad timing. Aisha had called in sick earlier and
he had only just gotten her replacement. But remembering how
hardworking Munachi usually was, he told her to go to a clinic and treat
herself.
Munachi asked Nduka to take her to any good pharmacy around so she
could get drugs. He found one soon enough, drove in, parked, and helped
her get into the building. His phone rang and he went outside to answer
it. He was negotiating fares for a trip with another customer when
people inside the Pharmacy started screaming. He craned his neck to see
what was happening and saw Munachi sprawled on the floor. He ended the
call and rushed in.
“Wetin happen…?” he yelled to no one in particular. “Aunty Muna,
ogini…?” he cradled her in his arms. “Aunty Muna….” he shook her. No
response. “What happen’?” he looked up and asked again. Before he could
get any response, the owner of the Pharmacy came out of a side room and
asked him to bring her in. He lifted her up and took her in, leaving a
trail of blood in his wake. He laid her on the bed and left the medics
in the room with her. “Wetin happen?” he asked the nurse at the counter.
“She just fell down o,” the visibly shaken woman replied. “She was
telling me she had headache when she suddenly fell down. Is she your
wi…” she looked him up and down “…is she your madam?” she asked,
immediately concluding he couldn’t be such a beautiful lady’s spouse.
He followed the direction of her eyes and noticed the blood stains on
his shirt. “Blood…” he muttered. “Where this blood come from?” The
nurse pointed at the spot Munachi had lain a few moments ago. There was
almost a pool where her head had been. Nduka started sobbing. A few
minutes later, an ambulance arrived.
Munachi died on the way to the hospital. The official cause of death
was ‘Intracranial Hemorrhage secondary to head trauma from a fall with
associated skull fracture and scalp bleeding’. Nobody asked why she fell
in the first place. Nigerian Doctors were on strike. The few who were
available had too much work on their hands.
Nduka, the pharmacist, the cleaner at the pharmacy, the paramedics
and the mortuary attendants – about 8 persons – were in direct contact
with Munachi’s body fluids.
***
23-07-2-14
Jemila was breastfeeding her five month old son when she felt like going to the toilet again – for the 4th
time that morning. She passed the baby to her mother-in-law and went to
relieve herself. When she came out she complained to mama who said
she’d concoct some herbs for her before she returned from work at the
Airport. Mama and her bitter tasting herbs she thought. She made a mental note to buy Flagyl en-route.
She never made it to the Airport.
She was collecting the purge-stopping drug from her local chemist
when her eye caught the TV news headline, ‘Liberian man in Lagos being
tested for Ebola’.
“Please turn the volume up”, she told the Chemist. He did. The clip
went on to chronologize the Liberian’s arrival at the Lagos Airport, his
collapse and subsequent transfer to a hospital at Ikoyi area. It added
that from all the symptoms, he was infected with the deadly virus, and
they were only waiting for official confirmation from the lab that it
was indeed Ebola. Even before Patrick Sawyer’s picture was displayed on
the screen, she knew it was him. She didn’t hear the chemist shouting
“Iya Jumoke, your change, your change…” when she rushed out of the drug
store. She whipped out her phone and dialed her husband.
“Hello … daddy, there is a problem…” she started when he answered at the 3rd ring.
In the 11 years they’d been married, Mr Paul Shaibu, a professional
caterer and cook at Federal Palace Hotel, Victoria Island, had never
heard those words from his wife. “Kilode…?” he asked, walking out of the
kitchen.
“Remember that incidence at the Airport I told you about? The Liberian I gave first aid?”
He did. “Yes. What’s wrong?”
“I made a mistake. It happened so fast I didn’t have time to look for
a medical kit and collect a protective barrier before I gave him mouth
to mouth resuscitation. It is recommended that we do that to prevent
cross infection, but he had a pulse, yet he was barely breathing. If I
had delayed he might have died, and…”
“Mummy, calm down. Kilode…?” he cut her short.
“I just saw the man on TV. They said he has Ebola virus.” Silence at the other end. “Hello, daddy…”
“I’ll go and pick Jummie and David from school,” he began, in the
calmest possible voice. “Just go to Ebony and wait. I’ll tell Dr Ugonna
we’re coming. I’ll be there in 30mins.”
Paul was a numb robot when he took off his apron and walked out of
the Hotel. He now understood why Jemila had been purging earlier that
morning. Purge … Diarrhea …one of the symptoms of the Ebola virus. If
she had it, then he had it. They’d made love the previous night. And the
night before that. If they had it, then, unless a miracle happened,
their 3 children, including five month old Paul Jr had it too. And his
mother who had been with them for the past two months…
Paul did not hear the people yelling at him to get off the road. He
did not see the Cement Truck nor hear the blaring horns either. He did
not feel the impact. He died before he hit the ground. Later, when his
body was deposited at the mortuary, the morgue attendant noticed some
strange rashes around what was left of Paul’s lower back. He ignored it.
Him don die be say him don die
After 40 minutes at Ebony Hospital, Jemila tried Paul’s number. It
didn’t connect. She called mama to know if he had come home. She said he
hadn’t. She called the school, they confirmed he hadn’t come to pick
the kids yet. Something had happened. She felt it. She was standing up
to leave when her phone rang. The caller identified himself as a
Policeman and asked her to come to the Lagos Island Mortuary to identify
the body of one Mr Paul Shaibu.
Her screams were heard from miles away …
***
24-07-2014
One of Bishop Samuel Ndah’s most notable attribute was his strong
baritone voice. On Thursday, when he woke up, he could barely speak. He
had only experienced sore-throat once in his life and it surely didn’t
hurt this bad. Nor did it come with weakness of the muscle and troubled
breathing. He asked his wife to call his pastors. The devil was at work.
That evil being didn’t want him to minister at tonight’s special
service. But he was going to, whether Satan liked it or not.
The pastors came, held his hands and prayed. His condition deteriorated.
He was taken to a private hospital some hours later. The doctors are
yet to realize he might have the Ebola virus. They’re still giving him
treatment for Influenza.
25-07-2014
Patrick Sawyer died and it was later confirmed by the Nigerian
Government and WHO that he was indeed carrying the Ebola Virus. 30
people may have been in contact with Patrick Sawyer from the Airplane to
the Hospital in Obalende. It could have been more, it could have been
less. The Lagos state government is still trying to track them down.
Epilogue
Munachi infected Nduka and a host of others. Nduka mourned for a
while, but man must wack. He still drives his cab around Lagos; he has a
wife and baby back home in Anambra, and a girlfriend in Okota to take
care of. He doesn’t understand why his joints and muscles have been
aching him since…
Aisha, Munachi’s colleague, thinks she’s constantly weak because she
is pregnant. She also thinks the rashes on her body are because she
changed cosmetics. She and her banker husband have no idea…
Jemila’s children were infected. The older ones shared meals, toys
and other facilities with their friends in school…the friends have
friends, who have families ….
Bishop Samuel Ndah is un-quarantined and has been receiving hundreds
of visitors daily; faithful members of his church who greet him with a
kiss on his Episcopal ring…
The end
AUTHOR’S NOTE
This story is fiction. Patrick Sawyer is indeed the first known
victim of the Ebola virus in Nigeria, but other characters exist only in
my imagination. Real locations have been used to make the story as
realistic as possible.
One nagging question remains though: are these scenarios not possible?
Could you know someone who knows someone who currently has the virus?
I’d have abandoned my awesome new job and carried my polythene bag
back to Portharcourt, but if it is in Lagos, is it not only a matter of
time before it gets to other parts of Nigeria?
This is not meant to start a panic though. It is to create awareness that this virus is real and amongst us.
I appeal to the Nigerian government to take this menace seriously. As
I write this, there are no equipments to diagnose the virus. There are
no centers to quarantine and care for victims. There are no specialists
to supervise the control of a possible epidemic. And striking doctors’
demands have still not been met.
I appeal to the Nigerian Medical Association to call off their
strike. Two wrongs have never made a right. And right now, if an
epidemic breaks out, you’re the only hope we have. Please put your heads
together, and agree on something positive for the good of your
brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers and children that make up this
entity called Nigeria. Once Ebola is taken care of, I’m sure the whole
Nigeria would gladly go to strike with you guys.
To everyone reading this, Ebola is real. The symptoms are Fever, sore
throat, headache, weakness, joint and muscle pain, chest pain,
Diarrhea, rashes, troubled breathing and bleeding from the skin. There
is no known cure yet. To reduce risk of infection, wash your hands as
often as possible with sanitizer or soap. Always wash your fruits and
vegetables before cooking. And finally, avoid contact with people with
suspicious signs or those from places where there has been an outbreak.
Cheers,
SOURCE:
Chidi @Chydee Ace Okereke.
www.chydee.wordpress.com
Follow me on facebook for more www.facebook.com/getinspiredwithadrianpastol
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