“Please no more handshake, keep your hands in your pocket until we contain the disease”. The foregoing were the words of Governor Chibuike Amaechi in Government House, Port Harcourt four days after the first death was recorded from Ebola virus in the state. It is now like a taboo to shake hands in Government House, Port Harcourt. This new culture that came with the first recorded case of death from Ebola virus is gradually becoming the norm in several parts of the state. Since the beginning of this week, friends, colleagues and business associates who ordinarily would shake hands as part of their greetings and exchange of banters merely waved or cup their right fist in the air, saying “I greet you in Jesus name” or “Ebola greetings”. The state government had consistently maintained that there was no Ebola case in the state until Thursday when the Commissioner for Health, Dr Sampson Parker announced with a heavy heart the first casualty of the dreaded virus. According to him, Doctor Iyke Sam Enemuo who died from Ebola virus treated a diplomat, a staff of Economic Community of West Africa, ECOWAS, who escaped from a quarantine centre in Lagos to Port Harcourt.
The diplomat was reportedly in the team that received the index case, late Patrick Sawyer when he came to the country. Like others who contracted the virus from Sawyer the diplomat also did.
Why treat the Diplomat in a hotel?
It was not clear who asked the diplomat to check into a hotel in Port Harcourt for his treatment. But the state Commissioner for Health, Dr Parker confirmed that the diplomat checked into a hotel in the state capital. And the late Dr. Enemuo was going there to treat him. The diplomat who allegedly fled a quarantine centre in Lagos chose to remain incommunicado, switching off his phones while in Port Harcourt. He reportedly regained his health and headed back to the quarantine centre in Lagos, apparently for a certificate of clean health. But how come the diplomat received his treatment in a hotel when Dr Enemuo ran a clinic on East West road in Rumuokoro area of Obio Akpor local government area, Rivers State is the question on many lips. The diplomat and his late doctor could certainly answer the question. There is speculation that the late doctor, Enemuo did not want the patients in his hospital to be infected with the virus and that was why he arranged for the diplomat to be treated in a hotel. Another view is that the diplomat feared he could be tracked to any hospital so he elected to hide in a hotel and take his treatment. A third dimension to the issue said the diplomat and his deceased doctor feared that if he was admitted into a hospital, staff of the place could tip government off on the presence of an Ebola patient. One week after the diplomat left, Dr Enemuo took ill. His wife who is also a doctor took up the responsibility to manage him. When the situation seemed like it was getting out of hand, they reportedly approached the first hospital that rejected him until the Medical Director, Good Heart Clinic offered to assist. Dr Enemuo vomited blood and was stooling. The Medical Director of the Good Heart hospital who suspected that the patient could have contracted the virus, alerted the state Ministry of Health. Blood samples were taken but Dr Enemuo died before the result, which confirmed he had Ebola, came out.
Painfully, his wife according to the Commissioner for Health, Dr. Parker, showed symptoms of the disease and was quarantined. At the time of this report the Commissioner said about 100 persons who had primary and secondary contact with the deceased were on the watch list of the state government. It was gathered that the late Enemuo and his wife have a three-month old female child. [eap_ad_1] The remains of the late Dr Enemuo deposited at the morgue of the University of Port Harcourt Teaching hospital caused tension as families hurriedly discharged their relatives from the hospital. Some workers in the morgue lamented that they were not told when the Corpse was brought in, that it was a case of Ebola virus. A top official of the hospital who spoke off camera said there was no need to panic as all measures had been taken to ensure the corpse did not create problem for staff. Residents who offered comments to our correspondent said the corpse should have been cremated. “Since a test had confirmed that it was an Ebola case, cremation should have been done on it rather than keep it in the morgue”, one person said.” Government should shut down the morgue”, another staff said.