More than 80 psychiatric patients escape Kenyan hospital as nurses strike
Hospital is working with the deputy county commissioner and police to track down the missing patients

Nairobi, Kenya: For years, the Kenyan government has been mired in
scandals of corruption and mismanagement. But that dysfunction is rarely
as visible as it was in the Kenyan capital on Monday, when dozens of
mentally ill patients escaped from Mathari Hospital, where nurses were
on strike and refused to work.
More than 80 patients, wearing
their hospital-issued uniforms, climbed over the hospital walls and ran
on to one of Kenya’s busiest highways. The nurses who were supposed to
be taking care of them had joined a massive strike to demand higher
wages.
The patients, unsupervised, “wandered away because there
was no one to guide them,” said Julius Ogato, the medical superintendent
of the hospital. “If patients are not engaged, they will find something
to do on their own.” More than 50 patients are still missing. Their
illnesses were not disclosed, and many in Nairobi worried on Monday that
the escapees could pose a threat. Mathari is Kenya’s largest mental
hospital.
“They are more of a danger to themselves. For example,
if one of them strays into a private compound, he or she could be
mistaken for a burglar,” Ogato said.
Traffic on the Thika Highway
was stalled on Monday morning as patients ran between cars and across
lanes. One video showed the patients straddling a wire fence and walking
away as onlookers gawked. The nurses never returned to work. It was
unclear whether anyone was there to provide food or medicine to the
patients.
The hospital is working with the deputy county commissioner and police to track down the missing patients.
Kenyan
doctors make as little as $400 (Dh1,469) per month, and nurses make as
little as $150 per month. Many of them say they are working in squalid
conditions. On Monday, thousands of doctors and nurses across the
country refused to go to work, instead marching in front of the
country’s finance ministry to demand a 300 per cent raise they were
promised in 2013. They have accused government officials of siphoning
off the money intended for Kenya’s public hospitals.
Doctors with
six years of training earn less than rookie police officers, according
to Ouma Olunga, secretary-general of the Kenya Medical Practitioners,
Pharmacists and Dentists Union.
Health workers warned Kenyans to
prepare for the longest strike in history if their demands are not met.
On Monday, the protests were broken up when police fired tear gas into
the crowd of doctors and nurses.
Delays in treatment and limited
resources have had dire consequences for Kenya, especially the country’s
poor who cannot afford the slew of private hospitals that have emerged
to fill the void. The average age at death here is 46 for men and 51 for
women.
No comments:
Post a Comment