For years, he strove to strike a balance between the two despite the weight of responsibility being a medical doctor placed on him.
In the days that followed, the reality of losing a breadwinner began to stare the family in the face. His wife, Joy, suddenly found herself in the threshold of widowhood with the burden of taking care of three children at different stages of their education. She stated, “Our last child is 13 years old and he is in Senior Secondary School 2. He misses his dad a lot and laments almost every day. He is in a boarding school. When I was about to take him to school recently, he was crying.
According to the World Health Organisation’s Global Health Workforce Statistics, Nigeria’s ratio of physicians to the population stood at 0.4 to 1,000 people as of 2018. About 10 months after, there seems to be little development on the package amid the virulent second wave of the infection, which had killed many health workers.
Joy, an official at a laboratory in Lagos, said the family had filed in all the necessary documents for his late husband’s gratuity but had yet to be paid. “Since his death, the family has been trying to move on but things have been really hard. I just have to be strong and act as if things were okay,” Daniel, a 300-level student at the Delta State University, stated. “If I am moody, how do I get my siblings to move on?” he quipped.Dr Toju Eresenara was a delight to be with at home and the workplace. Having become a doctor in his 20s, he rose through the ranks to be a seasoned consultant anesthetist at the Central Hospital, Warri, Delta State.
When his condition did not improve, a test was conducted on him. He was confirmed positive and admitted at the hospital’s isolation centre. “It was not an easy thing. He was my parent and best friend but life continues. The truth is life can never be the same again.” To lessen the risk of contracting the virus, the dentist appealed to the government to provide prophylaxis drugs for health workers in addition to PPE, noting that more hands should be employed so the number of patients seen by a doctor per day could be reduced.On Friday, June 12, 2020, the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, lost an Assistant Director, Nursing Services, Mrs Adenike Bakare, 54, to the pandemic.
Nna this country don tire me oo
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