The Management of the Med-Vical Medical Centre in Benin City, Edo State capital, on Tuesday, denied allegations of negligence, secrecy and incompetence in the handling of the very ill extreme pre-term twin babies referred from another facility to the hospital.
Med-Vical Medical Centre is specialised in paediatric and neonatal intensive care services with state-of-the-art facilities for respiratory care and life support
The pre-term babies eventually died on separate days at the neo-natal intensive care centre.
Parents of the babies, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Sylvester, had petitioned the Police Force, calling for discreet investigation into the death of their babies.
They accused the hospital of taking one of the babies to the mortuary without informing them.
But, the hospital said the babies were delivered pre-term in another hospital but subsequently referred from the facility to Med-Vical at about 9pm on July 9, 2025.
The Consultant Paediatrician/Neonatologist of the hospital, Dr. Enato Gertrude, said she received the babies who were in a critical condition and diagnosed them to have severe prematurity, severe respiratory distress syndrome, severe neo-natal sepsis and peri-natal asphyxia.
Dr. Gertrude said that despite the fact that the parents of the babies could not provide 50 per cent of what was needed to start treatment, they commenced treatment in a race to save the babies.
She said the parents were counselled, informed and their consent sought on every step taken to treat the babies.
Dr. Gertrude said the first twin died after eight days of being admitted at the facility, while the second one died after three weeks.
According to her, “I wasn’t there at the delivery. I don’t know what transpired. I don’t know everything that happened until they got to our facility, which was several hours after the children were born, because they came into our facility very ill.
“When the children came, we diagnosed them and put the babies on the machine and started treatment, there is a minimum deposit that is supposed to be paid. The babies needed tubings, surfactants and caffeine citrate, which are expensive. They are not even readily available over the counter.
“They’re actually specially ordered, specially packaged, and cold chain must be maintained with them. And they are quite expensive. I don’t produce them. I buy them to use for the babies. And it’s supposed to help these babies. So at this point, the parents didn’t have enough money for all of this. I think the father had less than 50% of the money because he said he couldn’t get the money at that time.
“He came to meet me and I just told the billing officer not to bother them, let’s attend to these babies first, collect what he had. So I think then he had just 250,000 or so for each baby. But we were not focusing on the money. We just needed to save the lives of the babies of which we continued the care.
“We placed both babies on the machine and we continued to give antibiotics and oxygen therapy. And at a point, we noticed that the respiratory distress was not getting better and we informed the parents.
“While on admission we noticed the babies had thrombocytopenia (low platelets) and immediately we told the parents to get what they call platelets. Due to the severe sepsis, we also requested for blood culture.
“At a point on day eight, we noticed that the thrombocytopenia for baby two was not getting better despite all that we had done. A diagnosis of severe neonatal sepsis with multiple organ dysfunction and disseminated intravascular coagulation was made.
“So we called the parents and counselled them that we needed to put the baby on the ventilator for complete life support but at this time the baby was bleeding from thrombocytopenia and we carried the parents along. They saw what happened. Despite all our resuscitation efforts for the baby, the baby succumbed to the illness. The father wasn’t happy after we explained everything to him. It was quite painful at that time for everybody.
“Following the passing of the first twin, the father became hostile and we tried to counsel him but he was difficult to get him to calm down. We even suggested referring the second twin to UBTH, but he quickly declined and pleaded for treatment to continue, as they had no where else they preferred to go to.
“We did a lot for these babies to ensure that the second baby continued to live but two weeks after the passing of the first baby, we noticed bleeding continued for the second one despite blood transfusion with platelets administration, and the baby needed a mechanical ventilator (life support).
“We counselled the mother and told the mother that at this point that the baby had poor prognosis. Chances of survival was slim and she said yes that we should continue to do everything she has faith that the baby will survive.
“On Wednesday we saw a little bit of improvement but it declined again and the baby had to be continued on mechanical ventilator life support, but the baby succumbed to the illness.”
She said the parents were contacted, the mother came to see the corpse of the child, she left and didn’t return. Due to the delay in claiming the corpse after 12 hours of demise and after several attempts to reach the father to no avail, we decided to take the corpse to the mortuary. We never denied the parents access to their child’s corpse.
The hospital further added that they were committed to transparency and accountability in their operations adding that at Med Vical Medical Centre, patients safety and well-being are top priorities as they strive to provide highest quality care.