Off the wall of Taweni Gondwe Xaba: Malawi deaths which could be prevented

My late step mum, Peliyawezi NyaChipeta Gondwe, was allergic to Quinine (anti-malarial medication). Although this was clearly stated on her chart, a medical assistant at the Mchinji Hospital, in his own wisdom, decided to administer this to her “because this is the medication we use to treat malaria.” So she died. My father was a wreck.

Almost six years later, her one and only child, my little sister Faith Juliet Gondwe, caught pneumonia in the freezing Mzuzu hills. The nurse at Mzuzu Central Hospital told her to “stop complaining like a baby, the pain killers will work just now” and (mis)diagnosed asthma based on the shortness of breath.

A medical assistant nearby suggested an x-ray… but the equipment in radiology was not working. So Faith was sent home with an inhaler instead of an anti-biotic. Several times they returned to the hospital as she was still in excruciating pain. They kept sending her home. On the fourth night she died in my father’s arms. Need I find a descriptor for Dad’s state of mind?

Yesterday afternoon, Dad fetched his younger brother, Douglas, from our village and took him to Mzuzu Central hospital (no options after hours in Mzuzu). His legs were swollen and he hadn’t been eating so he was very weak. In the emergency room, the nurse told the doctor she couldn’t fetch the oxygen machine as she was still busy eating. She would put the drip in when she was done. Uncle was still alert at this time. But the Doctor was alone and the ER was full so he asked Dad to take Uncle D to the ward where there were more hands on deck. By the time he got there, he barely registered a pulse. While the doctor rushed to get oxygen, Uncle asked Dad to take him to the bathroom but once there he couldn’t get out of the wheelchair or respond. Another one died in dad’s arms. Out of nine siblings, he now has only two left.

A few years ago a friend’s mum had severe constipation. The staff at the expensive private hospital (Blantyre Adventist Hospital) managed to perforate her colon doing a simple enema. She died from the resulting complications.

The worst part of this is that my stories are not unique. I have many many friends who can speak of having witnessed or suffered similar tragedies.

As if to put the cherry on top of this grotesque inedible cake of life in the Warm Heart of Africa, Kamuzu Central Hospital even managed to lose us a sitting Head of State, Dr Bingu Wa Mutharika – the most shocking of our nation’s losses. This is not a system in trouble. This is a system that has collapsed. Until we acknowledge this reality, we will continue to put a band-aid on the situation when deep surgery is what is really needed. Who else must die to convince us of this?

Needless and avoidable deaths are the order of the day. Facebook posts are full of such statuses. Citizens in the rural areas have to travel for miles just to get to a health centre or clinic. Sometimes one wonders why they bother because, in many areas, the hospital is just a building, nothing more. Our hospitals are plagued by blackouts, water shortages, staff shortages, medication shortages, malfunctioning equipment, specialist shortages etc. District Health Officers are drowning under the pressure of providing basic meals to patients, let alone treatment. Nurses and medical assistants are overworked and underpaid… and, in many cases, undertrained.

Every time my parents mention that they have a headache, my blood pressure rises. I panic. I start to think how quickly we can evacuate them to SA for treatment in case it gets serious. But why should we depend on the functioning systems of other nations???

Is this it? Is this what we have been reduced to? Dying like flies? Yes we may wear the disgraceful label of being the poorest country in the world… but does this have to be synonymous with poverty of initiative? Are we Malawians really going to resign ourselves to this fate? When do we say enough of our family members have died for ridiculous reasons and start demanding some answers from our leaders? When do we start demanding a clear plan of action? Do we need a fancy stadium or functional hospitals? What are our parliamentarians debating in the house? Are we aware? What is the status on recovering some of the stolen cash gate funds? Is this being prioritised? Shouldn’t we be inundating our MPs with letters of demand regarding the healthcare facilities in each of our districts? Can we not get organised as citizens??? Are we aware of the power we have? Do we even know or accept that they are employed by us and must deliver not only on their promises but to our aspirations too?

Next time you vote, think of the local clinic or healthcare centre that your family in the village have to depend on for their survival. Human life is cheap in Malawi. The wealthy get to escape to hospitals outside the country while the poor, the mass of voters, have to accept crumbs… paracetamol for cancer being the worst I know of. Not to start a revolution or anything… but the rural poor need to be informed, educated and empowered to become more demanding of government to deliver quality healthcare for all. There is need to demonstrate the direct link between the realities that people live and the votes they cast.

Death is the final end of us all. I accept that. I even embrace it. But there IS such a thing as dying BEFORE your time where negligence and malpractice are concerned. The number of Malawians dying before their time is too damn high. It is abnormal and we call it fate. It is malpractice and we call it witchcraft. It is unacceptable and we call it the will of God. These are lies from the very pit of hell. We need to wake up. Or we will die in our “sleep.”

  • This was posted on Taweni Gondwe Xaba’s Facebook wall

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keps
keps
8 years ago

we have well developed standards in medical field in malawi, easy to follow yet we do not. the patient also has a role to play in medicine, presenting early to health facilities, clear state their problems, follow their past health as well, keep health documents at hand. not only blame the medics, if untrained blame the colleges.

Manuel
Manuel
8 years ago

I hope one day Malawians wl begin to look at WHAT not WHO is wrong? That’s the only time we’ll start looking 4 realistic solutions

Member
Member
8 years ago

I lost a cousin at a certain private hospital in Blantyre after the nurses administered some medication following instructions they got from the doctor though phone. The doctor does not work after sun set Friday through Saturday due to religious beliefs. However nurses phone him for consultations. The medication was wrong and the patient complained immediately after taking it through a drip. Soon she died. Doctors are really sacred in Malawi. They go Scot free after professional negligence.

Kwazulu
Kwazulu
8 years ago

Well written. Congrats!! By the way, is thus the Taweni Gondwe who was at Euthini Sec School? Wow!!

Lusungu Luweme
Lusungu Luweme
8 years ago

Life is really cheap in Malawi.If you clock 30 then say thank God.We have a lifespan of a dog in Malawi.I was away for sometime and I just happen to visit my village and whenever I asked about most my playmates during primary school days,most were gone in their early 30s.Is this normal despite having the issue of hiv these days?Most of them were sent to early graves because of lack of facilities in our hospitals,no drugs,understaffing and other myriad problems.The healthy system is totally in shambles and sometimes you could also wonder the role of the health minister because… Read more »

mzungu grey
mzungu grey
8 years ago

Most of these deaths are court cases. If pne , just one doctor of medical assistant is successfully sued and put behind bars others will learn to be more careful and diligent! Its not fair!

MAKOMBOLA THAVA
MAKOMBOLA THAVA
8 years ago

ITS TRUE MANY (PEOPLE) PATIENTS IN MALAWI DIE OF PREVENTABLE CAUSES

IT SEEMS VERY FEW VALUE HUMAN LIFE !!

francis mkandawire
francis mkandawire
8 years ago

Nyc story bro,my mom died last yr when the doctors failed to diagnose her at Karonga District Hospital for several times,just diabetes u can imagine brotheren

joj
joj
8 years ago

some of your cases are clear examples of medical negligence and should have been reported to the Malawi medical council if such a body exists. There is no excuse for giving an allergen to a person who is allergic to it.

Kanthu Ako!!
Kanthu Ako!!
8 years ago

Mine is a serious question.

How does one find out if they are allergic to a particular medication?

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