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How facilities got overwhelmed with burn victims from Mradi fire

How facilities got overwhelmed with burn victims from Mradi fire
Victims of Embakasi fire at Kenyatta National Hospital on Friday. PHOTO/DPPS

On the night of February 1, 2024, most of the Accident and Emergency sections of health facilities within the capital, Nairobi especially public hospitals were swarmed with tens of casualties from the Embakasi gas plant explosion.

Mama Lucy, Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) and Kenyatta University Teaching, Research and Referral Hospital (KUTRRH) were all overwhelmed, and families of the wounded were at the mercy of the thin number of standby health attendants.

A spot-check by the People Daily yesterday, which involved talking to some of the affected families, revealed the dire need for expanded emergency care for accident casualties in the country, particularly fire and fatal tragedies.

“I sustained a serious injury on my forehead but have not been able to get admission to a health facility,” Mike Nzau, whose true identity is protected due to patient confidentiality, said.

Private entities

However, for Nzau, the presence of other private entities that responded to the distress call was a huge blessing.

“I am very grateful to the Nairobi Hospital doctors for treating me for free,” he told this publication.
Another affected person, Mercy Gakendu has been nursing her three-year old baby whose chest has been aching since the blast but has not been attended to because her only hope was in a public health facility, which she knew will attend to her for a pocket-friendly cost.

But she lost hope after she was kept at the waiting bay for more than 10 hours. “I lost hope. My child’s pain was getting into my nerves, and I was becoming sick myself.

“I prayed for miracles before I left the hospital,” she said, noting that indeed a miracle happened when she returned to Embakasi only to find medics from Nairobi Hospital attending to the fire survivors at the Embakasi Health Centre.

Nairobi Hospital Chief Executive Officer, James Nyamongo while urging other corporate bodies in the private sector to come forward and help those affected, said that the high-end health facility did not have a better way of responding to this emergency than to mobilise its medical experts to the scene.

“The situation on the ground is dire and I urge other private sector players to come forward and lend a hand to our brothers and sisters who are in pain,” Nyamongo said at the closing of a three-day free medical care by the hospital.

He noted that when an emergency strikes, it is everyone’s business to see to it that the affected people are assisted.

Accidents and Emergency Manager at the hospital, Dr David Abaya confirmed that over 500 people showed up over the three-day period seeking different kinds of assistance.

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