News
BMSH Decries High Unclaimed Corpses
Management of Braithwaite Memorial Specialist Hospital (BMSH), Port Harcourt has cried out over high number of unclaimed corpses in the hospital’s mortuary. Consequently, it has ordered depositors of the corpses to update their payment or have them removed by the end of this month.
Managing Director of BMSH, Dr Bernard Apirioku said the high number of unidentified and unclaimed corpses was negatively affecting the finances of the hospital in terms of preservation.
According to him, “BMSH mortuary capacity should not be more than 200 corpses but currently the morgue has over 500 corpses.”
To check cases of corpses being abandoned for a long period, the hospital’s managing director said henceforth corpses would not be kept more than 21 days, while corpses brought by the police would not exceed one week in the morgue.
Following the development, Apirioku said the hospital’s management had mapped out strategies to ensure that unclaimed corpses were removed from the mortuary in order to decongest it.
“We are trying to get clearance from the police, Port Harcourt City Council and the hospital management before the final evacuation of corpses will take place by the hospital,” he said, adding that the management of the hospital also planned to renovate the mortuary to a standard so as to restrict certain categories of corpses.
Meanwhile, the Head of Pathology Department of the hospital, Dr Dorothy Okoh assured that adequate notice would be given to owners of unclaimed corpses to enable them remove their corpses.
Apart from the cost of preserving the corpses, there is also the danger of health hazards when the corpses are littered all over the mortuary.
Okoh remarked that the state government was doing everything possible to ensure that “we relocate to the new mortuary soon,” and pleaded with all to bear with the hospital’s inadequacy.
Though the hospital’s managing director said that the mortuary had a deposit of about 500, The Tide investigation revealed that it currently has 1,385.
Our investigation also showed that 30 corpses are kept on each roll, some are found lying adjacent while some heap of corpses are kept near the fence used in demarcating the mortuary.
One disturbing development is the fact that all mortuary attendants in the hospital are casual staff. Sources said some of them had served for more than 15 years, while others have served for about eight years and above and earning about N10,000 monthly.
Sogbeba Dokubo
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