Niger Delta
Hospital Waives Bills For 13 Indigent Patients
Federal Government
owned Irrua Specialist Hospital, Irrua, in Esan Central Local Government Area of Edo, has written off medical bills of 13 indigent patients.
The Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the hospital, Prof. George Akpede disclosed this in an interview with newsmen.
Akpede said that the 13 patients had been discharged and that they were among 17 indigent patients discovered to be on admission in the hospital as at December 2011.
“We could not write off the bills of the other four patients because they did not meet the ‘passionate grounds’ criteria set by the hospital for such persons.”
The CMD said that the hospital also recorded seven indigent patients in 2010.
Expressing worry that the number of indigent patients at the hospital seemed to be increasing annually, Akpede disclosed that between January and February, this year, seven indigent patients had already been admitted.
He lamented that the recurrence of indigent patients on admission in the hospital was becoming a burden to the authorities.
According to him, some of the indigent patients stayed here for more than six months after their discharge before they now made a passionate appeal of lack of money and we freed them.
“And from our records so far, the shortest period any of them has stayed here before we got to know that they could not pay our bills after discharge from the ward was 16 days.”
Akpede, however, stated that before being declared indigent, the hospital management always ascertained that the family of such patient could really not afford the medical bill.
“All those freed by the hospital met the criteria”, he said but regretted that the inability of some persons to pay medical bills was affecting the finances of the hospital.