Whenever we get some good news for the country, eg, the passage of the Bail and Polygraphs Act, both Government and Opposition “exercising maturity,” as the Guardian Editorial put it on Sunday, you immediately get cuff in your face and it’s back to shaking your head and cussing.
This is a country where at times, it looks like all people are interested in photos of four-year-old “graduates” in gowns and mortarboards, or who is who in which beauty pageant, Ms Magnificent Mom or Miss India Worldwide, and if the nurse from Princes Town, who was involved in the Miss India Worldwide contest and got assassinated outside the health centre, is the one in the sex video.
What a commess country! I published an article last week about a major problem children face today, smartphone syndrome. I am ashamed to tell you how many people accessed it on my Facebook Page.
The week before, I posted an old British publication, nothing to do with T&T, about a stat suggesting that one in 25 fathers was not the biological parent, and three times the number of readers accessed that one.
So it’s not unsurprising that the eagerly awaited PAHO report on the deaths in the POSGH NICU has come and gone without much commentary in public. Anyway, here’s my summary of the PAHO report, which was a very simple document. It should be used as the basis for a fuller report by the Ministry of Health, which will never be done because it would require a lot of hard work. It’s easier to lay the foreign-made one in Parliament and, except for the lawyers and parents involved, buss it.
To briefly summarise, the report found that seven of the eight preemies died of infection and that infection control in the hospital was poor. Here are the major findings:
The NICU was understaffed and overcrowded. Too many patients, too many beds, and not enough nurses. Hence, infection control among patients was difficult. Alarmingly, there weren’t even enough alcohol dispensers in the NICU for nurses to disinfect their hands adequately while taking care of two or three babies. At the hospital level, infection control was also poor. It turns out there is no one responsible for infection control in the hospital. That’s quite a remarkable lapse.
Surveillance for monthly blood infections is not done. NICU medications were not being prepared in sterile conditions in the pharmacy. Apart from the problems with infection control, there was some criticism of the behaviour of the staff themselves. For example, early breastmilk feeding was not being advised, and there were breaches in the use of personal protective equipment. Both could be related to understaffing and overworking. The ministry has pronounced that “many of the recommendations contained within the report were already integral parts of the national and regional standard operating procedures,” whatever that means. They certainly were not following those principles.
The overall impression is that the problem with the NICU is the hospital administration. It’s of nurses working under potentially septic conditions (understaffing, overcrowding, limited sepsis control) without support from the hospital infection prevention and control system, which itself is not working properly. Those are administrative problems. Administration also seems to be the problem with the security services.
The PM made a statement last week that is the most frightening I have heard since the 1991 coup, and again, it’s apparently about a coup plot. Details are sketchy, and as again, the Guardian editorial says it “raised more questions than answers.” Presumably, there was a plan for certain paramilitary personnel “to replace the country’s political leadership!” Apparently, a group within our local National Security Services—something that sounds like it’s an imitation of the US CIA, the SSA—was accused by the PM of plotting to overthrow the Government. What! Just so? Twenty-eight people from the agency have been fired, some of them belonging to a religious “cult” in the East. What is it with religious cults in the East? This is absolutely astounding. Again, the reaction from the public and press is also astounding. Except for the Opposition and the occasional editorial, no one seems to care. No one is taking responsibility. No one has been arrested. Thousands of rounds of ammunition are missing. There’s no talk of a state of emergency.
Now one is hearing that it is all a lie, and there are denials all around, from the former director of the SSA to a former police commissioner and the Minister of National Security saying he is not to blame for the fiasco. Is this an attempted political coup similar to the one that has just occurred in the USA or another sort of “emailgate”? What a mauvais langue nation we are.