The mysterious death of a Senior Secondary School 3 student in Akwa Ibom State has become an object of controversy.
The deceased, Edima Ini Umoh, the Daily Post reports, was until her death a student of Full Life Academy, Uyo, Akwa Ibom.
It began as a minor complaint of a headache, but within the next few hours, Edima was no more.
Her death has now sparked allegations against the school authority.
But the school management, for its part, believes the mother of the deceased has a lot of questions to answer.
According to the principal of Full Life Academy, Pastor Aniefonteabasi Victor-Williams, everything happened in a flash as no one had any premonition of her death.
She said the deceased student complained of having a headache in the morning of that fateful day, and the nurse gave her paracetamol. She added that she felt better and joined her friends for lunch at about 2:30 pm, during which she even demanded extra food.
The principal told the Daily Post that, âat about 4:00 pm of the same day, Edima complained of headache again. At that point, the school nurse wanted to commence malaria treatment so that the headache would not result in a full-blown fever; she brought out Coartem, an antimalarial drug, to administer to her, but the deceased refused to take it and said instead they should inform her mother to get Amathem for her.â
She explained that at that point, the school matron called Edimaâs mother and handed the phone over to the deceased to speak with her mother.
She further explained that âEdima was telling the mother to pray for her about three times and asked her to come to the school immediately with Amathem and pepper soup; the mother felt that she was over-panicking and asked her to calm down.â
The Principal continued, âThe matron told us that shortly after Edima spoke with her mother, she became calm and asked the hostel parent and hostel prefect who were on the ground to allow her to rest, and because of the headache, they felt it was proper to let her rest. The hostel parent assigned the school senior prefect, who is her classmate, to stay with her.
âWhen we asked the head girl about what happened, she said that Edima was calm and later slept off, so she left her room to also sleep upstairs. Not long after she (Edima) started snoring, they felt that it was normal.
âAfter a while, the hostel parent said she returned to check on those on prep to see if they were reading and to check on Edima, who complained of headaches.
âThat was when she saw a white substance mixed with blood coming out of Edimaâs nose. At that point, she said she raised an alarm, and there was panic everywhere. By the time they carried her out of the bed, she had already messed herself up.
âShe said they cleaned her up, and the nurse tried resuscitating her while waiting for the doctorâs arrival. We are affiliated with Premier Clinic. Our Executive Director was called, and every other school leader was called, and they all ran down to the school immediately; even the owner of Premiere Clinic was called, and our ED called him, and he came immediately and tried his best.
âI was told that when it was as if nothing was happening, they took the girl to the Premiere clinic, where she was placed on oxygen. We prayed, hoping she would respond and come back to life.
âWhen nothing happened, we reached out to Jeconiah Specialist Hospital; the consultant said we should bring her. It was when we got there that she was confirmed dead by the doctor.
âAt that point, we could not do anything else. We and the family were hoping that she would wake up before morning because her body was warm. I was even squeezing her fingers, praying that she would come back to life.
âShe was taken home that night; we followed the uncle to the house, and we got to our homes at midnight.
âIn the morning, I went back to see if she had woken up, and the uncle told me they had taken her to the morgue.
âSo after the school session that Friday, I and my team went back for a condolence visit to the motherâs residence. That was when the family informed us that they wanted to carry out an autopsy and that they would carry us along. We accepted.â
Asked if the deceased had an underlying sickness or any known medical condition, the principal said there was nothing of that nature to the best of her knowledge.
âEverything was confusing considering the speed with which the whole thing happened, because we have had cases where parents came to carry their wards at 10 p.m. to the hospital and they survived.
âWe also have children with serious asthmatic attacks, but they survive.
âWe have nebulizing machines here; we nebulize them before taking them to the hospital. This girl was one of our best, and we were even preparing her to be our valedictorian this year until this incident,â she lamented.
However, the family appears not ready to buy into the narrative of the school management.
In a letter through their lawyer, Edikan Lawrence, Esq., obtained by the Daily Post, tagged âDemand for Full Disclosure of Events Leading to the Unnecessary and Unfortunate Death of Miss Edima Ini Umohâ, the family insisted that the school authority furnish them with a detailed account of what led to their daughterâs death.
The letter, which was copied to the commissioner for education in the state and the commissioner of police, regretted that four days after the incident, the school authority had failed to give a full and detailed account of what transpired within the school that culminated in the âuntimely, painful, and unfortunate loss.â
The letter said, âPredicted on the foregoing, we have our clientâs instruction (and indeed that of the entire Richard Essien Umoh family) to demand a full disclosure and formal statement of all events, including the minutest details, leading to the death of Miss Edima Ini Umoh, addressed to the family through our office within 48 hours of the service of this letter.
âTake note that where you fail or refuse to act in terms of this demand within the time stated above, we have our clientâs instruction to resort to other legal measures to ensure that justice is not only done but seen to be done in this case, and this will be without further recourse to you.â
But the school lawyer, Barr Iniobong Udoh, said in an interview that the school was not perturbed.
Udoh said the whole event was a result of negligence on the motherâs side, wondering how a mother would waste over three hours to visit her daughter, who was sounding desperate on the phone, saying she had a headache.
According to her, âWhat I noticed from the whole story was that the mother was negligent. She delayed giving the drugs to the daughter for over 3 hours after she was informed.
âEveryone knows the history of their children; she was supposed to rush down to give her the drug or, if need be, take her to her personal doctor and later go for the pepper soup.
âFrom the lawyerâs letter, she sent someone to go to the market to buy chicken to prepare pepper soup, and that was what delayed her.
âThat is why there is provision for students to call their parents in case of sickness. Also, in the child rights law of Akwa Ibom State, you canât force anything on a child; as soon as the child says she doesnât want this particular drug, we donât have the right to force her to take it.
âThe mother was supposed to rush down to see what was happening first before going for a pepper soup, which can even be bought in a restaurant.
âShe never gave the school any instruction that since she was delaying they should do something to the child as others do, the school hoped on the mother to rush down.
âWe are meeting with the lawyer as a team this evening before we write officially and copy all the places the letter was sent to.
âSince the letter was asking us to disclose the cause of the death, as we donât know, we are expecting the mother to tell us the cause; unless the mother agrees to tell us if there is any family history concerning the childâs health, we will not know.
âDuring admission, there was a space to write about any underlying medical condition; the mother wrote none, and the medical report of the child she gave us proved that she was a healthy child.â
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