Gabriel Onogwu, 20, from Benue, has become a symbol of hope for failing
kidneys across the country, after successfully undergoing a transplant.
His
surgery in December is the first recorded in Abuja, done by a team of
surgeons at View Point Hospital, a private clinic in the suburb of
Gwarimpa. Gabriel’s transplant was funded by Nafs Kidney Foundation, a
philanthropic group run by Suleiman Sulu-Gambari.
For days after
the surgery, he walked around with a mask across his nose to ward off
germs that could compromise his immune system and force his body to
reject the kidney donated by his elder brother.
Weeks later, the SS3 student of GSS, Karu is out of hospital and attempting to return to what his life was before his surgery.
“I
feel great, normal, just the way I used to feel before the kidney
failure,” he says. This time his mask is off as he speaks to Daily
Trust. But the reporter who met him had a nose mask on. “I am very, very
happy to have my life back.”
Millions more Nigerians are not so
lucky. Millions more Nigerians, many of them young as 18, are coming
down with chronic kidney disease—the gradual loss of kidney functions.
Leading figures from the National Association of Nephrology indicate up
to 32 million kidneys in Nigeria are failing.
When a kidney is
compromised, the body loses it greatest natural filter—and with that the
ability to remove toxins from the body. Prompt treatment is dialysis—a
procedure that imitates the function of the kidney to remove toxins and
waste from the blood. It is effective, but it also expensive.
“They deserted us”
Experts
worry that the age of Nigerians facing failing kidneys is falling.
Gabriel’s age at 20 makes him a poster child for the poster. His
situation worsened in 2011 when “he started complaining of sever
headache,” recalls his mother Comfort Onogwu.
“He was swollen,
fatter than we knew him. We could not look at him like that. We took him
to hospital, did twenty-something tests before they realised it was
kidney failure.”
It took nearly a year, but Gabriel was finally
placed on dialysis in June 2012. Each dialysis session cost N20,000 and
required up to three pints of blood (blood is the medium used in
dialysis). Gabriel estimates the weekly cost of his kidney management at
around N150,000—money his family couldn’t afford.
“It affected
my family more, because getting that amount of money every week was not
easy. We couldn’t continue with [three dialysis sessions] weekly, so we
had to reduce to twice weekly.” Experts recommend three dialyses a week
as optimum, but Gabriel’s sessions dropped to just one a week
eventually.
“Our relations couldn’t help again. They deserted us.
Help was coming from people we had never met, neighbours—helping with
lots of test.”
Gabriel started treatment at Asokoro General
Hospital, then was moved to National Hospital. A transplant was the only
option left when he came onto Nafs’ radar at View Point “in a very,
very pathetic situation and in severe pains,” says Nafs founder
Sulu-Gambari.
“When they told the options of treatment and the
financial implications, which obviously the family is nowhere capable of
financing, I asked the management how we could assist.”
The
option was a transplant, and the choice was between the US at N16
million and India at N8.5 million. View Point, which has been doing
minimal-invasion surgeries since it started, agreed it could do the
transplant for N5 million but it didn’t have every equipment needed.
“The
foundation took it upon itself to acquire some equipment from London to
enable them perform the surgery,” says Sulu-Gambari. The acquisition
was outside the N5m agreed upon, but the extra spending is being
considered down payment for future surgeries for indigent patients.
Nafs
has opened an account at the hospital through which anyone can directly
fund future transplants. A second kidney transplant for a 50-year-old
patient is scheduled for some time in March.
“The whole idea is
not to assist only one person. We want it to be a continuous thing
whereby other indigents that cannot afford it, the foundation will be
able to step in to help. For us to have good result and sustainability,
we have to be able to part with money.”
Nearly 16 surgeons
hovered over Gabriel in theatre, headed by Dr Nadey Hakim, director of
kidney and pancreatic transplant, Imperial College, University of
London, with some 2,000 successful transplants under his belt.
The
foundation has defended using a top brain in kidney transplant as a
means of teaching local doctors to carry out future transplants on their
own. It also plans to invite surgeons from as far as Maiduguri, Kano
and Abuja to sit in on the next transplant.
Giving hope
The emphasis on chronic kidney disease is for a reason, says Sulu-Gambari.
CKD
is not only a painful but expensive condition for patients and their
families. “The cost of haemodialysis in government hospital is about N2
million in one year; in private hospitals, it is N4 million.”
“If
you have successful kidney transplant, the patient becomes 100 pecent,
cured, he goes back to his normal life. That is the joy in it, as
against diseases such as cancer whereby you spend so much money and the
outcome is not pleasant.
“This one, if the transplant is done
successfully then you are hundred percent sure the patient will enjoy
happy life and that happiness gives me great pleasure.”
It has
also immense publicity “and a lot of interest in the hospital,” says
View Point chief medical director, Dr Hauwa’u Bello-Gambari. “More
people are coming in, trying to find out what else we can do, and
patients with kidney problems have been coming too.”
On the same
day Gabriel and his doctors spoke with Daily Trust, they also met with
Press TV. Several news organisations have also been to speak with them.
But Bello-Gambari says View Point “wouldn’t be limited by kidney problems alone.”
There
have been few recorded successful transplants in other major hospitals,
but that it is also possible in smaller, lesser known hospitals is a
lesson for larger teaching hospitals—a lesson the foundation wants
noted. It is also one score in favour of Nigeria in the rush to stem
trips abroad for medical procedures.
Comfort Onogwu insists her
family could never have afford medical bills for any treatment abroad,
and a transplant back in Nigeria still isn’t cheap either.
“I
never dreamt I could one day go for this transplant,” says Gabriel. “My
family cannot even raise half a million naira.” But he’s back home with a
new kidney to show for it.
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