The woman says she isn't allowed to leave the hospital from the time
she delivered a girl in September last year; hospital rubbishes claims;
husband sends legal notice.
A Nigerian national and her
baby have been allegedly confined to the 11th floor of a hospital in
Mira Road for the last five months as she hasn't been able to clear her
medical bills, even as the hospital has claimed that she has been
discharged. At the time of going to press, the woman was residing in the
hospital.
Erinma Laurette Chamberlin, 36, delivered a girl by
Caesarean Section in September last year, and hasn't stepped out of the
hospital since then. Her husband, Chamberlin Chiemela Ezeama, who is in
Nigeria, has issued a legal notice to the Wockhardt Hospital alleging
illegal detention of his wife and daughter. While the woman's
medical visa has expired and her bill has now ballooned to around Rs 8
lakh (she is being charged around Rs 12,000 a day for the room alone),
the hospital management told Mirrorthat the woman and her baby "were
allowed to stay at the hospital on humanitarian grounds", after her
husband didn't respond to calls and messages regarding the dues.
"Her husband has not bothered to take the family back home despite
repeated requests, even when the woman was fit to be discharged 15 days
after admission. Her bill is now more than Rs 8 lakh, largely because of
the unnecessary stay due to his non-response regarding settling the
bill or taking his family back," a hospital official said in an email.
Erinma, however, said it was distressing to see her new-born, who she
has named Benita, not being allowed to return to her country. "Back
home, several women undergo a Caesarean Section end up dead. Friends
suggested I travel to India as the country has fantastic medical
facilities. I didn't know that I would have the worst experience here,"
she said. Benita is Ernima's fifth child, and anticipating
complications during the pregnancy, she and her husband got in touch
with the Wockhardt management, which helped Ernima secure a medical
visa. She was admitted on September 15, and has been confined to the
hospital's room no. 1124, she alleged.
"Around a month after
the surgery, I asked the doctor whether I was fit for discharge, to
which she said yes. I began to make plans for our return to Nigeria when
the management told me I could not be discharged as I hadn't cleared
the dues. I told them that we had already paid $3,000 (around Rs 1.89
lakh), and promised to stay in the city till we paid our dues. But they
did not discharge me and my baby and I have been living in this room,
for which I am charged $180 a day," she alleged. She further
alleged that the hospital staffers would threaten her. "They would warn
me that I will end up in jail and now I will see the 'other' side of
India," she said. "I am only allowed to take a stroll on the floor where
my room is located. I am scared and worried, and my temperament is
having a negative effect on my baby. Living in this room, I have lost
track of time," she added.
Erinma's husband contacted advocate Utkarsh Srivastava of Adjuva Legal.
He told this newspaper from Nigeria, "I wrote to several government
departments, including Sushma Swaraj's office. I am ready to pay the
dues but over a course of time during which my wife will stay in India. I
am unable to visit India due to financial and immigration issues. But
my wife and daughter are being wrongly detained in India. I have not yet
held my daughter in my arms, I only get to see her on the phone."
Erinma said that her acquaintance who lives in Mira Road was
"interrogated" by the hospital staff, which scared her so much that she
never turned up again. "My only respite is that the nurses are really
sweet to me and look after my daughter," she said.
The hospital
has already submitted complaints to the police, the foreigner regional
registration offices, the Nigerian High Commission, and the Indian High
Commission in Nigeria.
"The patient has been given the best of
services. Nobody has barred the patient from leaving the hospital. The
couple was unable to pay the entire amount due to constraints and a
limit to the amount of money they can carry out of their country. The
husband promised to send the money and said that the woman would stay in
the hospital till the bills are settled. On numerous occasions, we had
told her husband that her visa will expire, but he hasn't taken any
action. We have looked after the patient like a member of our family,"
the hospital said in a statement. The hospital further said that the
woman herself chose to remain in the hospital as she wanted her baby to
get vaccinated.
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