Tag: Chimamanda

  • Chimamanda serves legal notice over son’s death

    Chimamanda serves legal notice over son’s death

     

    Chimamanda Adichie

    –  Accuses hospital of negligence, demands record

    Renowned Nigerian author Chimamanda Adichie has demanded accountability from a private hospital in Lagos, accusing it of medical negligence and professional impropriety following the death of her 21-month-old son, Nkanu Nnamdi, after a series of medical procedures.

    In a detailed legal notice dated January 10, 2026, solicitors acting for Adichie and her partner, Dr. Ivara Esege, alleged that the hospital, its anaesthesiologist, and other attending medical personnel breached the duty of care owed to their son, Master Nkanu Adichie-Esege, who died in the early hours of January 7, 2026.

    According to the notice, the child, born on March 25, 2024, was referred to the hospital on January 6, 2026, from Atlantis Pediatric Hospital for diagnostic and preparatory procedures ahead of an imminent medical evacuation to the United States, where a specialist medical team was reportedly on standby.

    The procedures included an echocardiogram, a brain MRI, insertion of a peripherally inserted central catheter, and a lumbar puncture. Intravenous sedation was said to have been administered using propofol.

    However, the notice alleged that during transportation to the cardiac catheterisation laboratory after the MRI, the child developed sudden and severe complications.

    Despite being under sedation, he was reportedly transferred between clinical areas under conditions that raised “serious and substantive concerns” about compliance with patient-safety protocols. He was later pronounced dead in the early hours of January 7.

    The legal notice, issued “without prejudice” to the parents’ rights and signed by the law firm led by Prof. Kemi Pinheiro, SAN, outlines multiple alleged lapses in paediatric anaesthetic and procedural care.

    These include concerns about the appropriateness and cumulative dosing of propofol in a critically ill child, inadequate airway protection during deep sedation, and failure to ensure continuous physiological monitoring.

    The parents further alleged that their son was transferred without supplemental oxygen, without adequate monitoring, and without sufficient accompanying medical personnel.

    They also raised concerns about the availability of basic resuscitation equipment, delayed recognition and management of respiratory or cardiovascular compromise, and an overall failure to comply with established paediatric anaesthesia, patient-transfer, and safety protocols.

    Another key grievance cited was the alleged failure of the hospital to adequately disclose the risks and potential side effects of propofol and other anaesthetic agents, thereby undermining the legal requirement for informed consent.

    According to the solicitors, these alleged lapses amount to prima facie breaches of the duty of care and render the hospital and the medical personnel involved liable for medical negligence resulting in the child’s death.

    As part of their next legal steps, the parents have demanded certified copies of all medical records relating to their son’s treatment within seven days of receipt of the notice.

    The requested documents include admission notes, consent forms, pre-anaesthetic assessments, anaesthetic charts, drug administration records, monitoring logs, procedural notes, nursing observations, ICU records, incident reports, and the identities of all medical staff involved.

    The demand also covers internal reviews, safety logs from the MRI suite, and any other documentation connected to the child’s care.

    The hospital has further been placed on formal notice to preserve all relevant evidence, whether physical or electronic.

    This includes CCTV footage from procedure rooms and corridors, electronic monitoring data, pharmacy and drug inventory records, crash-cart and emergency equipment logs, internal communications, and any morbidity and mortality reviews.

    The solicitors warned that any destruction, alteration, or loss of evidence after receipt of the notice would be treated as suppression of evidence and obstruction of justice, with attendant legal consequences.

    The letter warned that failure to comply with the demands within the stipulated timeframe would leave the parents with no option but to pursue all available legal, regulatory, and judicial remedies against the hospital and all medical personnel involved.

  • Chimamanda’s Son, Dr. Anthea Nwandu Speaks on Nephew’s Death

    Chimamanda’s Son, Dr. Anthea Nwandu Speaks on Nephew’s Death

     

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    Chimamanda’s Son – Dr. Anthea Esege Nwandu Addresses Inconsistencies in Euracare Hospital’s Statement on Nephew’s Death.The growing controversy surrounding the death of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Dr. Ivara Esege’s 21-month-old son, Nkanu Nnamdi Esege, has taken a significant turn.

    Dr. Anthea Esege Nwandu, the child’s aunt and a dual board-certified Internal Medicine physician with 30 years of global clinical experience in Nigeria and the United States, is debunking Euracare Multi-Specialist Hospital’s statement released on Saturday, January 10, 2026.

    The statement relates to the circumstances of the child’s passing, which occurred at Euracare’s facility.”In their press statement, Euracare claims that there are inaccuracies in the account of how my nephew passed. Which inaccuracies exactly?” she asked.

    In a detailed rebuttal, Dr. Nwandu has identified alleged significant falsehoods in the hospital’s statement. Below, she contrasts the specific claims made by Euracare with what she describes as “the documented truth of the situation

    .”Claims vs. Reality According to Dr Nwandu Euracare claims the child had received care at two paediatric centres. This is false. He was in one hospital before coming to Euracare for the procedures.Euracare claims they provided care “in line with established clinical protocols and internationally accepted medical standards.” International standards demand that a child on oxygen who is given sedation must have continuous oxygen therapy.

    Did Euracare do this? No! They confirmed this verbally to me when I went to the hospital to question the doctors.International standards demand that the child should have had continuous monitoring of oxygen levels in his blood. Did Euracare do this? NoInternational standards demand continuous monitoring of pulse and respiration. Did Euracare do this?

    NoInternational standards demand that when moving the child from one part of the hospital to another, the child must be accompanied by resuscitative equipment in case he stops breathing (stopping breathing is a risk of anesthesia), and this can easily be done by a simple apparatus called an ambubag.

    Did Euracare do this? No.Since there was no monitoring, is it possible to accurately document when the child stopped breathing or for how long he was pulseless before he was resuscitated? No. Is it international standard for an anesthesiologist to carry a child post-sedation on his shoulder, unable to visually see the child, with absolutely no monitoring, while insisting that he alone would be in the elevator with the child?

    No.To transfer the child to the ICU, the anesthesiologist disconnected his oxygen and again carried him on his shoulder. Is that standard practice? No.Dr. Nwandu asserts that the child was medically stable and booked for a scheduled evacuation flight to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore when the alleged negligence took place.

    (Dr. Anthea Esege Nwandu is board-certified by both the American Board of Internal Medicine and the American Board of Lifestyle Medicine. She is also a Fellow of the American College of Physicians. Dr. Nwandu holds a Master of Public Health degree from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.)