The letter made public on Friday was in spite of the billions of naira released by the President Muhammadu Buhari to tackle the spread of the virus. Many corporate organisations and individuals had also donated billions of naira and equipment to states and the Federal Government as their corporate social responsibility.
The number of cases in Oyo State had risen to seven on Saturday, while the state governor, Seyi Makinde, on Saturday morning tweeted that “84 Persons of Interest have been identified, and contact tracing and collection of samples have commenced.” Only one death had been recorded while the number of cases across the country had risen to 97 as of press time.
Meanwhile, in the open letter dated March 26 the Chief Medical Director of the hospital, Prof Jesse Otegbayo, highlighted the items needed by the hospital as he expressed hope that people would offer support.
The letter, titled, ‘To whom it may concern’, reads, “As part of the plans to scale up our ability to respond credibly to the COVID-19 pandemic, the hospital has commenced plans to scale-up its initial four-bed isolation unit to an 18-bed facility. Due to the highly infectious nature of the organism, all requests are in multiple numbers in order to ensure that cross infection is limited as much as possible.
“To this end, we hereby solicit funds to achieve the following: pipeline oxygen with at least 20 patient points with humidifier, respiratory ventilators, personal protective equipment (apparel), suction machines, nebulizers, bacterial and viral filters, medical consumables, mobile x-ray machine, oxygen concentrators, pulse oximeters and nurse/doctor’s day.
“We are expectant that in the spirit of social responsibility, well-meaning groups/associations, etc., will support the initiative as deemed fit.”
Buhari had announced the release of N15bn, UBA N5bn, Abdul Samad Rabiu N1.3bn, Dangote N200m and NNPC and its partners N11bn, among others.
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