Audio By Carbonatix
The Volta Region on Friday recorded its first Covid-19 death at the local Treatment Centre in Ho.
The deceased, a 60-year-old woman who returned from Accra two weeks ago, visited the Ho Teaching Hospital with difficulty in breathing, fever for three days and reduced level of consciousness.
She was noticed to have been progressively getting weak prior to her presentation at the Teaching Hospital and passed on after five days on admission at the Regional COVID -19 Centre on May 14, 2020 at 1815 hours.
Dr Archibald Yao Letsa, Volta Regional Minister, in a statement copied to the Ghana News Agency (GNA), said the deceased was a known diabetic who had suffered a Cerebro-Vascular Accident (CVA) a few years ago.
The sexagenarian, the statement said, also had a pacemaker in situ for an unspecified cardiac condition.
It said she had been previously reviewed at the National Cardio Thoracic Centre where she was told the pacemaker was no longer effective.
“On examination, she was febrile (40.0 °C), not pale and anicteric with a Glasgow Coma Score of 11/15. She had a respiratory rate of 28cpm with Bronchial Breath Sounds and coarse crepitations bilaterally.
“Oxygen saturation was 86% on room air. The blood pressure was 100/70mmHg, Heart Sounds I &II heard with no other sounds. There was residual weakness of the right upper and lower limbs," the statement said.
It said a preliminary diagnosis of severe pneumonia, Diabetes Mellitus type-2 and CVA with residual weakness was made to rule out COVID-19 but results received from the University of Health and Allied Sciences Laboratory for COVID-19 in three hours confirmed the deceased as positive for the disease.
Dr Letsa said, “the patient was clinically managed in conformity with the established clinical protocols for the various disease conditions, psychosocial support given to the family of the confirmed case and all contacts and appropriate burial procedures currently underway”.
The Regional Minister said 39 staff including ten doctors, 28 nurses and an orderly were immediately quarantined as a precautionary measure after varying levels of exposure while contact identification, listing, tracing and testing was ongoing.
He said the Emergency Unit of the Ho Teaching Hospital was evacuated and shut down for 24 hours for fumigation.
Latest Stories
-
Nurses and Midwives Union condemns assault on midwife at Tema Community 22 Polyclinic
31 minutes -
FoSCel founder urges free genotype screening for Ghanaian youth
31 minutes -
Savelugu drug lord jailed three years for tramadol offences, faces further drug charges
32 minutes -
Nearly 50 people die of thirst in Sahara desert after lorry breaks down
34 minutes -
UPSA management pays courtesy call on Duncan-Williams ahead of 60th anniversary thanksgiving service
35 minutes -
Tampuli donates medical equipment, staff accommodation to four health facilities in Gushegu
36 minutes -
Accra floods: “I jumped through the window” — 14-year-old girl loses all in deluge
52 minutes -
Stars pay tribute to ‘visionary’ Mobo Awards founder Kanya King
53 minutes -
Upper West launches Tree for Life initiative to fight desertification
53 minutes -
Astronauts return to ISS after sheltering during air leak repair attempt
1 hour -
Teen rapists spared jail partly because of intellectual limitations, judge’s full remarks show
1 hour -
Fury in France after child murder suspect’s criminal record released
1 hour -
US Senate approves $70bn for Trump immigration agencies
1 hour -
KATH CEO suspended over emergency admissions announcement
1 hour -
Court slams Police for ‘unprofessional’ conduct in #OccupyJulorbiHouse arrests, awards GHC150k to 3 journalists [Full Judgement]
2 hours