Since 1965 Isyaka Mamman, has been a doctor in Nigeria
Prosecutors at the Queen's Court in Manchester, England, have told the court that a doctor killed a woman who went to the hospital for a check-up as a result of a breach of contract.
The court was told that Dr. Isyaka Mamman, 85, had committed a number of unethical acts, prior to the incident which led to the woman's death.
Dr. Mamman, who has admitted to making a mistake that led to his wife's death, had previously been fired by the medical board for lying about his age.
But after a while he was re-employed at the Royal Oldham Hospital.
He will be arraigned on Tuesday on charges of negligence and negligence in causing the death of a woman with three children.
Shahida Parveen, 48, went to the hospital on September 3, 2018, with her husband, to investigate how her body was producing more blood than normal.
It was for this reason that she was advised to have a search in her blanket, as the prosecutor, Andrew Thomas QC, told the court.
Normally, lice are extracted from human bones, but Mamman did not, at first, say the plaintiff.
The woman lost her life as a result of an injection at the Royal Oldham Hospital
Instead, the doctor followed an unusual, very dangerous path.
Where he tried to get the bone from the woman's breast or breasts, even though the wife and husband had expressed their dissatisfaction, as the court was told.
In addition, the doctor used an inappropriate injection to remove the bone, which accidentally ruptured the bone, causing the needle to pierce her heart, causing her to bleed profusely.
Ms Parveen fainted from the moment the needle pierced her heart pocket, and did not sleep that day, life took its course.
Mamman has been a doctor in Nigeria since 1965, and has worked in the UK since 1991.
From 2004 until the time of this error he had been working at Pennine Acute Hospitals.
The court was also told that his age was also a matter of controversy, as his birthplace in Nigeria was not registered at the time.
He initially told the British Ministry of Health that he was born in 1941, but later said that in 1947, it was clear that he had started his undergraduate studies at the age of ten.
In 2004 he was found guilty by the British Medical Association of violating the code of conduct which led to his suspension for one year, for lying on his age.
He was fired by the commission but re-employed in 2006, after it was established that he was born in 1943.
Mamman quit his job with the Medway Trust due to stress issues, and in 2015 a complaint was filed with the Oldham hospital where he works.
This was done when a patient reported that excessive force had been used during the extraction of his arm for further investigation.
Also this year there was another problem of pickpockets, where the patient was vaccinated in the wrong place.
The patient survived, did not die, but also sustained permanent disability.
0 Comments