Psychiatric Patient Attacks Nurses

"Patients wield all kinds of weapons such as knives, cutlasses and metals. As psychiatric doctors and nurses, one must be smart enough or else patients would use these weapons on you." "When diagnosing patients I use one eye to write prescriptions and the other is fixed on the patients ready for any surprise that can come from them," he said. Dr. Osei said compensation given to victims of those attacks was pathetic. Madam Gbedemah took GH A2150.00 while and spent GH A2160.00 on her medical bill and therefore had no compensation for the loss of her eye. "Compensation to victims of psychiatric attack is a big insult, this is wrong," he said. Narrating his ordeal Mr. Twumasi said in the night of December 17, 2008, Mr. Sela Aguzey, who was admitted to the hospital, told him he wanted to go to Akatsi. He attempted opening the gate while the nurse restrained him. "Before I realised he hit hard my left eye with his elbow and moments later my eye began to swell." He said he was taken to the Ridge Hospital but was transferred to the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital where Dr Stephen Akafo, an eye specialist, declared him blind in one eye. "I drive a taxi after work and my off days to supplement my scanty salary but I cannot drive again because of this misfortune," Mr. Twumasi said. Others have also suffered similar attacks and Madam Doris Darkwa lost almost all her teeth when she was beaten by a patient.