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Misdiagnosed and Mistreated: Port Harcourt’s Silent Medical Crisis

Port Harcourt, the commercial hub of Rivers State, is facing a deepening healthcare crisis, one that’s not always visible, but dangerously pervasive. Rising cases of medical misdiagnosis are leaving patients traumatised, impoverished, and in far too many cases, dead.


In early 2025, alarming reports surfaced from Rivers, Akwa Ibom, and Cross River, sparking outrage over recurring diagnostic errors across hospitals and laboratories. The pattern is undeniable and the consequences, devastating.

Faith Onovo, a mother of five, was treated for migraines at a “reputable” private hospital. Her worsening symptoms led to a second diagnosis: a brain tumour already inoperable.

Mercy Iwhnurohna died from a ruptured appendix after being misdiagnosed with an ulcer.

Monalisa Tamuno’s brother was treated for a heart condition that turned out to be a pulmonary embolism. By the time the truth came, it was too late—and financially ruinous.

Bassey Effiong spent three years on hypertension medication, only to later be correctly diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease.

These real-life cases reflect a disturbing reality: misdiagnosis has become a recurring and lethal error.

Related News: http://Rivers State Ministry of Health Holds 4-Day Capacity Building Workshop to Improve 2026 Health Plans

What’s Going Wrong?

Health experts point to several compounding factors:
Unqualified personnel: Many private labs are operated by untrained or unlicensed individuals.
Poor diagnostic tools: Nigeria’s market is flooded with low-quality equipment and reagents.
Symptom-based guesswork: Some doctors bypass proper testing altogether.
Lack of regulation: Few inspections, little enforcement, and unchecked facilities.
Overburdened workforce: Understaffed hospitals and burnout increase the risk of clinical errors.

Misdiagnoses are not just technical failures; they are deep personal tragedies. Patients suffer worsening conditions, trauma, and sometimes death.

Families bear the emotional toll and an often crippling financial burden. For many, it’s a betrayal of trust in a system meant to heal.

Reforming the System

Medical stakeholders are calling for urgent reforms:

Enforce lab registration and regular inspections.
Equip hospitals with modern diagnostic tools.
Train and retrain lab staff and clinicians.
Insist on evidence-based, test-backed treatment protocols.
Strengthen national health insurance to make accurate diagnoses affordable.

The mix of formal and informal health providers has made it both a centre of innovation and of risk. With poor oversight, unaffordable testing, and inconsistent clinical standards, a wrong diagnosis can become a death sentence.

But this crisis is not beyond repair. With stronger enforcement, smarter investments, and better public awareness, the tide can turn.

Misdiagnosis isn’t just a medical error; it’s a call to action.

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