ADVERTISEMENT

Husband turns room into 'ICU' after hospital discharges woman in a coma for 11 years

April 01, 2020 02:43 pm | Updated 03:51 pm IST - GUWAHATI

The hospital had to discharge the patient because it has been turned into exclusive COVID-19 centre.

Okenjeet Sandham with his bed-ridden wife and attendant.

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought Nagaland’s Aneile Kenye back home after more than 11 years in an intensive care unit (ICU).

Ms. Kenye, 50, was discharged from the Naga Hospital Authority Kohima on March 30 after the State government decided to convert it into a novel coronavirus -specific hospital.

She was shifted to a house adjoining the hospital that her husband — martial artist and writer Okenjeet Sandham — had rented to stay close to her.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We are happy that she has come home but at the same time worried because there’s a difference between her room and the ICU. The decision to move patients out of the hospital was quite sudden and must have created problems for other patients and their attendants,” Mr. Sandham told

The Hindu from Kohima on Wednesday.

The hospital provided him with an a portable suction machine for draining out deposits in his wife’s windpipe, where a tracheostomy pipe has been inserted to help her breathe. This was after he failed to get one at medical equipment stores in Kohima, affected by the countrywide lockdown.

“I want to turn the room into a mini ICU. I hope the situation (because of lockdown) allows me to at the earliest,” he said.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ms. Kenye collapsed on August 30, 2009, a year after she became the first Indian woman to officiate in an international Muay Thai competition in South Korea. She was diagnosed with brain tumour and had to be air-lifted to Guwahati for surgery at a neurological hospital.

The hospital discharged her after 41 days but she was confined to a wheelchair in Kohima. She collapsed again three weeks later and had to be admitted to the ICU at the Naga Hospital.

“We have struggled to meet the expenditure but never let others know what we were going through. She cannot speak and we don’t know if she can see us, although her eyes look normal. I have not left her side because I am what I am today because of her. I am just trying to pay back for the sacrifices she made for me, our daughter and son,” Mr. Sandham said.

The two had married in 1986.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT