Monday, June 15, 2026 - Award-winning Nigerian author, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, has accused Euracare Multi-Specialist Hospital, Victoria Island, Lagos, of negligence and actions she said had hindered investigations into the death of her twin son, Nkanu.
In a post shared on Instagram on Saturday, Adichie alleged
that the hospital had engaged in conduct aimed at delaying inquiries into the
circumstances surrounding her son’s death.
Nkanu, the 21-month-old son of the author, died on January
7, 2026, following a brief illness.
Adichie, who published a letter she said she wrote to the
Chairman of the Board of Directors of Euracare Multi-Specialist Hospital,
stated that she decided to make the letter public because, according to her,
remaining silent was not an option.
The author alleged that the hospital’s Medical Director, Dr
Tosin Majekodunmi, initially accepted responsibility for errors made during her
son’s treatment.
“The day after Nkanu died, on January 8, the medical
director visited our home in Ikoyi and admitted the errors made by the
anesthesiologist. He accepted full responsibility. He also said that he would
fire the anesthesiologist, Dr Titus Ogundare,” Adichie alleged.
She, however, claimed that the hospital’s position
subsequently changed.
Adichie further alleged that the hospital failed to provide
the situation reports and medical records it had promised her family, and that
the records eventually released were incomplete.
According to her, Majekodunmi told her that the
anesthesiologist had administered “too much propofol” to her son.
“On January 6, at Euracare hospital, the Medical Director,
Dr Tosin Majekodunmi, whom I considered a friend and trusted as a physician,
told me that the anesthesiologist had given my son Nkanu ‘too much propofol.’
Those were his exact words to me after I saw him rushing into the Cath lab
where Nkanu was,” Adichie wrote.
complications arising from the procedure led to his death.
Adichie also disputed the cause of death stated on her son’s
death certificate.
“We were later startled to see that Euracare had indicated
that his cause of death was bacterial and fungal meningitis. This is
inaccurate. There was no medical evidence to make such a claim on his death
certificate,” she stated.
The author also criticised the hospital’s handling of the
matter through its legal representatives.
“Euracare lawyers wrote a letter referring to our son’s
death as a ‘dispute.’ This kind of language is baffling in its heartlessness,”
she stated.
Adichie further alleged that although the hospital initially
applied for a coroner’s inquest into the death, it later took steps that, in
her view, delayed the process.
According to her, the hospital has also approached a High
Court in relation to the inquest proceedings.
“Most egregiously, Euracare is now asking a High Court to
stop the inquest. An inquest is a public judicial inquiry designed to establish
the circumstances surrounding a death. It is not a trial. It is not a claim for
damages. It is simply a search for the truth,” she stated.
When contacted for comment, an official of the hospital who
answered the call declined to comment on the allegations and asked our
correspondent to visit the hospital to obtain the management’s response.
As of the time of filing this report, the hospital had not
issued an official response to the claims made by Adichie.

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