Petition for Buhari to Rename NCDC building, Stella Adadevoh House

Petition for Buhari to Rename NCDC building, Stella Adadevoh House

Started
13 November 2018
Signatures: 23,997Next Goal: 25,000
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Why this petition matters

Started by Dada Olusegun

As Nigeria heaves a collective sigh of relief after being declared free of Ebola, one woman is being widely praised for helping to ensure a more devastating outbreak was avoided.

 

Dr Stella Ameyo Adadevoh raised a red flag when attending to a Liberian patient at the First Consultant Hospital in Nigeria's main city, Lagos, in July.

 

Patrick Sawyer had just flown into the country, already sick - he should never have been allowed on the plane.

 

Nigeria had never had an Ebola case before so it was an impressive piece of diagnostic work.

 

Whilst caring for Mr Sawyer and protecting the nation from the virus, Dr Adadevoh and her colleagues were themselves at great risk

 

Without her dedication, it is quite possible that the World Health Organisation would not have declared Nigeria – the most populous country in Africa – Ebola-free. The significance of her actions, and those of her hospital colleagues, cannot be overstated.

Adadevoh was born in Lagos in October 1956. Her father was Babatunde Adadevoh, a professor of chemical pathology and, between 1978 and 1980, the vice-chancellor of the University of Lagos. Her great-grandfather was the Nigerian nationalist Herbert Macaulay (himself the grandson of Samuel Ajayi Crowther, the first African Anglican bishop). She lived most of her life in Lagos, spending the last 21 years working at the First Consultant hospital in Obalende on Lagos Island, where a statue of Macaulay still stands today.

 

There is still time to further recognise Adadevoh’s heroism and I believe renaming The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) who's act for establishment has just been signed by President Buhari after Dr Stella Adadevoh House become it is no doubt the biggest tribute Nigeria could ever give her as it would create a culture in which devotion and dedication to one’s vocation is habitual.

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Signatures: 23,997Next Goal: 25,000
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