A 34-year-old mother of five is grieving because she was not shown the body of a stillborn baby she gave birth to at the Georgetown Public Hospital (GPH) on July 8.
A distraught Shellon Nedd visited the Lyken Funeral Home yesterday in an attempt to locate the body of her child, since, according to her, she was not getting any assistance from the police. She said she had been told that sometimes bodies were taken to Lyken’s from the hospital. However, her child’s body was not there.
”I just want to see me child body. Right now I really grieving over this. I not even eating. It is hard on me,” Nedd said yesterday while sitting at the funeral home. “I ent even get a death certificate. All they give me is me discharge slip. I carry the baby fuh nine months and I go through pain fuh it to born so I want to see something.”
Stabroek News contacted Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the GPH, Michael Khan, and he confirmed that the woman had given birth at the hospital. According to Khan, the child was abnormal and was delivered dead. However, the CEO said, normally a stillborn child was still shown to its mother so he did not understand why this was not done in Nedd’s case.
“I have launched an investigation and I would be able to speak with the relevant people, including the doctor on Monday and make a statement,” Khan said. He further stated that no death certificate was issued when a baby was stillborn and this has been the hospital’s policy for several years.
Nedd has since made a formal written complaint to the GPH.
Speaking to Stabroek News yesterday, Nedd, who was only discharged from the hospital last Sunday because the child was delivered by caesarean section, said she was admitted to the hospital on the morning of July 8 with labour pain. She said that after some time she was told that her baby was “coming down by the foot,” and she was taken to the labour room. In the labour room her “water bag” was clipped and she was told to push. According to the woman, shortly after the baby’s feet protruded and she was told to lie on her side and continue to push. Nedd said she was then further examined by a nurse who sent for the doctor immediately. “By this time I start to haemorrhage, I was bleeding a lot and when the doctor come is like I ent had any more life in me to push,” Nedd said.
She said the nurses then put an adult diaper on her because of the bleeding and she was taken to the operating theatre. According to the woman this was done even though the baby’s feet were protruding. She was given an anaesthetic and when she awakened, she was in the ward but she did not know the fate of her baby.
“I ask a nurse where is my baby and she tell me is a girl and I go see she when I go to the ward,” Nedd said. She said another nurse went to help her clean up and she again asked to see her baby.
This time she was told that the baby “was a beautiful girl baby but it born with no brains and it dead.” Nedd said she still asked to see the body of the child and the nurse told her that because of her condition she should ask her family members to visit the morgue to view the body.
Nelva Nedd, who is the aunt of Nedd’s husband Noel Nedd, and who accompanied her to Lyken’s, said she and other relatives visited the morgue at the hospital but were told by those in charge that they “had a lot of dead and we can’t see the body.” Asked if they were told to return on another date, Nelva Nedd said she could not remember.
Nedd said she kept asking to see the body of the baby and at one point a nurse told her that the baby was a “Mongoloid [a derogatory term used to refer to people with Down’s Syndrome] and if my family see the baby dem will laugh at me.”
However, Nedd said, “I ent care if my baby was a Mongoloid. If I give birth to a dog or cat or whatever I still want to see me baby. I carry she fuh nine months and I had pain to get she so I want to see the body. This thing really grieving me.”
She said her husband was very upset and because they were not able to view the body of the baby he was questioning what really happened to his child. Nedd said she wanted answers from the hospital.
The baby girl was Nedd’s seventh child. Another of her children died when he was eight months old. Her other children are 18, 13, six and three years old.




This is so callous and unsympathetic on the part of the GPH.
Compassion is one of the several qualities that should emanate from such an institution. Someone from the hospital (preferably one of the doctors) should’ve long sat down with the Nedds and given them information concerning the procedure and the remains of their child.
This runaround that they are complaining of seem to suggest that there is an atttempt to ‘cover up’ something. This is not good.
We are forever being treated in such a manner by almost all of our institutions that suspicion and mistrust is the natural order of the day.
My condolences to the Nedd family.
The baby died from suffocation because its head was stuck in the vagina and the nurse failed to remove it in a timely manner.
The hospital is reluctant to present the body of the child because its corpse will confirm that that the child suffocated during the delivery process.
Callous indeed!!!!!! More words fail me. You talk till you blue in your face and you get the same old same. How long more will our people have to endure this?
I agree with you Ankoko, and as you have correctly noted, “We are forever being treated in such a manner by almost all of our institutions that suspicion and mistrust is the natural order of the day.”
I offer my heartfelt sympathies too.
GPHC is a law unto themselves… typical in any dictatorshp!
They are always launching investigations and nothing ever becomes of the so called investigations.
This bell rings throughout the PPP regime!
What the Jill???? This is so ridiculous. Clearly no one is willing to say where this woman’s child is. Find the woman’s child or start an investigation into a possible kidnapping. Furthermore, start a law suit against GPH and it’s operatives.
The only reason Guyanese are treated like this is because they allow these abusers to get away with such treatment. Once people start losing their jobs, licenses to practice, and their freedom the system will become a lot more careful.
If only, if only it was that easy to sue the pants off of these quacks. I just hope that some day soon Guyana will get to that level
Something doesn’t smell right here! I don’t think the baby is dead, since there is no body to show.
If this had happen to anyone in most civilized countries around the world, someone would have gone to jail for murder…..I have no doubts that this poor child died because of lack of oxygen and sure she took in fluids by her nose and mouth…….there is no way she could have lived with all the time lapse and confusion………then they come with the child born without brains and the child is a mongal, well someone with brains need to explain and stop behaving like a mongal, we need to know the truth. Look God looking at all alyo fire and brimstone.
Somebody needs to sue this and a few other hospitals/doctors in Guyana for them to wake up and see that they are not treating patients properly. An anomaly test should have been done months ago to see if there was any problems with the fetus.
An ultrasound should have been done when she was admitted to see whether the baby was breached before delivery started.
Lack of a body makes one suspicious that the child had no anomalies but died during childbirth. So I would recommend that they produce the body asap.
Seems like the hospital is trying to cover up something. Let GOD be the judge. What is really going on in Guyana?