At the first encounter with
her, this fair-complexioned lady exhibits no physical disability. Rather, she
presents all the physical features of a young, healthy lady who possesses all
it takes to win a beauty pageant.
But call to her from behind
or while she’s not looking in your direction, beautiful 27-year-old Miss
Folashade Oluwaseun Kokumo will not in the least respond to you. This is not
deliberate. She has hearing impairment which she has been grappling with since
the age of two! She goes about oblivious of the happenings around her.
Her case is compounded by
the fact that she’s an orphan: she lost both parents as a child. So severe is
her hearing challenge that she finds it very difficult to compose a complete
sentence. Doctors say her ears could not send the signals required for her to
compose speech. Her only option when she wants to communicate with people is by
writing whatever she wants to say on paper.
In spite of this hearing
challenge, the brilliant young lady has been able to weather the storm of life,
especially in academics. Kokumo, who is an indigene of Abeokuta North Local
Government Area of Ogun State, has been able to complete her Ordinary National
Diploma programme and is currently a Higher National Diploma 1 student in the
Department of Business Administration at the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta. She attained this feat
because of the scholarship offered her by the authorities of the MAPOLY for two
academic sessions.
She said, “My predicament
began at the age of two after an illness. My parents suddenly realised that I
could no longer hear. Later, a speech impediment was also discovered. My
parents made valiant efforts to take me to various hospitals for treatment and
when it was finally ascertained that the only possible cure for my hearing
impairment was N3.6m cochlear implant that would take place in India, they lost all hope because
they couldn’t afford it.
“Subsequently, I have
struggled from primary school to the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic where I am
currently a Higher National Diploma 1 student of Business Administration. To
say the journey so far has not been easy would be an understatement. The
successful completion of my National Diploma was solely with the help of a
hearing aid I purchased five years ago with the assistance of well wishers who
perceived my doggedness and zeal for success in life. However, at the twilight
of my ND programme, the hearing aid was damaged and it had an adverse effect on
my academic performance.”
The crux of the matter now
is that she needs about N5.38m to correct this hearing challenge —N380,000 to
purchase a new set of hearing aids and N5m to undergo ear surgery in an Indian
hospital. The hearing aids would give her temporary relief from the
excruciating pain she suffers currently and also assist her in attending
lectures and listening to what the lecturers are saying to the entire class.
Confirming Kokumo’s urgent
need for hearing aids and surgery in India, the Director of the Nigerian Army
Audiological Centre, Nigerian Army Reference Hospital, Yaba, Lagos, Dr. Irene
Okeke-Igbokwe, in a cover note attached to the receipt issued the patient in
August, said the N380,000 was required for the purchase of the pairs of the
Siemens behind-the-ear hearing aid and batteries, while a cochlear implant in
India would gulp about N5m.
Okeke-Igbokwe’s cover letter
reads in part: “Physical examination revealed a healthy looking young lady
without any physical defects. Otoscopic examination revealed clear canal and
both tympanic membrane intact. Audiological investigation on Pure Tone
Audiometry revealed bilateral severe to profound sensoneural hearing loss.
“A physician recommended
cochlear implant in India, which is expected to cost
N5m and medical treatment device that replaces the function of the damaged ear.
Unlike hearing aids, it does the work of damaged parts of the inner ear
(cochlear) to send signals to the brain. It also transforms speech and other
sounds into electrical energy that is used to stimulate the hearing nerve in
the inner ear.
“It also has both internal
and external components. She was diagnosed with lack of speech and language
acquisition and inability to hear and no history of familial hearing loss.
“She will require binaural
post auricular type of cochlear and hearing aids, with ear mould to enable her
to hear better and cope with her education. The cost of the cochlear implant
treatment and moulds is N5m in India.”
Kokumo is therefore
appealing to well-meaning andpublic-spirited Nigerians to come to her aid to
enable her to make use of her ears.
“I hereby call on
well-meaning and kind-hearted Nigerians to come to my aid in raising the
required amount (N5.38m). This would bring sunshine into my life and also bring
to an end untold hardship experienced in coping with my academic career and in
my day-to-day life. I would be forever grateful for your assistance,” she says.
Donations can be sent to her
bank account number: 0225665107, Kokumo Folashade Oluwaseun, WEMA Bank,
Oke-Ilewo branch, Abeokuta, Ogun State; or Access Bank, Sapon branch, Abeokuta,
account number: 0034194247. You can also contact her on 08180989549 (text
messages only).
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