Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, the acclaimed Nigerian novelist, has accused a British hospital of deliberately delaying a full investigation into the death of her three-year-old son, Chinedu. In a statement issued on Wednesday, Adichie alleged that the institution, which she did not name, had refused to release medical records and had failed to cooperate with an independent review.
Adichie’s son died in April 2022 at a London hospital following complications from a routine surgical procedure. The writer, who resides in the United Kingdom, said she had sought answers for more than a year but encountered “institutional stonewalling.” She described the hospital’s behaviour as “unconscionable” and questioned whether UK medical standards were adequate in cases involving families of colour.
“Transparency is not a privilege. It is a fundamental right of any bereaved parent,” Adichie said. “The manner in which this hospital has handled my son’s case suggests a systemic failure, one that disproportionately affects black families.”
Adichie’s accusations have reignited debate over racial disparities in British healthcare. Studies have long indicated that black patients in the UK are more likely to experience poorer health outcomes and less likely to receive timely treatment. A 2020 report by the NHS Race and Health Observatory found evidence of “institutional racism” embedded in clinical practice.
The hospital, whose identity is known to The Times but has not been publicly disclosed, responded with a brief statement expressing condolences and affirming its commitment to patient safety. It said it would “review the concerns raised” but declined to comment on specific allegations while investigations were ongoing.
Adichie, a vocal campaigner on issues of race and gender, called on the UK government to mandate independent inquiries into unexpected paediatric deaths. She argued that current procedures lacked independence and were too reliant on the goodwill of institutions being investigated.
“The system is broken when the investigating body is the same entity being questioned,” she said. “We need a statutory mechanism that removes conflicts of interest and ensures accountability.”
The Medical Protection Society, which represents doctors in the UK, said it could not comment on individual cases but emphasised that “every death is a tragedy that warrants thorough investigation.” It pointed to existing NHS frameworks for learning from adverse events.
Adichie’s intervention comes amid broader scrutiny of UK medical establishments’ handling of deaths involving minority ethnic patients. In 2021, a parliamentary inquiry heard testimony from families who said doctors had dismissed their concerns or failed to communicate effectively, sometimes with fatal consequences.
Legal experts noted that Adichie’s decision to go public could push the hospital toward a more transparent process. “Public pressure often accelerates internal reviews, though the quality of those reviews varies,” said Dr. Ekua York, a medical law lecturer at King’s College London.
Adichie has indicated she will pursue legal avenues to compel the release of her son’s full medical records. She has also appealed to the Care Quality Commission, the independent regulator of health services in England, to investigate.
“I want no other parent to go through what we have endured,” Adichie said. “My son’s death was not just a personal tragedy. It is a test of whether our institutions are capable of justice.”








