A fresh wave of outrage has hit Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) in The Bahamas following the death of Clanesha Adderley, with her family alleging severe medical neglect. The case has drawn striking parallels to another tragic incident from nearly two years ago, revealing what appears to be a persistent pattern of systemic failure within the nation’s public healthcare system.
Jerad Darville, who lost his 33-year-old wife Kenise at PMH in January 2023, stated that the allegations surrounding Ms. Adderley’s death have reopened deep emotional wounds. The circumstances are eerily familiar: Ms. Adderley was found cold and unresponsive in a hospital ward on November 14, with staff allegedly unaware of her passing. Her family reports that in her final hours, she repeatedly struggled to get attention from medical personnel and even instructed relatives to contact a lawyer to sue the hospital.
This narrative mirrors Kenise Darville’s experience, who days before her death posted a viral Facebook video detailing what she described as negligence and substandard care at PMH. The video has since garnered over 240,000 views and sparked national calls for healthcare reform.
Mr. Darville expressed profound disappointment with the government’s response, noting that despite personal assurances from the Prime Minister to investigate these matters, accountability remains elusive. He criticized hospital management for creating an environment where overworked, underpaid staff operate with limited resources, while senior officials avoid public scrutiny by refusing to identify medical personnel involved in controversial cases.
In a March 2023 letter, the Public Hospitals Authority claimed Kenise Darville died from being “extremely ill” and reported no shortcomings in her care—a conclusion her husband vehemently rejects. He argues that simply building additional facilities won’t address the core issues of staff frustration and management failures that directly impact patient outcomes.
In response to the growing public concern, Health and Wellness Minister Dr. Michael Darville has pledged that his ministry will “do everything in its power” to investigate Ms. Adderley’s death. Both cases have become emblematic of what many Bahamian families believe is a broader pattern of neglect at the nation’s leading public medical facility.
