Two dialysis patients make a wish for 120
>> Monday, June 11, 2012
BENCHWARMER
Ramon S. Dacawi
BAGUIO
CITY-- In a country where millions are poor, it’s normal for legions to pursue
dreams of instant financial relief. They queue up daily, hoping to make the
audience cut and then to be chosen at random to play, dance or do whatever for
cash rewards in those game and variety shows on television.
So
last October, 31-year old Amor Orpilla an only-child from DPS Barangay here,
inched her way in to “Will Time Big Time” over Channel 5. Hours before dawn
that day, the Baguio girl arrived in Quezon City for that long queue of the
sick and needy seeking fund support from the Philippine Charity
Sweepstakes Office.
As
she was already in the Big City, it wouldn’t hurt to take another line before
taking the long bus ride for home. A patient suffering from kidney
failure, she needs all the support she could get to sustain her twice-a-week
hemodialysis treatment necessary for her to survive.
“Pumila
at nakapasokako at nagbakasali, ngunit ‘di ako natawag ni Mr. Revillame
(I lined up and was let in but I was not called by Mr. Revillame),” she
recalled last week, referring to the TV show host.
Over
lunch at the city hall canteen, she and fellow kidney patient, Mary Grace
Binay-an, 23, of Irisan barangay, continued to day-dream. They had
hiked to the city’s main building to work out free use of two vans
for 20 patients going to the PCSO on June 13, a day after Independence Day.
“Sulatan
kaya naminang “Wish Ko Lang” Amor wondered aloud, referring to the Saturday
show over GMA 7 that turns wishes of some of the poor into reality.
The
two women’s wish is a long shot. Amor estimates 120 patients have their
blood-cleansing sessions at the renal room of the Baguio General Hospital and
Medical Center. At P2,200 per patient per session, the wish would
require P264,000.
The
only child of Moreno Orpilla, a 70-year old widower and retiree now also on
maintenance medication for heart ailment, Amor has been on dialysis since
January, 2010. Father and child are jobless, yet defy reality by struggling to
survive on his P3,000 monthly SSS pension.
“We
have another wish,” confessed Mary Grace. “Amor and I now and then entertain
thoughts of landing a job, particularly to do light office work or take-home
clerical tasks in-between our Wednesday and Saturday dialysis
schedule.”
Both
thought that, like day-dreaming, working and earning a little between
scrounging for funds for dialysis would be therapeutic. Both swore they are
still fit but understand employers would hesitate to hire them because of their
afflictions. Still, Mary Grace handed a hand-written resume
outline while Amor turned over a report on her case prepared by social welfare
officer FlorecitaTul-an.
The
ninth and last child of Patricio Binay-an Sr., a 68-year old barangay aide at
Irisan Barangay, Mary Grace was an honor student since elementary and an
academic scholar until her senior year at the Benguet State University.
A
multi-awarded Sangguniang Kabataan chair of Irisan, she had worked under the
Special Program of Students (SPES) and under Branch 1 of the Municipal Trial
Court in Cities. With just a semester to go for a degree in education, she
dropped out due to financial and health constraints.
She
began her life-time hemodialysis treatment in October, 2009. She has gone this
far with a long list of people to thank. They include her former teachers and
classmates, barangay officials and residents of Irisan and former SK city
federation chair Ysabel de Vera.
“I
can still do light work, but who will hire a dialysis patient in any
establishment?,” she asked. “My life is now simple. I use most of my time
searching for funds of politicians, NGOs and political parties to finance my
treatment because my family can’t support me.”
In-between
the endless search for fund support for the next blood-cleansing session, she
still serves Irisan as barangay tourism officer.
Amor
lost her mother in 2004, after a long battle against cancer that
left the family indebted, noted social officer Tul-an. Her mother’s death
forced her to look for a job to be able to fend for herself.
“She
is now dependent on her father, a senior citizen receiving a monthly limited
SSS pension,” Tul-an said in her report. “His pension, however, is not adequate
for both of them because he is also on medication for hypertension.”
In
her search for Samaritans, Amor would bring along her father’s medical
prescriptions, hoping donors would extend their understanding and also reach
out to him. It’s a wish that she extends to all her fellow dialysis patients at
the BGHMC - if only “Wish Ko Lang” would eventually respond to her wish.
Until
last week, however, she couldn’t still write and had to thumb-print her
permission to have her story written, “with the hope that readers would be able
to know of my plight and extend their support to help me sustain my lifetime
treatment”.
Her
hands remains swollen from the introduction of
“arteriovenous” fistula on her forearm, wrist, upper
arm and even on the edge of her neck or wherever an artery and vein is
found for access to the bloodstream needed during dialysis.
Soon,
her doctors said, she has to have an “arteriovenous graft” (AVG), or the
insertion of a plastic tube required of “people whose veins can not
tolerate a fistula”.
The
implant is not so urgent, she said. Otherwise, she would be at a loss on how to
produce P15,000 for the procedure. Bound by a common ailment, Amor and Mary
Grace last week knocked on doors together, on behalf of the rest, especially
those on their Wednesday-Saturday dialysis schedule. Together with
their own papers, they submitted the documents of 18 others who will
take the cue with them at the PCSO before dawn on June 14.
One
of the 20 won’t be going, the two said
last Monday. They just heard news a fellow patient had just passed on. Last
Thursday morning, Amor texted that another had also died.
Make
that still 20, Amor said. “May kapalit na pupunta yong dalawang nawala.Ang problema
baka hindi kakasya yong dalawang van.” If so, then two or four of relatives
representing patients who couldn’t travel would have to ride the bus.
Samaritans
out there can ring up Amor (09214193776) and Mary Grace (09282179154)..
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