By
Marionne Molintas-Ruiz
MANKAYAN, Benguet- Public private partnership (PPP)
between government agencies and private firms is proving crucial in the success
of programs especially in districts that need assistance.
In celebration of last month’s Kidney Awareness Month,
the Department of Health (DoH), National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI) and the Department of Education
conducted a nationwide program on Renal Disease Awareness and Urinalysis for
grades V and VI in public elementary schools.
NKTI’s program consultant Dr. Alma Suclad and
DOH’s Dr. Shelly Aral stressed
the importance of instilling awareness and the importance of the Renal System
in the elementary level especially those located in the country side where potable
water and access to proper information is challenge.
Dubbed as the Renal Disease Control Program (RED COP),
the program seeks to inform school children how their daily diet affects the
health of a commonly unheralded vital organ, the kidneys.
In Mankayan, School District Supervisor Joseph A. Pacpaco and
its five district school nurses faced the problem of implementing the program
for lack of mobilization in reaching far flung schools.
Help arrived through a partnership with Far
Southeast Gold Resources Inc. (FSGRI), which extended its support by mobilizing
their team of community facilitators.
The FSGRI community facilitators, who also happen to be
registered nurses, conducted the educational lectures on the vital functions of
the kidneys.
“The partnership between FSGRI and Dep-Ed paved the way
for higher impact because we were able to conduct the program on a massive
scale instead of being selective considering the location of the schools,”
Pacpaco said.
“It was timely that FSGRI also had a school comfort room
improvement program,” said District Nurse II, Mila Paciteng. “FSGRI handled the
educational lectures on how kidneys work, the effect of one’s diet and how
cleanliness of a comfort room can affect the renal system.”
Zhimar Carriga,
another Dep-Ed district nurse, lauded the FSGRI facilitators for using
Kankana-ey, the local dialect. “We observed that the students easily understood
the information and were not hesitant to ask questions,” she quips.
Guinaoang Elementary School principal Asterio C. Madalla hopes
that the program could be institutionalized. “This program can monitor the
students having kidney problems so
that we could also inform the parents and the students on how they could adapt
healthier options,” said Madalla.
Twenty-two district elementary schools benefitted
from the kidney awareness lecture and urinalysis program, and a total of 756
students underwent Urinalysis.
According to Paciteng, “The urinalysis results
yielded unusually high Leukocytes in the urine of most of the students tested.
Some even have blood in their urine indicating a need for a more serious
measure to alleviate their conditions.”
Johanna
Sinong, a grade V teacher at the Guianaoang Elementary School discloses,
“Our students are now aware of the functions of their kidneys. They now know
the importance of proper diet to avoid renal diseases.”
Her pupil RaizabelleBriones attests to this. “Now I know why my
parents always serve Kamote (sweet potato) during our merienda time and avoid soft drinks, and whenever
I see my friends eating junkfood I remind them of what it can do to their
kidneys,” she concludes in Ilocano.
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