Donors prop up kidney patients
>> Monday, November 19, 2012
By Ramon Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY
-- Reading articles like this has been quite costly for some readers.
Among them
is Leonard Licanio, an engineer who recently rang the cellphone numbers of
several seriously ill patients, asking to meet them so he could hand them fund
support for their twice-a-week hemodialysis treatment sessions for kidney
failure.
The latest
beneficiary of Engr. Licanio’s kindness is Marilou Matias, a 25-year old mother
of a five-year old girl from Villasis, Pangasinan who goes for dialysis sessions
every Monday and Thursday at the Baguio General Hospital and medical
Center.
“As he did
for others, Engr. Licanio gave P1,200 for my wife’s treatment,” said
Simplicio Pescador, Marilou’s common-law husband .
Some of
Marilou’s other benefactors were also repeat donors, among them an anonymous
soul who contributed P5,000 and the owner of a restaurant along Session Road
who contributed P1,500.
A certain
Moises Ursais handed P2,000 while Shoshin, a small foundation based in southern
Germany, bankrolled two treatment sessions worth P4,400.
“Please
allot also two dialysis sessions for DintonBasta,” advised Shoshin founder
Julian Chees, a former world champion in shotokan karate who earned the
distinction of being the only non-German by birth to have been drafted into the
German national karate team.
Basta, a
25-year old former carrot washer at the La Trinidad Trading Post in Benguet,
also earlier received P1,200 from Engr. Lecanio, P1,000 from RogelAtiwag and
P5,000 from the same anonymous donor who supported Matias.
Shoshin
likewise provided two dialysis sessions for 27-year Sharon Valdez Dalida, whose
parents now spend their waking hours knocking on doors to sustain her
blood-cleansing treatment on the Monday-Wednesday-Saturday schedule at the Baguio
General Hospital and Medical Center.
The
foundation last Tuesday handed P2,000 to 45-year old widow Wilma Tomas who is
suffering from heart ailment, goiter and complications of diabetes.
Unlike previous amounts given her, the sum was not for her medications.
“I badly
need so I can reach San Juan Hospital (in Metro-Manila) where my daughter
Suzanne is confined,” Wilma said.
Suzanne, a
“tiangge” store helper in San Juan receiving P150 a day had a bad
fall early in the week and had to be hospitalized, Wilma was told.
As this was
being written, Gloria Tiyad, sister of dialysis patient John m ark Tiyad,
texted that a certain Edna met her at the SM Baguio with a P3,000 support to
her ailing brother.
Likewise,
Mary Adian, a farmer-housewife originally from Nueva Vizcaya, texted that an
anonymous donor met her last Monday infront of the Red Cross building along
Harrison Road, Baguio and gave her P6,000.
The amount
was for her husband Sabino, a diabetic who was blinded by the disease and
is also undergoing twice-a-week dialysis treatment at the BGHMC.
Another
donor who declined to be identified also offered P2,000 last Oct. 10 at the La
Trinidad Trading Post.
Other Samaritans may want to reach
out to Adon is Togana, a 45-year old former public school teacher who is into
his fourth year fighting skin and tissue cancer.
“It’s a difficult and protracted
battle but it’s more difficult to give up,” he said upon his return to Baguio
recently from flap surgery, radiotherapy and skin grafting sessions in various
hospitals in Metro-Manila.
Adonis lost his wife, a fellow
teacher, and their baby, during in 2005, leaving him to raise their
two other kids, Trojan and Jezrelle.
Samaritans may ring him up at
ce3llphone number 09291577446.
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