BENCHWARMER
Ramon
S. Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- Despite lapses that we should have
seen earlier, the signature campaign towards a government policy making
dialysis a medical procedure free of charge was launched through “Kapihan Sa
Cordillera” last Tuesday morning.
The Baguio media were there to boost the campaign
initiated in tandem with Regional Director Helen Res-Tibaldo for the growing
number of families who have to bear the continuous emotional and financial
burden of helping keep alive a member stricken by what doctors diagnose as
“end-stage renal disease” or kidney failure.
Dialysis is expensive, averaging P10,000 a month for
one undergoing the four-hour blood-cleansing procedure that doctors advise
should be done four times a week for a life-time. Even for those submitting to
twice-a-week treatment, the cost is staggering.
The figure does not include regular injections,
life-time medications, check-ups and hospitalization, especially so that kidney
disease also causes a host of other illnesses such as imbalance in blood
composition and pressure, heart trouble and so on. Diabetes, which is a major trigger
for kidney failure, also causes impaired vision and blindness.
Given the prohibitive costs and our culture, it’s
difficult to even attempt at dreaming or thinking of possible or probable
kidney transplant. In a country where even the educated ones hesitate to donate
blood, - this amidst the assurances of medics that it’s healthy for normal
people do so. - it would be blasphemy to give a relative the inkling that he or
she might consider being a donor.
I know of a widow whose husband’s kidneys, eyes and
other organs were “harvested” when he died as it was his wish that these be
donated and used by people in need of them.
The couple learned of this beautiful practice when
they migrated to the United States, leading him to also decide what has become
a normal act there but an unthinkable decision here. Given the prohibitive
costs of the procedure and the life-time medication to prevent rejection of the
implant, it would be foolhardy to resort to transplant here.
We’ve heard of people who had undergone the
procedure but went back to dialysis for failure to financially maintain their
post-surgery medication.
Dialysis is a free medical procedure in the
United States, Canada and other well-developed countries where we can only
dream of being in. The first time I was in California, just when my kidneys
were about to fail, I thought deep, twice, thrice, and for the nth time staying
there for good over their revelation that dialysis is a free of charge as
it is an emergency, life-saving, albeit- temporary treatment.
N’ya pay ngay naadal mo idiay? (What else did you
learn there?),” friends at Luisa’s Café, the newsman’s hang-out along Session
Rd. asked me when I came back after stepping on snow with now
Baguio Midland Courier editor Harley Palangchao.
As Harley and I gained weight quite fast there, I
recalled our visit taught us the difference between “eat all you can” and “eat
all you have”. I realized you can eat all you can while you are there. Here, you
eat all you have yet you cannot still have your fill. There, you can save to
eventually be able to buy Cadillac. Here, you can not save anything towards
having a Tamaraw FX.
Among those who hosted us there were
expatriate Cordillerans who wanted to foot the bill from day one. They wanted
to know if we wouldn’t be back home soon, for them to go on vacation so they
could bring us around. Some were nurses who told me later on I should have told
them I would eventually need to have a tube called a “stent” in my heart to
keep my blood circulating.
They wanted the operation there as it would cost a
fortune here. When they learned about my re-piping, they asked me to report to
Western Union to prevent complications over my seeing the over-all hospital
bill.
That’s why we love reading former city prosecutor
Benny Carantes. He can call a spade a spade, as he had been doing so, long
before President Duterte came to the scene. Last week, boss Benny mentioned
something about the prohibitive costs of being hospitalized in a language that,
while it may hurt some people, speaks the truth.
I’m blessed because most if not all my doctors
scrapped their fees, as if they owed me something in the first place. What
triggers hollering is when you find in your hospital bill a P20 charge for “use
of scissors” and P300 for wheeling-in fee, or a door away from the recovery
room to the regular room.
But where were we? We’re into that signature
campaign to make dialysis free of charge, for the sake of patients who could
not cope with the costs of staying alive. The campaign is in memory of those
who had gone ahead, they who decided to kick the bucket so that something
is left behind for their families to live on. It’s in memory of Jane Lamlamag
Garcia, a 34-year old mother who asked to be brought home to Mankayan, Benguet
, saying she was tired and already wanted to rest . A miner’s wife, she began
her life-time, twice-a-week hemodialysis treatment in December, 2015.
Recently, her daughter, six-year old Princess Arcia,
was diagnosed for leukemia or blood cancer. Recently her other daughter,
three-yrear old Cathy Sy, was diagnosed for epilepsy. After Jane’s death, her
husband Romeo brought her to Bauko, Mt. Province where she was buried. After
that, Romeo submitted himself for confinement at the Notre Dame de Lourdes
Hospital here in Baguio. From there, he went to the Baguio General Hospital
where his daughter Princess was confined.
“Imbaga diay doctor nga madaddadael metten ti
kidneyk, Stage 2 kano (The doctor told me my own kidney is also being
destroyed, Stage 2),” he said while visiting her daughter.I didn’t how to
respond, but had the luck of turning over to him P10,000 sent by expatriate
Samaritan Julian Chees, the karateka with a heart, so Romeo could have a start
in figuring out how to unravel the mess his orphaned family is in because of
poverty.
Whatever, please wait for developments as newsmen
who belong to the computer generation are coming up with a free-dialysis
signature campaign online so that fellow Cordillerans and Filipinos can
sign to save lives. (e-mail: mondaxbench@yahooo.com for comments).
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