By Ramon
Dacawi
A fund support of
P5,000 dialysis patient Martina Pacatiw Macario received last week will not
stop her from sleeping –when she can – on a pew of the chapel of the Baguio
General Hospital where she had found sanctuary in a determined move to save on
costs and sustain her life-saving blood cleansing sessions she has to undergo
for a life-time.
The amount coming from
an unidentified Korean woman who coursed it through courier at the public
market in La Trinidad, Benguet last Monday, is too precious to be used for
transport fare and other needs outside dialysis.
The support triggers a
retelling of Macario’s story – so she can thank the donor and for other
would-be Samaritans to follow the anonymous donor’s act.
Martina, a 50-year old
native of Tadayan, Pudong, Kapangan, Benguet, is now on her third year of
twice-a-week hemodialysis. In May, 2013, she was rushed to the Baguio General
Hospital and Medical Center where doctors told her her kidneys had totally
failed.
Three years earlier,
on May 29, 2010, she was released after serving 20 years and one week in
prison.
She was sentenced
after she was caught trying to sell marijuana in a vain effort to improve the
living condition of her family.
“While client (was)
serving her sentence, she made effort to send money to her children who (were)
in the custody of her parentws in Kapangan,.” Noted social worker Charity
Mabini in a report she made to help Martina look for support to her life-time
dialysis.
“(Her) children have
their own families already (and) can not extend their (sustained) support
anymore to Martina since their income is not even enough (for) the needs
ofthier families” Mabini added.
Martina eventually
found alife-time partner from Tayug, Pangasinan where she goes home to when she
could after her dialysis sessions here. She is hooked to the dialysis machine
from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Mondays and from 11 a.m. on Wednesdays and Saturdays.
The prohibitive costs
of dialysis (P2,200 per session), forced her to sleep Monday and Tuesday
evenings to save on travel costs while waiting for her treatment on Wednesdays.
Chances are Martina’s
story would be told again, after another Samaritan reaches out to her and she
asks if the support can be acknowledged through the local papers. She can be
contacted through cellphone number 09994699940.
Also in financial
distress, another woman-patient requested last week that her condition be also
told, hoping Samaritans out there would also help her sustain her life-time
dialysis.
Sixty two-year old
Remedios Bagsao of Paoay, Atok, Benguet could hardly sustain her twice-a-week
dialysis at the Benguet General Hospital in La Trinidad, Benguet.
The patient began her
dialysis in June, 2013 and has exhausted the resources of her three children
the past three years. The family’s financial condition took another blow when
her husband died two years ago.
“It leaves me with no
recourse but to seek help through your publication,” she said.
Samaritans may ring up
her cellphone number 09395684672.
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