BENCHWARMER
Ramon
Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- If not
for the kindness of friends and strangers, I should be running on empty by now.
The effects of diabetes have caught up with me, rendering me a slave to the
dialysis machine the past two years for kidney failure.
My pro bono
doctor, nephrologist Josefina Luspian.
advised a four-times-a-week dialysis treatment, if only to slow down the
debilitating effects of having too much sugar in the blood.
They
include heart ailment, erratic blood pressure, failing eyesight and anemia.
Costs of
dialysis, which has to be for a life-time (unless one undergoes kidney
transplant, which is far more costly), are staggering. Dialysis averages P2,500 per
session, excluding the figures for maintenance medicine, injection to generate
red blood corpuscles and occasional blood transfusion and hospital check-in.
The
prohibitive costs led housewife Jane Garcia to go home for good
to Mankayan, Benguet when she could no longer sustain the
costs of twice-a-week blood-cleansing session at the Baguio General Hospital
and Medical Center. She gave up and was buried in Bauko, Mt. Province, her
hometown.
The 34-year
old housewife left behind daughters Cathy Sy, who is suffering from epilepsy,
and six-year old Princess Arcia, who is battling leukemia.
To top it
all, her husband, miner Romeo, was also diagnosed for kidney failure. He
learned this when he was hospitalized after he buried his wife.
The
family’s plight is enough reason for me to stop hurling unanswered questions to
the ceiling over my own predicament. Unlike Romeo, I have buddies, cockfighting
aficionados who recently staged a cock derby, raising funds so I won’t have to
be scrounging for the next payment for the four-hour blood-cleansing session.
Non-gamblers,
non-bettors may frown, but I am deeply indebted to the cockfight aficionados
led by barangay captain Edward Aclopen of Gibraltar Barangay who staged the
derby to keep alive my chances of sustaining a medical procedure that has to be
repeated again and again for a life-time.
I owe it to
Tuba cockpit owner, former city councilor Antonio Tabora Jr. and the rest of
the United Baguio-Benguet Breeders Association (U3BA) for mounting and
supporting the fund drive.
Truth to
tell, it is at the cockpit where you find honesty at its best. Aficionados are
also used to throwing part of their bet money into the ring, for the relatives
of a patient or somebody who just passed away, to pick up for the medicine or
the funeral costs.
Purists or
former bettors who now consider cockfighting no less than a vice may frown but
the fact remains that it is in the cockpit where one finds instant support than
perhaps anywhere else, except in charitable institutions.
I’m lucky,
too, for having known other people who would now and then greet me on the
sidewalk and then grip into my wrist some amount to help sustain my dialysis.
These occasions leave me voiceless, trying to hold back tears.
“You don’t
have to write about it,” one cock-fight enthusiast, a lawyer, told me last
week. “But I have to,” I said. “Then you don’t have to identify all of us,” he
advised.
Anonymity
was what a Korean wanted when he or she advised a messenger last week to
deliver her/his support of P5,000 to dialysis patient Martina Pacatiw
Macario..
Macario, a
57-year old mother of two, woke me up while I was attached to the machine last
Monday. She was enthusiastic, telling how this stranger sent his/her support
through emissary.
Among the
many dialysis patients, Miriam stands out like miner Romeo Garcia, if only
because of what she has been through and still has to undergo.
Originally
from Tadayan, Pudong, Kapangan, Benguet, Macario spent 20 years of her life in
prison for trying to make a quick buck peddling marijuana to government agents.
While serving
her prison term, she tried to send money to her children who were in the
custody of her parents in Kapangan. She thought misfortune was over after she
was released from prison in June, 2010.
In May,
2013, however, she was diagnosed for end-stage renal failure and was advised to
undergo thrice-a-week dialysis (Monday-Wednesday-Saturday) in order to survive.
To cut on
costs, she sleeps on Monday evenings on a pew inside the chapel of the Baguio
General Hospital and waits for her next dialysis on Wednesdays instead of
commuting to Tayug Pangasinan.
Those who
can help her may ring up her cellphone – 0999-469-9940.
Other
Samaritans may reach out to Marie Joy Ligudon, at 14 the youngest dialysis
patient at the BGHMC. The kid, for years now under the care of her
adoptive parent, Gina Epe, has just been out of the hospital for complications.
Samaritans
may ring Epe’s cellphone number – 09198169234. As did former world karate
champion Julian Chees, now head of the Julian Chees-Shoshin Kinderhilfe
Foundation in Germany who recently sent 400 euros for the girl’s treatment.
Oss, Master
Julian.
No comments:
Post a Comment