Strengthening organ donation
>> Tuesday, July 31, 2018
BENCHWARMER
Ramon
Dacawi
Among items on the
status of organ donation in this country, I gathered through the
internet this announcement from the Philippine Red Cross that it is
venturing into this life-saving business. More often than not, it seems efforts
on this are pronouncements than results, as is the case in Third World
countries like ours.
I’m into
dialysis for three years now but have no temerity to open up, to ask any of my
relatives to consider donating a kidney to save me from years of expensive
and time-consuming blood-cleansing through the dialysis machine four
times a week.
The reason is
culture. Many of us Ifugaos, and Igorots in general, still consider
blood-letting, a simple life-saving procedure, as “lawa” (bad). When my
youngest brother Manuel, a woodcarver who did not pursue formal education, was
killed in a stabbing incident, some of our relatives who were at the funeral
parlor told me to tell the embalmer to let all his organs intact. They were
more concerned of keeping his body intact than getting the results of autopsy.
Beyond the
dictates of “ugali”, the Philippines still has a long way to go in saving
millions through organ donation. The latest I read from the maze of articles on
the subject from the internet was an undated news release from the Philippine
Red Cross announcing it was going into an organ donation campaign.
“(Department
of Health) records reveal that only 36 people have managed to (donate their
organs) last year as compared to Spain, the largest organ donor country
worldwide, which registered a total of 1,360 organ donors that same
period”.
This
pronouncement, when set into motion, is what this country needs beyond the
present practice of the Land Transportation Office of indicating on driver’s licenses
they issue which parts of his/her body would be “harvested” for transplant in
case of accidents.
The issue is
how to tap people who may not be drivers but who the Department of Health
should convince to also donate their organs in case they figure in fatal
accidents. Where do non-drivers register as potential
donors of eyes, hearts, kidneys, livers and tissues.
The issue is
how to connect would-be organ donors to a network with potential recipients of
body parts to facilitate transplant, a system already in place in the United
States and other advanced countries.
Unless a
system is in place, as the Philippine Red Cross announced on establishing the
same, it would remain difficult for us ailing Filipinos to hope for a
transplant here.
That’s the
reason why I wrote basketball legend Lebron James. I asked him, in a Hail Mary
shot, if he could sponsor me for a kidney transplant in the United States.
It’s a long
shot, I know, but I had to write him so that I would have something to hope
for. For their words prodding me on, I’m grateful to a lot of Filipinos here
and abroad who reacted kindly to my attempt. For whatever the present
difficulties I face, life is still beautiful and should be lived. (e-mail:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments.)
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