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Saturday, June 30, 2012

Kidney: A Gift to New Lease of Life


by Noemi B. Edaga

Financial constrain, self medication, lack of medical awareness compounded an anthill problem into a stone: a kidney stone.
 Rufo Paitan, who is fondly called Pong by family and friends, works in a piggery farm as manager. At age 31, he was at the prime of his health. Robust and athletic.
Everything was well with his work; save that schistosomiasis is phenomenon in his job site. To shield him from getting the disease, he buys himself potable water when he goes downtown. For two years, he survived from schistosomiasis but landed in a hospital diagnosed with infection and stone in his left kidney.

Heal Thyself for 9 Years
With medication and therapy administered on Pong, sand-like matters were passed out trough his urine. After some time, the infection and stone bothered him no more. He felt fine and forgot about it.

In year 2000, arthritis inflicted him. He consulted his arthritic friends for medicine and opted to self- medication. Unsurprisingly, it alleviated his pain and healed him. Believing in the effectiveness of his friend’s prescription, Pong continued to self medicate during painful arthritic bouts; until he was 3 days down with fever.

Creatinine High in 2009
Blood chemistry and a visit to a nephrologist indicated that his creatinine was high at 875. Pong bought the prescription, felt good and defied what he called “the shocking truth of his going into dialysis sessions.”

Barely seven months after the doctor’s advice for dialysis, the defiant Pong was again admitted in a hospital, this time with creatinine recorded very high at of 1200.

Family’s Prodding
Concerned for his well-being, family members had successfully prodded him to submit for a dialysis, where he met a fellow kidney patient who referred him to Dr. Michael Abutazil, a nephrologist and team leader of the Western Mindanao Medical Center (WMMC) Renal Transplant Unit (RTU).

Dialysis has become a very costly tri-weekly thing for Pong. He said, his dialysis expenses range from P10,000 to P12,000.00 a week, covering maintenance and transportation expenses to and fro Calatunan, Sindangan, his residence in Zamboanga del Norte  and to Zamboanga City.

“The procedure, travel, maintenance cost and  the fear of harboring all sorts of infection as my immune system was low every after dialysis, made me entertain the thought of submitting myself to kidney transplantation,” Pong articulated in the dialect.


The WMMC and the Renal Transplant Unit (RTU)
Little did Pong know that he would be part of WMMC-RTUs  history as the kidney transplantation  patient who underwent the first ever renal transplantation done at WMMC of Zamboanga City with a sounding success.

Dr. Abutazil, WMMC-RTU Head, highlighted the national government’s effort to make renal transplantation accessible every citizen, saying, “the Department of Health, NKTI and partner agencies have bonded together to make renal patient treatment more accessible in the Zamboanga Peninsula and the neighboring regions.”

Zamboanga City Mayor Celso L. Lobregat and Dr. Abutazil were one in saying that the success of the first ever renal transplantation in WMMC is a milestone in medical tourism and will help promote Zamboanga City as venue for renal transplantation in the future.

The WMMC Renal Transplant Team’s Good Job
On October 1, 2011, at age 45, Pong prayerfully tendered himself to God and to the expertise of the WMMC’s Renal Transplant Unit composed of Doctors Abutazil, John Ahalajal (transplant surgeon), Jayson Sangkula (transplant surgeon), Paterno Cabrera III (surgeon for the donor), Henry Ratag (surgeon for the patient), Tatad Kalbit (urologist) and Albert Tan and Neil Gallenegro (anaesthesiologists), who all did a very good job.

Road to Recovery Wisdom
After the tough ordeal, Pong advices friends, family and love ones to practice a healthy lifestyle and abide by the doctor’s prescription.

To date, Pong still sees Dr. Abutazil for the monthly check-up. All the time since he was diagnosed with a kidney disease until now on post-operation; he and his family is still on a steep financial climb to sustain his fight against infection and organ rejection.

He is ever grateful to his friends and family; wife, Lolot; siblings Dodong Tirso (Dodong), Quirino (Jr.) and Ropisa (Omping) who financially support him through; more so to his cousin, Virgilio Solito, who gifted him with his kidney for a lease of new life.

“Get rid of vices as it would harm our body, abide by the doctor’s prescription because repentance always comes last,” Pong added in closing.

RTU and PhilHealth Work at Best
Zamboanga’s RTU continues to serve its purpose. After Pong, two more had successful kidney transplantation in March and June. Another is scheduled on July 2012.

On the other hand, Dr. Abutazil said during the recent launch of the PIA Media Forum in Zamboanga City that the  Health Department and concurrent Philhealth Chair Dr. Enrique T. Ona announced they will subsidize 70%  of  the kidney transplantation costs, making it extremely affordable for patients to undergo renal transplant.

 “We’re very glad that effective June, we will be receiving P628,000 subsidy coming from Philhealth for each transplanted kidney thus the patient only needs to shell out P160,000 as the package at WMCC costs P850,000,” Dr. Abutazil said. (ALT/NBE/PIA9)