FOR those of us in good health the issue of health services
may mean very little while for some it is the difference between life and
death.
Today I decided to spend my lunch hour visiting the country's
premier public health facility, Port Moresby General Hospital. I wanted to see firsthand
the state of our health services in our Nation’s Capital and meet the people
who keep it running as well as the patients that fill it.
I arrived unannounced and
fortunate the staff were kind enough to show me around the many wards, ICU,
Surgical, Cancer and Emergency divisions to name a few. I even toured the
laundry and maintenance divisions, whom would normally be ignored but all play
a critical role in keeping the hospital functioning.
I was privileged enough to meet
many patients and their careers, some on the path to recovery while others
critically ill.
There was one patient in ICU I
was moved by and his name is Wilfred Nukuitu. Wilfred comes from Biun South
Bougainville and an employee of Finance Department. He has been confined to a
Hospital bed in ICU for the past 8 months.
He has a very rare disease,
called Myasthenia gravis. It’s a disease that causes weakness in the skeletal
muscles, which are responsible for breathing and moving parts of the body,
including the arms and legs.
It becomes a life-threatening
condition when the muscles that control breathing become too weak to do their
job. This explains why Wilfred is hooked up to a ventilator to assist him with
breathing, essentially keeping him alive.
There is no cure for myasthenia
gravis, but treatment can help relieve signs and symptoms, such as weakness of
arm or leg muscles, double vision, drooping eyelids, and difficulties with speech,
chewing, swallowing and breathing.
Wilfred was the only patient who
was in a conscious state in ICU and when I walked over to greet him who greeted
me with a big smile. Of course I couldn't help but smile back.
The disease has affected
Wilfred's ability to speak so I had to rely on his career to tell me his story.
If there is one thing I've
learned in life that is one of most precious things in this world is when a
person struggling to survive, living in pain but will still muster what little
strength they have to greet you with a smile.
I promised Wilfred I will be back
soon to visit him again and I intend to keep my promise.
So why share this story with you?
Well I don't expect everyone to
understand why I do what I do or why I will stop at nothing to bring down a
corrupt system of Government including those behind it.
It is because I am blessed every
day to be touched and inspired by people like Winfred who are stuck in a
hospital bed and need some of us to fight their fights for them. - Via Garamut News.
-
Commentary
by Bryan Kramer, MP.
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