Tag: kidney

  • Kidney Patient Robbed Of Last $50 In Sembawang

    Kidney Patient Robbed Of Last $50 In Sembawang

    All the kidney patient wanted was a drink from the vending machine.

    She ended up getting into a fight for her handbag that contained the last $50 she had for the week to feed her two sick sons.

    The robber was too strong and made off with her bag after a short but violent struggle.

    She was left with a sprained arm and an anxious wait of several days for her salary to come in so she could put food on the table for her family.

    Madam Jurina Johari, 42, has been a kidney patient for 25 years.

    The part-time assistant pharmacist was on her way home from work when she felt thirsty.

    She stopped to buy a drink at a vending machine at Block 512, Wellington Circle in Sembawang at around midnight on April 24. She was retrieving the can when she felt a violent tug.

    Speaking to The New Paper last Thursday from her one-room rental flat, the mother of two sons, aged 21 and 22, said: “I was flung around. I managed to only catch a glimpse of the robber.”

    She said she suspected the robber was a man in his 20s.

    Madam Jurina said: “I held on to it (bag) as tightly as I could because the money in my bag was all I had. I didn’t want to let it go.”

    A male passer-by, who was walking home with his mother, also gave chase, but he was too late as well.

    Madam Jurina made a police report the next day and wrote to TNP to highlight the incident.

    She said: “I was trembling. Everything happened in less than a minute.”

    Madam Jurina, who is in the process of finalising her divorce from her husband of nearly three years, also lives with her mother, 60, who is diabetic and has heart problems.

    Choking back tears, Madam Jurina said: “When I lost the money, I felt like I failed as a mother to put food on the table for my children.”

    STRUGGLE

    Madam Jurina has been struggling with chronic kidney disease since she was 17 – she had her right kidney removed eight years later.

    Her older son, Mr Muhammad Shafiee Junadi, who is waiting to enlist into national service, was diagnosed with mild chronic kidney disease when he was an infant.

    He has been a part-time mover after graduating from the Institute of Technical Education two years ago.

    Said Madam Jurina: “He gets sick easily, so I was worried that he took on such a labour-intensive job.

    “But he assured me the daily pay will allow him to support himself, so I’m just glad.”

    She added that Mr Shafiee would at times complain of aches and pain near his left kidney, but the family cannot afford to seek treatment at the hospital.

    “Medication for the four of us can amount to more than $1,000 a month.

    “So we visit the doctor only when one of us is really sick. Otherwise, we just try to bear the pain,” said Madam Jurina.

    “After I was robbed, Shafiee gave me $50 and told me to buy groceries. So I cooked one dish, reheated it for two to three days before cooking again.”

    She said the money lasted her till she received her salary on April 28.

    Madam Jurina’s younger son, Mr Muhammad Shahirul Junadi, was diagnosed with autism when he was one.

    He attends the Goodwill, Rehabilitation and Occupational Workshop at the Cerebral Palsy Alliance Singapore (CPAS) from 10am to 4pm on weekdays.

    The workshop provides vocational training and sheltered employment for adults aged 16 and above with cerebral palsy and other associated disability conditions.

    When Madam Jurina called out to Mr Shahirul, he responded with a bright smile before lunging into her arms.

    Planting a kiss on Mr Shahirul’s forehead, Madam Jurina said: “I couldn’t work full-time because there must always be someone to take care of him. So when my mother is sick, I have to take some time off work to help.”

    SOCIAL AID

    The family has also been receiving monthly food rations such as rice, biscuits and tinned food from the Lee Foundation through CPAS.

    A Ministry of Social and Family Development spokesman said Madam Jurina’s mother, Madam Saminam, was provided with ComCare’s cash assistance, as well as support for water and electrical bills, from November 2015 to January 2016.

    Representatives from the Sembawang grassroots group told TNP they are looking at how they can provide further assistance to Madam Jurina and her family.

    Still traumatised by the incident, Madam Jurina raised her concerns about the groups of men seen drinking and hanging out at her void deck every weekend.

    TNP spoke to 10 neighbours, who shared the same concern.

    One of them, Madam Sheela Singh, 65, who goes on regular walks around the neighbourhood with her wheelchair-bound husband, said she has seen the group of men get rowdy at times.

    “They will sit in groups of seven to eight people and drink. Especially on weekends, they can be quite noisy and usually leave the place in a mess,” said the retiree.

    Another neighbour, Mr Norjohan Buniran, 43, a security guard, added that the problem has not improved since he moved in six years ago.

    He said: “I have daughters, so I’m very worried about their safety. That’s why I don’t allow my children to play at the void deck.”

    Madam Jurina said she is now more careful when she walks home at night after work.

    “Even the idea of going to the shop at night scares me. I hope this incident will be a lesson to not only myself, but other residents as well to be more vigilant,” she added.

    A police spokesman said investigations are ongoing.

    “Medication for the four of us can amount to more than $1,000 a month. So we only visit the doctor when one of us is really sick. Otherwise, we just try to bear the pain.”

    “When I lost the money, I felt like I failed as a mother to put food on the table for my children.”

    – Madam Jurina Johari

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 51 Year Old Kidney Patient Looking For A Flexible Office Job

    51 Year Old Kidney Patient Looking For A Flexible Office Job

    Thousands of Singaporeans go to the hundreds of dialysis centres every day spread all over the island due to kidney failure.

    They do it thrice a week religiously forever or alternately they receive a kidney from a donor of which they need to pay $200,000 for a hospital transplant ops.

    We visited 51-year-old Indera who faces kidney failure recently and he has just started his dialysis two months back.

    He is undergoing his dialysis when we visited him.

    He is extremely positive and could even passed as a spokesman for kidney failure patients.

    He pays $200 per session at a private dialysis centre due to his $4000/month income as a cheuffeur cum asst working for a Korean company.

    NKF dialysis is alot cheaper but there is a salary cap.

    Unfortunately he lost his job recently and has to make do with his PR wife pay of $1700 as a F & B captain.

    They have a 1 1/2 year baby.

    To complicate matters, while waiting for his BTO flat they have to rent a 3-room flat paying $2300 a month.

    Mr Adnan is looking for a job in the office and if you are open to hiring a guy on dialysis please let us know.

    No one should be left behind.

    Editor’s note: visit was done together with Ms Janna Rehanna.

     

    Source: Gilbert Goh

  • Singapore Diabetes Patients Among The Youngest In Asia

    Singapore Diabetes Patients Among The Youngest In Asia

    A new local study on patients with type 2 diabetes across nine Asian territories showed that Singapore has the highest proportion of younger patients.

    The study among 319 patients was conducted by the Asian Diabetes Foundation from 2012 to 2014, and included patients from Singapore, Thailand, China, the Philippines, Hong Kong, India, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.

    The study found that three in 10 patients in Singapore had diabetes before turning 40.

    Younger patients also fared poorly in terms of glucose control, hypertension and cholesterol management compared to older patients.

    Hence, doctors said it is timely that a new drug called JANUMET XR was approved by the Health Sciences Authority last year to help patients with type 2 diabetes maintain their blood sugar level.

    Currently, patients require multiple drugs for blood sugar control. But doctors said this new drug, which combines two powerful diabetic agents, will help to lower patients’ glucose levels in one dose.

    A total of 498,190 people in Singapore have type 2 diabetes and achieving glycaemic control continues to be a challenge for people with diabetes.

    “Diabetes has no symptoms. Because of that people do not care — they think they are doing well,” said Dr Ben Ng, a consultant physician at Mount Elizabeth Novena Specialist Medical Centre. “On top of that, many other lifestyle issues such as too good a diet, lack of exercise and a sedentary lifestyle all contribute to increasing weight and rate of diabetes.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com