Odysseys of George

As life cruises along; vita non est vivere sed valere

Browsing Posts published in October, 2006

Goodbye Seha!

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The lead singer of one of my favourite bands, Freedom,Seha passed away today from Lung Cancer. My condolences……

Nation
Wednesday October 11, 2006

Seha, former Freedom lead singer, dies after bout with cancer

PETALING JAYA: Seha, the former lead singer for local pop group Freedom, died at Hospital Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday.

The popular singer had been undergoing treatment for cancer for about two months before she passed away at about 8am this morning.

Seha is survived by her husband and two children.

I received a call. This was yesterday. Across the line, I hear a familiar voice tainted by her sobbing. Through those, I heard the message that made me shiver. ” My cousin, she is 20, had a fit and collapsed.” Being in the medical line herself, she continued,”She arrived to the hospital with a GCS(Glasgow Coma Scale) of 3, intubated her and done a CTscan which shows a huge bleed within the brain. The Neurosurgical doctor saw and said that they cannot salvage her.” Silence was my response. Then the advice came and she felt better. I informed my colleagues in that hospital to have a look on my behalf. Then, I realised, probably as being part of the Transplant Organ Procurement (TOP) team for Selayang, I had to impress upon this doctor of organ donation.

Lying there in the hospital is a 20 year old lady who is brain dead but otherwise healthy. She will not survive. Then the faces of those who are in need flashes across. The baby with biliary cirrhosis whose only hope is a healthy liver. Another young lady with young kids to care for but cannot because she will slowly succumb to her failed kidneys. Another man with a large dilated heart failing with every contractions. Nobody sees them, nobody talks about them. All the above will survive for long if they replace their dysfunctioning organs.

Lying there is a 20 year old lady, who for once in her life during her dying hours can make the biggest selfless contribution and save at least another. The commonly transplanted organs are kidneys, heart, liver, lungs and pancreas while the transplantable tissues are eyes, bones, skin and heart valves. Thus a single donor can save the lives of a number of people.

But even the doctors are hard to convince! Some are reluctant to talk or find it shamefull to talk about it. I myself occasionally have difficulties even after successfully convinced at least 2 families to proceed with donations. I am young at this, I agree but there is no awareness created and a sense of need to approach this issue more seriously. This is not a topic thought in medical school and during your early years as a doctor unless your superiors were keen for organ donation little is learned and far from understood.

Is it enough just to sympathize or sholuld you push for donations for your other patients in need when an opportunity comes in however painful it may be!!

Patient’s relative in the grief of the moment do not take to such topics well unless they have had friends or family who have encountered similar issue. Often, the doctor would be seen as unjust and uncaring. We are sorry for being so blunt some times. Communication therefore plays an important role. I am happy I managed to attend a course on this but does the other doctors get the same opportunity? The TOP team are thought on how to communicate, counsel and pick up the bad non verbal cues and cool down the situation quickly rather then get entangled.

Normally, once a patient has been identified, some test are done to confirm that there is irreversible brain death. The doctors involved in confirming brain death are not involved in the transplant procedure.

The issues that came about were initially of religious matter.
For the Buddhist
From the Buddhist point of view, the donation of organs after one’s death for the purpose of restoring the life of another human being clearly constitutes an act of charity – which forms the basis or foundation of a spiritual or religious way of life.
href=”http://www.mst.org.my/MSC_religiousview_BuddhistAttitude.htm”

For the Muslims
The matter was discussed at the National Fatwa Committee meeting on June 23 and 24 in 1970. The committee, assisted by a panel of medical experts, made the decision to allow organ transplantation based on acceptable juridical principles.
href=”http://www.mst.org.my/MSC_religiousview_IslamandOrganDonation.htm”

For the Christians
The Christian Federation of Malaysia encourages all Christians to share Christ’s love with those who are in grave need of replacement for their dysfunctional organs. This should become an integral part of Christian education at home and in the church.
href=”http://www.mst.org.my/MSC_religiousview_AChristianPerspective.htm”

For the Hindus
a Hindu should do whatever is in his means, to eradicate sorrow and sufferings of others. To this end he may donate anything, including his organs, while living or at the time of death. If he can save the life of a patient by donating one of his organs.
href=”http://www.mst.org.my/MSC_religiousview_HinduismandTransplantation.htm”

The other is the ability of the family to say yes to their dying member of the family. For example, I have agreed for organ donation and sustain irreversible head injury, will my family members give consent on my behalf to proceed with the donation? Perhaps yes if I have clearly raised my views to them. What if I haven’t? Is holding a pledge card sufficient for family members to consent?

This is not a comfortable topic to talk about at home for most Asians. But talking about death should not be a taboo. Your wish once put forward makes it easier for beloved members of the family to act on your behalf. Is it fair to make others responsible for such a decision? So what would you do?

Some facts about over local scene:

Organ Transplant

The first organ transplant in Malaysia was a living related renal transplant that took place in Hospital Kuala Lumpur(HKL) on Dec 15th 1975. Since then a total of 1,005* renal transplants have been carried out in the country.
Heart transplant which is only carried out in Institut Jantung Negara(IJN) was first performed on Dec 18th 1997 and 15 heart transplantations have been done since then.
Liver transplant programme was started in 1995 at Subang Jaya Medical Centre(SJMC), and later in Selayang Hospital. To date, about 50 liver transplantations had been carried out with majority from living related donors to paediatric recipients.

*(Source:National Transplant Resource Centre, 30-11-2003)

Tissue Tansplant

Corneal transplants have been performed in Malaysia since the late sixties with a total of 1,231* reported cases.
Bone marrow transplant service was first started in University Hospital Kuala Lumpur for paediatric patients in 1987 and later for adults. This was followed by other centers in HKL (1994), Hospital University Kebangsaan Malaysia (HUKM) and SJMC. Up to November 2003, a total of 634* bone marrow transplantations had been performed, of which 372 were for paediatric and 262 for adult cases.
The first National Tissue Bank was set up in Hospital University Of Science Malaysia (HUSM), Kubang Kerian in 1991. The bank collects, processes, stores and provides tissues such as bone, skin, and amnion from both human and animal sources, to be used by surgeons nationwide as biomaterial or tissue grafts to replace diseased tissues. Total of 4,170 tissue grafts had been done until now. Bone banking services also started in HKL in 1993, a total of 483 grafts had been performed so far.

*(Source:National Transplant Resource Centre, 30-11-2003

The Red Ribbon

Red Ribbon

Anti-drug symbol
AIDS awareness symbol
Heart disease (also uses the red dress symbol), Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome,
Multiple myeloma (burgundy/maroon)

The Blue Ribbon

Blue Ribbon

Anti-tobacco,
Anti-second hand smoke campaign.
Oral Cancer Awareness

The White Ribbon

White Ribbon

The anti-violence against women movement

The Orange Ribbon

orange

Leukaemia,
Multiple Sclerosis,
Lupus ( SLE, Lupus pernio for Sarcoidosis, Lupus vulgaris for TB)
World harmony Day

The Green Ribbon

Green

Organ donation & Transplant
Awareness of Abuse ( mint green)
Special Parents for Special Children
Ovarian Cancers
Prostate Cancer

The Pink Ribbon

pink

Breast cancer

The Purple Ribbon

Purple

Pancreatic Cancer Research
International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on November 25
Awareness for Testicular Cancers

The Jade Ribbon

Jade

Hep B & Liver Cancer

The Metallic Gold Ribbon

Gold
Children Cancer Awareness

The Silver Ribbon

Silver

All Mental Health
Help fight Diabetes

The Brown Ribbon

brown

Brown

Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Colorectal Cancer Awareness

The Black Ribbon

Black

Malignant Melanoma

The Yellow Ribbon

yellow

Bladder cancer,
Endometriosis,
Spina bifida (pale yellow),
Sarcoma (yellow with sunflower),
Hydrocephalus or hydrocephaly,

Others

Lung
lu
Lung Cancer

multi
Autism

cream
Spinal Muscular Atrophy

peri
Pulmonary hypertension,
Eating disorders,
Stomach cancer,
GERD,

peach
Endometrial cancer,
Uterine cancer

lace
Osteoporosis

red w
Leukaemia
Lymphoma

teal
Myasthenia gravis;
Ovarian, cervical, uterine,polycystic ovarian syndrome and all other gynecological cancers;
Substance abuse;
Sexual violence;
Tourette syndrome

Genital
Is there such a thing??

The Ex-Gratia Scheme

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Ex gratia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ex gratia (sometimes ex-gratia) is Latin (lit. ‘by favour’) and is most often used in a legal context. When something has been done ex gratia, it has been done voluntarily, out of kindness or grace. In law, an ex gratia payment is a payment made without the giver recognising any liability or legal obligation.

The phrase is pronounced ex grah-tsee-ah.

In 1994, the government implemented the Ex-Gratia Scheme for government servants who gets involved in an accident or injured in the line of official duty.This was then amended in 2001.to follow the PERKESO/SOCSO Scheme. The difference is that a civil servant do not make contributions to this scheme and therefore the financial benefit is 20% less compared to that of SOCSO.

This scheme covers:
1. ex-gratia payment for accidents and permanent disability or death done either as a bulk payment or monthly payments according to certain formula
2. payments for various partial disability
3. diseases identified as occupational hazards

This scheme actually covers contract staffs, temporary staff and permanent staffs.

Further information:
http://www.treasury.gov.my/

For those who missed this article in The Star (3rd October)

PSD: Doctor who died eligible for ex-gratia

PUTRAJAYA: The doctor who died after an accident in an ambulance is eligible for an ex-gratia payment, according to the Public Services Department (PSD) and Treasury.

PSD corporate communications unit head Hasniah Rashid said although Dr Norbaizura Yahaya was not confirmed as a doctor at the time of death, she was eligible for the compensation as long as she was a government staff member.

She said the ex-gratia scheme was provided for all government servants under a 1994 Treasury circular amended in 2001, which stipulated that a staff member injured or killed while on duty, even if not confirmed, was entitled to compensation.

“In her (Dr Norbaizura’s) case, the Health Ministry is conducting an investigation and will propose the payment (quantum) to the Treasury, which will then relay the final decision to the PSD on the next course of action,” she said.

On Sept 4, Dr Norbaizura was accompanying a patient in an ambulance from Seremban Hospital to Selayang Hospital when the vehicle burst a tyre at the expressway near Bangi and landed in a ditch.

The 24-year doctor from Sabak Bernam, who suffered injuries to her head, ribs and lungs, went into a coma and died 16 days later.

Any comments?

Well I will try to put up the Ex-Gratia file!

Buying a Watch

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Lost my watch recently. It was a nice professional type watch in almost in its 10th year of life and were showing signs of aging. Must have accidently misplaced it either in OT or after the gym.

I did not want something fancy but again another professional type watch simple design for me to wear for functions and meetings. Furthermore, I just invested into a dive watch, the famed SUUNTO D6.

So, with a limited budget, extremely limited budget, I went hunting. After,a while I invested in a watch whose name has been in the industry 120 years founded by Kintaro Hattori in 1881. He called his factory Seikosha(Seiko = miniature;exquisite;success: sha= house). Now called SEIKO.I bought a SEIKO 5 series.

Seiko 5

Any idea what are the pros and cons of this brand? The SUUNTO is still my favaourite.

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