Saturday, December 27, 2008

Happy 2009 New Year to Everyone



Wishing my friends and fellow ostomates a blessed and fruitful New Year. We have looked at a very happy 2008 with our meetings and friendships. We look forward to a more happy and activity oriented meetings this 2009.

For all ostomates, people with pouch bags, I wish you a healthy new year ahead. Let us fight all these trials which are only temporary.

God bless us all.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Fast Food Delivery / Fast Food Hotline

You are what you eat - Fuerbach

In case you need immediate help to satisfy your hunger, dial the fast food delivery contact #.

Jollibee - 8-7000
Mc Donald's - 8-MCDO
Wendy's - 533-3333
Kenny Rogers - 533-8888
Chowking - 702-8888
KFC - 887-8888
Greenwich - 5-55-55
Pizza Hut - 911-1111
Shakey's - 533-8000
Yellow Cab - 636-1111, 499-9667 (ortigas)
Super Bowl - 737-8888
Kitaro - 911-1115
Max's - 7-9000
Goldilocks - 888-1-999
Red Ribbon - 747-7777
Don Henrico's - 371-7171, 372-7272, 372-3777 (west ave)
Tapa King - 531-TAPA

Monday, December 8, 2008

Colostomy LIfe / Ostomy News Notes (Philippines)

I would like to present to you the Ostomy News Notes which is a reading material for people with colostomy bags/pouches. Life remains beautiful in spite of pouch bags. There are many people in the Philippines who look for support groups and venues to share experiences. Hopefully, we can gather and take time to exchange stories as soon as we strengthen our friendships and trust.

I hope you enjoy reading the latest issue (December 2008) of the news notes which is in honor of our friends most especially in Japan during the 6th AOA conference from November 13 - 16, 2008. It was also the time for me of being nominated and likewise elected to the coordination committee of the Asian Ostomy Association. The other members come from Malaysia and Japan. It has been an honor for a Philippine representative and serve the cause of ostomates in the Asia region.

A Merry Christmas to all and a Happy and Blessed 2009 New Year.











Thursday, November 6, 2008

AOA Tokyo Conference



This is the invitation that will be used for the coming Tokyo Conference in promoting Quality of Life for Ostomates. The Philippines will be sending two delegates and one them happens to be me.

I will blog soon the experiences after attending the conference.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Ostomy News Notes
Philippines


I would like to present the Ostomy News Notes for this month of October.
Hope you like the issue.

We welcome contributions and personal stories that can be printed and shared for other people to know and understand.

Wishing quality ostomy life for all.












Send in your questions and articles for the Ostomy News Notes

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Religious Images for Calendars (2009)

Religious Images for Calendars (2009)


Sunday, October 5, 2008

Enjoying the Exhibit with the Heartist Painter

Enjoying the Exhibit with the Heartist Painter


At the entrance of Glorietta 3 lobby where the paintings are displayed. People come and go to view the paintings, some say a short prayer, others for curiosity, and also for photoshoots.

A candid shot with Mr. Joey Velasco. He belongs to batch 83 - DBJ. I belong to batch 90 - DBJ. I know the heartist painter as very down to earth and at the same time I enjoy reading reflections that goes along with all his masterpieces.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Joey Velasco 2009 Calendars

Joey Velasco 2009 Calendars


Joey Velasco is a social-realist artist. He possesses a profound sensitivity to the human drama. He touches the mystery of God in what is otherwise ugly and mundane.

His paintings are a momentary peek into eternity, a passing moment that captures the meaning of ordinary life in all its grandeur. The human soul finds genuine rest in the love of the Almighty. Hope beats with courage again. I call it inspiration; and we all need it.

Joey acknowledges that his profoundest gain from the Salesians is acquiring a heart for the poor. Having given some of his best years to the apostolate in the Don Bosco Youth Centers, he has never forgotten the faces of poverty and uncertainty that stared back at him. His paintings in oil convey messages of life-giving especially to the unfortunate.








I purposely placed the sample pictures of the paintings of Joey Velasco in my blog in order to sell it online especially among the people in the provinces or outside the country who are interested with the 2009 set.

Thank you very much.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Ostomy News Notes (September 2008 - Issue)

New header for ostomy news notes


Hello Friends and Fellow Ostomates,

I would like to share with you this months Ostomy News Notes for September 2008 Issue.
We have adopted a new look but still the same advocacy..

The topics for this months issue tackles:
a. The Phillipine Cancer Society
b. Ostomate in Focus - Mark Anthony Reynon
c. Understanding Crohn's disease.

We appreciate comments for the continued improvement of our news notes. Happy Reading to one and all.

Download Ostomy News Notes here

New header for ostomy news notes

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Ostomy Reality (Bites)

The Correspondents, July 29: Dugtong ng Buhay

The Correspondents

“Dugtong ng Buhay”

July 29, 2008

They were able to survive cancer. But in exchange for their life’s extension, they have to live with a bag everyday – literally. Ostomates have undergone surgical operation to remove the cancer-stricken part of their intestines. Now, their intestines are peeking through their bodies, with them having no control of their bowel movement. They have to use colostomy bags to catch the involuntary dispersal of their stool.

They live in fear of being discriminated upon. Although the presence of the colostomy bag under their clothes is hardly noticeable by those they encounter, they are afraid that they would suddenly smell, or would uncontrollably defecate in the middle of a long journey. And worse, a lot of ostomates in the Philippines cannot even afford the colostomy bags: a disposable colostomy bag costs P350 and is good for only three days.

Ruben Gidacan, 42, has his ostomy since 1998. But a tragic string of events befell on him – his wife agreed that they separate because he could no longer support his family financially, he no longer was able to drive for a living. And just very recently, his brother Ariel died from the cancer – something very similar to what he had years ago. The only hope he is holding to now is the possibility that his ostomy is only temporary. He could go for a restorative operation for his condition.

Cita Guanzon, 39, could not afford the colostomy bags. She places household plastic bags inside the colostomy bag to extend the days of use. Whenever stool would come out, she would throw the plastic bag away and replace it with another one. Although cheap, she has very serious rashes around her colostomy. She used to hide her condition at the beginning, but her husband’s unconditional love keeps her intact.

The lives of Ruben and Cita, among other ostomates the episode will feature, are stories of sacrifices and hope.

Take your Tuesday evening with Bernadette Sembrano and The Correspondents team in this episode on ostomates. Watch with an open mind, and an open heart. July 29, after Bandila.


Link taken below.

Thank you to scarredempress


- - - - -


Addendum:


The sad fate of the ostomates here in the Philippines continue. The television exposure for this documentary worked both ways: both good and bad. Some people were willing to help and at the same time some people were not ready to accept the situation.


I am writing in behalf of Ruben my fellow member of the Ostomy Association of the Philippines. He would share that it was a joy to be featured in TV but the joy was shortlived.


Many people who were his usual customers stopped buying from him upon learning of his condition. A month after since the August airing, "wala na siyang kinikita sa trabaho niya."


Some OAP members are planning to get help from other sources because the media exposure had somehow backfired on us. These are lessons learned on the situation of what ostomates in the Philippines encounter. There is no wonder that many ostomates would hide and never reveal the condition to others even to one of their closest friends.



Sunday, August 17, 2008


Dacawi: Humanitarian golds

By Ramon Dacawi
Benchwarmer

UST hours before China unfolded its pageantry and fireworks display in Beijing, Edgar Dacanay, a 36-year-old barber, was fidgety. Edlyn Joy, his two-year-old daughter, was an unsure starter for her next crucial bout. The kid is in a personal combat event of sorts she's too young to comprehend and wage and her family simply can't afford.

Edgar couldn't watch seeded Filipino boxer Harry Tanamor's debacle Tuesday night in the hands of Ghanaian light-flyweight Manyo Plange. He had to be at the corner of her kid. He learned of Tanamor's fate only the following morning, when he and his wife Merlinda were on their way to bring home Edlyn Joy. The kid had just pulled through her fourth bout and will rest for her next fight.

Each victory of the kid - and kids all over - is worth more than an Olympic medal. Her battle is protracted - against a dreaded Goliath who has no regard for disparities in age, weight and height, and too wily, deceptive and painfully brutal. Edgar and Melinda can only be relieved, thankful people came to cheer for their daughter and hope they will be around before the next round.

Edlyn Joy is battling cancer. The big C is at her tailbone, diagnosed as sacrococcygeal tumor. Doctors said it's malignant.

That's why hours before the opening of the World Olympics, people who heard came to see her being admitted for her next chemotherapy session at the Baguio General Hospital and Medical Center.

Juliet, a public school teacher, handed Edgar P5,000. She said it came from her brother Irwin Ilustre. Earlier, a woman delivered P4,000 at the barbershop, saying it was from an anonymous donor. A mother and son added P1,000.

As Edlyn Joy was being wheeled into the chemo room, a man caught up with them. He handed Edgar a wad, and reminding him of the power of prayer. When he has settled the kid on her bed for her six-day chemo confinement, Edgar remembered and counted the man's support. He then called him up, saying it was too generous - P16,000.

The man said he understands how difficult the ordeal was for Edgar and his family. He said he knew because he, too, survived cancer survivor. That's why he came, he said.

That's also why when Edlyn Joy's illness was diagnosed, her uncle Antonio, a farmer in Tubao, La Union sold his cow and had the small family land he was tilling tied to a loan. With no land to farm, he came up to watch over the kid, so her father can cut hair at the United Barbershop behind the Tiongsan Bazaar. So her mother can go back to work and repay her wage loan as a salesgirl at the Maharlika Building.

So Edgar and Merlinda could attend a court hearing last Thursday morning before bringing her home to their rented house in Loakan Proper Barangay. The hearing was about what happened to John Emerson. Edlyn Joy's elder brother, three years ago.

That was when John, then eight, and a classmate of his were walking to their second grade class when a passenger jeepney bumped him. He died two days after the accident in late January 2005.

Edgar said John, his second son, was able to push the other kid, saving him.

That's why Edgar can't give up on Edlyn Joy, whose other brother, Edmher, now 13, is in first year high school. That's why members of members of the Chrysanthemum Lions Club came to her hospital bedside, handing colostomy bags so Edgar won't worry about having to buy them for a while.

SunStar Baguio

Monday, August 11, 2008

Ostomy News Notes (Philippines)

I would like to share with you this months issue of the Ostomy News Notes. Once again, contributions are most welcome.


click below to read in pdf
August Issue 2008

Happy Reading to all.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Esteem Synergy Convex Wafer and Bag

Convex Wafer and Bags

What is a Convex Wafer?

The special kind of wafer adjusts to the stoma inasmuch as it does not protrude but it is situated inside the abdomen. There are stomas that are flat and follows the normal contour of the stomach. This will require ordinary stomahesive wafers.

The use of convex wafers are especially helpful for the stoma that is deeply embedded. This will ensure that the wafer will stick and last long as it follows a convex shape.

See figure below.



































I have excess convex wafers and I am giving it out for free. My stoma is not embedded but it lies flat. I will be most happy to give it to those who are in need. Please feel free to contact me so I can give you the wafer and bags.
Maraming salamat po.!

Monday, June 2, 2008

Poor housewife finds help for son born without anus

Poor housewife finds help for son born without anus
By Jeannette Andrade
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 22:28:00 06/02/2008

MANILA, Philippines -- After Jennelyn Guansing, a 35-year-old housewife, gave birth to Sam, her youngest son, she and her friends attributed his condition to her inexplicable preference for snails during her pregnancy.

Sam was born on January 26, 2006, with an imperforate anus, a condition that afflicts only one in every 5,000 children. Without an anus, the baby was unable to get rid of the waste in his body the normal way.

"I found out about his condition two days after I gave birth to him with the help of a midwife in our home. I was cleaning him up with a cotton ball soaked in baby oil when I noticed he had no anus," Jennelyn told the Philippine Daily Inquirer, parent company of INQUIRER.net.

Jennelyn is married to Moreto, 43, a farmer in San Jose, Occidental Mindoro. The couple and their children live in a nipa hut, which belongs to the owner of the land Moreto is tilling.

Despite their poverty, Jennelyn said she was determined to let Sam live a normal life, even if it meant seeking help from relatives and strangers in far-off places, including Metro Manila.

She turned to her aunt, Angelita Guansing, and her cousin, Annie Magbanwa, for help. The two women, residents of Batangas City, consulted doctors at the Batangas Regional Hospital, who recommended an immediate operation to save the boy's life.

Sam needed to undergo a colostomy -- a medical procedure where an opening in the abdomen is created through which a small portion of the colon is brought up to the surface of the skin. This new opening, called a stoma, allows stool to pass directly out of the body.

"My husband asked his employer for a loan and he was lucky that he was given one because he has been working there for 10 years," Jennelyn said, explaining that the loan was in the form of several cavans of rice, which they sold.

With the money, Sam immediately underwent a colostomy.

The boy, however, needed to undergo another procedure, an abdominal perineal pull-through operation where the rectum is "pulled down" and sewn into a newly-made anal opening in the perineum. The operation costs at least P100,000.

With the help of Senate President Manuel Villar, who agreed to finance the operation, Sam was operated on at the Philippine General Hospital.

Dr. Esther Sagui, the PGH pediatric surgeon who led the surgery team of four doctors, told the Inquirer that the procedure took three to six hours but remarked that it was good that the operation was done while Sam was still young.

"Children should be given a chance to live normal lives. It was good that the procedure was done as early as possible to allow the child to develop normally," she said.

Sam is expected to go through one last operation -- the closure of the stoma on his abdomen -- a source of relief for his mother.

"I am sure now that he will live and grow up normally like other children," she said.

Ostomy Association in the Phillipines

The first board meeting was held this second quarter of the year that saw the new set of officers laying out plans for the smooth running of the Ostomy association. It was held at the Getz Bros office, Pasig City upon the kind accommodation of the marketing and sales manager Ms. Madeleine Cunanan. The issues that were discussed focused primarily on setting a scheduled agenda every monthly meeting on behalf of the members. This will at least give a semblance of order and participation. Somehow, it has been a common recurrence that monthly meetings had no direct objectives and goals achieved. Likewise, there has been the common observation wherein members just attend the meetings in order to receive the free ostomy supplies that is being distributed. This is sometimes unavoidable and excusable since most of the members are really poor and in need. Nevertheless, it has been argued too that each and every member can play a part in further establishing the betterment of the association

The pressing decisions taken and upheld were the urgency to get support through solicitations that will be able to fund activities and supplement budget expenses of the groups. In line with these, the group intends to thank in a special way the sponsors and benefactors who have been supporting the OAP since the beginning by sending Thank You cards as sign of gratitude. The setting up of a website for the OAP was also approved and should be functional by the end of the year. This will allow the association to be reached online.

There have been lively exchanges among the board officers with a mixture of 3 senior citizens and 2 young adults represented by the two namesakes.

What is Ulcerative Colitis?

What is Ulcerative Colitis?

Ulcerative colitis is a disease that causes inflammation and sores (ulcers) in the lining of the large intestine, or colon. It usually affects the lower section (sigmoid colon) and the rectum. But it can affect the entire colon. In general, the more of the colon that’s affected, the worse the symptoms will be.

Ulcerative colitis can affect people of any age, but most people who have it are diagnosed before the age of 30.

What causes Ulcerative Colitis?

Experts are not sure what causes ulcerative colitis. They think it might be caused by the immune system overreacting to normal bacteria in the digestive tract. Or other kinds of bacteria and viruses may cause the disease.

Ulcerative colitis is not caused by stress, as people once thought. But if you have ulcerative colitis, stress can make it worse. You are more likely to get ulcerative colitis if other people in your family have it.

What are the symptoms?

The main symptoms are:

a. Belly pain or cramps b. Bloody diarrhea or an urgent need to have a bowel movement c. Bleeding from the rectum.

Some people also may have a fever, may not feel hungry, and may lose weight. In severe cases, people may have diarrhea 10 to 20 times a day.

It can also cause other problems, such as joint pain, eye problems, or liver disease. But these symptoms are more common in people who have Crohn’s disease.

In most people, the symptoms come and go. Some people go for months or years without symptoms (remission). Then they will have a flare-up. About 5 to 10 out of 100 people with ulcerative colitis have symptoms all the time.

Ulcerative colitis sometimes leads to more serious problems. It can cause scarring of the bile duct. This can lead to liver damage. In rare cases, severe disease causes the colon to swell to many times its normal size (toxic megacolon). This can be deadly and needs emergency treatment.

People who have ulcerative colitis for 8 years or longer have a greater chance of getting colon cancer.

WE TIP OUR HATS OFF AS AOA REGIONAL PRESIDENT DATO JOHN CARDOSA CELEBRATES HIS 81ST BIRTHDAY!

Great men lose somewhat of their greatness by being near us; ordinary men gain much.

Walter Landor

The story of Dato John David Cardosa goes a long way as he turns 81 this fourth of June. I believe he has touched a lot of people’s lives merely by the energy and passion in the way he has been living life and that is by just being near ordinary men.

He reveals that he had made a vow in the year 1972 when he was given a death sentence by his doctors then. It was at that time that he made a vow to serve his fellowmen for as long as he is able to do. It inspires everyone to know that he has been faithful in his promise to our Lord and Master who have actually gifted him with 36 more years and still going strong. Dato John quips that “every additional day I am alive is a bonus, it is the reason for me to serve Him through my fellow ostomates and cancer survivors.”

John Cardosa is on his second 3 year term as AOA President in his own right. In 1998, the then President, Hj Zainuddin Tahir of Malaysia, was unable to travel to IOA Executive Meetings due to illness, and deputized John Cardosa to attend IOA Executive Meetings in his stead.

Afterwards, he was elected AOA President in his own right in 1999 and served for 3 years until the Manila Conference in 2002. At the House of Delegates' Meeting in Manila, John Cardosa proposed Dr Harikesh Buch of Mumbai as the AOA President for the term of office 2002 to 2005. But Dr Buch refused to accept this position unless John Cardosa remained on the AOA Council as Secretary and Treasurer. John had to agree to those terms, and Dr Harikesh Buch, who was then an ileostomate of some 25 years' standing or more, was elected the AOA President, while John Cardosa served as Secretary and Treasurer of the AOA.

In 2005, at the Bangkok AOA Conference, he was again voted in as President of the AOA. So in actual fact, this is the third term John Cardosa is serving as AOA Presidency. Dato John Cardosa looks back at all the past years with gratitude as he decides to finally retire from the International Ostomy scene. Yet, he assures his people and friends that he will continue to be active in the Malaysian Ostomy Association, in the Hospice Movement, and in the Cancer Society for as long as he is healthy and able to serve his fellow ostomates and cancer survivors.

Note that, as can be seen from the tracheostomy tube in his throat in the photographs above, John has also survived cancer of the larynx, and uses a combination of esophageal and laryngeal speech, thus resulting in his own words, “in a very sexy voice.

We wish you our sincerest greetings and prayers especially with the people you inspired during the conference here in Manila. God bless you and grant you good health in all your endeavors. Maligayang Kaarawan Sa Iyo… (Happy Birthday to you!)

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Friday, May 2, 2008

Ostomy News Notes (Philippines)

May Issue 2008



April Issue 2008


How to DressTransparent Pouch Bags

Cover for Transparent Colostomy Bags

Colostomy bags can come in two colors: the opaque and the transparent.

There are occasions when colostomates are confronted whether to expose their colostomy bags in front of people especially when they are using transparent ones. There are already several companies abroad that offers pouch bag coverings that has two purposes: to hide the stool and likewise minimize the noise when the stomach seems to be grumbling.

I have been using both opaque and transparent pouch bags. Each bag can be costly and their is no reason not to use the transparent one's.

Here below, I would like to share how I dress the transparent colostomy pouch bag. I usually dont cover my transparent colobags at home but when I have to leave the house, I have to use the black dressing not to expose it to other people who may be ignorant of what a colostomy intervention is.

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sample transparent colostomy bags

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Materials: black cloth porous and thin, scissors, needle and thread

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Using a pen, trace the shape of the transparent bag in the black cloth leaving an allowance of 2 mm or more so that there is space when the transparent bag gets inflated with gas.
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sew the lines that have been traced with the given allowance.

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and afterwards invert the black cloth it so that the sewed thread is now hidden inside. Trace the middle and cut with scissors again with the proper allowance.

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get ready to insert the transparent pouch bag inside the sewed black cloth; fit well so that it is not too loose or too tight. I use one big clip that holds the pouch and the cloth at the top most portion so that the cloth is not easily pulled out.

If the cloth will exactly fit the colostomy bag, there will be problems when the bag begins to bloat, so it is advisable that there is enough allowance for the cover to avoid this problem.

It is also advised that the bottom part of the black cloth where the colostomy bag is clipped should have some open and free space. This will allow some accessibility when disposing stool and clipping it back again.