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« MTD and Ontology: Picking up the (W)rant Again | Main | News not on the Networks » September 16, 2005
Health Care with the Poor
It seems that the past few weeks have brought me into extensive interaction with the "health care industry" in San Diego. While I need to blog more on what I've learned through interaction with the San Diego Health and Faith Alliance, I want to share two other experiences from the week. I mentioned a few days ago that I visited Bill Hatcher in the Emergency Room on Tuesday evening, 8:00 pm. I speculated that it would be 2:00 am before he got out of the emergency room. I was wrong. He did not get out of the emergency room until the next morning, after breakfast. He was then given a bed on an unoccupied floor, until he finally moved into a room late Wednesday morning or Thursday afternoon -- almost 24 hours after entering the hospital, he began receiving direct medical treatment for his legs. Once in the room, his care has been good, but it shows the difficulties of getting medical treatment while poor. Shoved to the end of the triage, with little resources or immediate trauma, there is no medical or financial incentive for the hospital to care for him. Given that this is a reoccuring problem, I knew pretty much what his treatment would be -- it isn't hard to diagnose. Yet there are so many "hurdles" to get through that it becomes difficult. I was also a bit concerned that they gave Bill morphine for the pain -- possibly not realizing the struggles with chemicals that Bill has had in the past. To me it seems to show the need to develop church-based smaller "hospitals" that actually know the persons over time that can be more immediate responsive to the sick and provide good care that is not embroiled in the bureaucracy that the "for-profit" system requires. In other words, we need to think creatively as embracing medical care as a work of mercy rather than as a means of profit. I think of the old Catholic system that has slowly gotten absorbed into the contemporary techno-bureaucratic system -- though with places of resistance that distinguish them experientially from purely "secular" hospitals and how it would have been built by a poor group of minority immigrants. It seems that some retrieval of this history might be appropriate. Similarly, we lost a friend, John Kang, to death this week. John was the "eldest elder" of the Nuer community from the Sudan in San Diego. I met him first six years ago in discussing the housing problems of the African community here in San Diego in light of eviction notices that were going out so that landlords could up their rents when the market conditions made housing more expensive here. He was always a great source of wisdom and grace. I teach his second eldest son now, and his kids have been enfolded in various degrees with us. He leaves a wife and nine children, with Mary, his wife, 6 1/2 months pregnant with their 10th child. John died of liver cancer. In the past weeks, perhaps months, he had been to the hospital at least three times with symptoms, but had been released each time without any or at least a correct diagnosis. Could this have saved his life? Did his financial condition have anything to do with this? I don't know. Yet miscommunications did take place that have brought additional pain and struggles to his family, though I can tell that the doctors attempted to communicate appropriately. Yet without someone who knows and understands the family, the cultural differences, the language struggles, such communication becomes difficult. The Nuer language does not possess verbal tenses like English. I am wondering if that led to the family expecting John to have died on Wednesday morning, only to find him still alive. It sounds like finally an appropriate conference took place with the family yesterday, when the life support systems where withdrawn from John, and he slipped away to be with his Lord. Yet this most likely came about because Mary, his wife, not totally understanding this system, had refused to take the life support away, even though John's body could not recover. Thus it then became economically viable to have the conference. I guess I want to have us think and pray about a "Christian humanism" where the bodies of the sick are not subject to treatments that the market can provide, but are treasured and honored as ones whose sufferings unite us with the sufferings of Christ. In closing it is interesting to reflect upon these experiences in light of the profoundly practical, profoundly Christian instructions on the sick found in the Rule of St. Benedict. Such wisdom, for the sick and their caretakers, gives us a basis to think from and with given our contemporary situation: Chapter 37
Chapter 37: On the Old and Children
Posted by johnwright at September 16, 2005 8:43 AM Comments
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