pallid appearance and asked her to rest while she prepared
breakfast for the family. Raheela, incidentally, had discontinued
her studies so she could help her mother in raising the family.
By
afternoon, Shaheena was complaining of severe pain in the lower
left side of her abdomen. Her son, a laboratory assistant earning
Rs. 5,500 (US$ 96.50) a month, frantically called his father. Shaheena
was then taken to AKUH where doctors found that renal stones were
obstructing her ureter. "Surgery is inevitable," the family
was told.
With the help of relatives and friends, Shaheena's
family managed to pool together Rs. 28,000 (US $491) to meet the
cost of treatment. Her uncontrolled diabetes resulted in complications
and Shaheena had to undergo four urological procedures to remove
the obstruction in her kidney. By then the cost of treatment had
risen to Rs. 103,000 (US $1,807). Staggering under the weight of
this huge burden, the cash-strapped family sought help from AKUH.
The Hospital's Patient Welfare Department intervened and offered
Rs. 51,000 (US $895), and also arranged for the remaining Rs. 24,000
(US $421) through an anonymous donor.
A fully recovered Shaheena is now busy planning
Raheela's wedding.