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Entries categorized as ‘Causes’

The Girl with the Broken Heart

December 14, 2008 · Leave a Comment

more about “The Girl with the Broken Heart“, posted with vodpod

If you can’t see the video, click here to watch on the website.

I normally don’t like doing this (posting an entire article from a newspaper), but this seems too important for me to summarize. It will cut off mid article, so click the read more. And donate, if you can. Spread the word around. And have a Merry Christmas.

A teen girl’s broken heart
Sara Perkins
December 13, 2008 – 11:47PM

LA VICTORIA – Adriana Garcia will not live to see 20 without a significant amount of money her family does not have.

She will never become the lawyer she wants to be, nor will her cheeks fill out to make the pretty, serious teenager look even more like her pretty, round-faced mother.

Instead, the 14-year-old with bright, appraising eyes and a broken heart will deteriorate, sleeping more and rising less, requiring more canned oxygen. She will waste away and she will die.

ADRIANA

The Garcias – Adriana, her sisters, Jessica and Mariana, her mother, Mirna, and father, Jorge – moved to a rented trailer east of Rio Grande City two years ago from Ciudad Mier, Tamps. They left behind a stable life for poverty, with a slim hope that in the United States their daughter could get a new heart and lungs, and with them, a future.

In Mexico, doctors told them, there was simply no hope she would receive an organ transplant to replace the damaged heart with which she was born.

It’s a Friday afternoon and at the table in the family’s tidy kitchen, Adriana is struggling through a series of pre-algebra problems under the watchful eye of teacher Paul Cho. Her mother struggles to keep Mariana, 2, quiet while her sister studies.

When Cho asks her a question she cannot answer easily or punch into her calculator, Adriana’s hand strays to the raised scar on her chest.

In January, doctors at Driscoll Children’s Hospital operated on her heart. She has another scar at the base of her rib cage, evidence of a stopgap attempt to keep the organ working for a while longer, an emergency measure that sent her through three different hospitals and produced a stack of still-unpaid bills.

Only two cardiologists would agree to the surgery, which repaired the hole in her heart but left it weaker than before, Mirna said. The rest thought Adriana would not be able to survive the trauma.

Cho and another teacher see Adriana in her tiny home because she cannot easily attend school. The Rio Grande City school district’s special education department nominated the Garcias for the “12 Days of Christmas” project.

The series, sponsored by the United Way and The Monitor, highlights local families in need and asks Rio Grande Valley residents to make their holidays a little better.

Adriana takes 10 pills every day, and she tires more and more easily since the surgery earlier this year. Teachers at Rio Grande City High School scheduled her classes so they were close together, so she wouldn’t have to walk too far between them, but three days into the school year, she broke her foot. Hobbling on crutches made the school day all the more exhausting and eventually she was told to stay home.

“This young lady wants to go back to school, incredible as it may sound,” said Silvestre Reyna Jr., a teacher for homebound students, who visits the Garcia home twice a week to bring assignments and provide a few hours of instruction. “The first meeting I had with her, she said, ‘As soon as this cast is off, I’m back in school.’”

NUMBERS

Compared to the wrenching choices hospital administrators have to make every day, the choice not to refer Adriana to a transplant center relatively easy. The numbers came nowhere close to adding up.

She’s ineligible for Medicaid and wouldn’t be able to get private insurance even if her family could afford it – a congenital heart defect is a pre-existing condition. Without either avenue, she cannot pay for the medical testing required to certify her for the transplant waiting list, much less the expensive surgery or a lifetime of medications to keep her body from rejecting the new organs.

Cathy Camp, a registered nurse at Driscoll’s cardiology center, could not speak specifically about the Garcias because of medical privacy laws, but said in a similar situation the hospital would call transplant-ready hospitals to see if they had any programs to pay for indigent patients.

“I believe there really wasn’t anything,” she said.

Without that referral, Adriana is not even on a waiting list for the organs she needs.

According to the Organ Procurement and Transplantation network, nine other people in Texas are waiting for a heart-lung transplant. There are 84 others across the country – as well as 2,705 people waiting for just hearts, and 2,019 needing only new lungs.

(more…)

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“This is like a Saturday Night Live skit” (The Professor)

October 3, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I was watching the VP debate with The Professor (she was on the phone as she lives in Waco and I live in South Texas). I made my comment from my last blog to her, which she thought was humorous because she’s been to and seen Mexico so she’s ready for the vice president position as well. Throughout the entire debate, we kept laughing at Palin’s nonanswers. Professor even made a crack by saying, “Oh, I know what your question is, but I’m not going to answer. Instead, I’m going to talk about fuzzy kitties.” Professor wasn’t far from the truth either, when she said that Palin seemed to be doing a SNL skit rather than actually answering the questions? So, did Palin succeed McCain? I don’t think she did. Will they win? I want to say no, but this country has voted in an idiot twice, so who knows.

One thing I noted is that Palin failed to win the debate. Perhaps if she would actually answer the question - “I’m not going to answer the questions the way you and the moderator may want.” – she might have left an impression on me. She even admitted that she’s only been on the thing for five weeks, as if saying, “Pfft. I dunno what to say. I’m from Alaska – as far away as you can get from the American people – and I have no real opinion in anything, so why the hell should you listen to me?”

And I want to be clear on this before you asshole conservatives attack me on this, I’m not voting Democrat because I’m Democrat. I’ve voted for independents as well as Republicans in the past and had John McCain picked someone else who could fill his shoes if he dies in mid-office, I would consider voting for him. But he chose Sarah Palin who knows much as being a politician as George W. Bush had – and I’ve been fooled once and once was enough. 

So Joe Biden won. However, it’s not that it matters. We’re voting for president, not vice president. However, in McCain’s case…

In other news, and this is something both liberals and conservatives can agree one, I posted a link in an earlier blog about a friend of mine running a marathon – 26.2 miles! – at the Rock ‘N’ Roll San Antonio Full Marathon in order to raise money in order to stop blood cancers. If you didn’t read the blog, then you’re not paying attention. I normally don’t ask people to donate money, but if you know the destruction cancer, then you know that it’s best to stop it before it happens. I’m not sure if that sentence made any sense or not, but it did in my head.

Anyway, hop on over to that post and read it and either pass it around, donate to her – or if you know someone else in your area running a marathon, donate to them – do whatever it takes to be a part of the solution. Take care.

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