Getting a wrong thing right
Anthony SB Thanasayan
Anthony SB Thanasayan is a wheelchair user who is powered by
his service dogs who help him stay on top of life. He is president of
Malaysia's first and only animal-assisted therapy society called
Petpositive.
Anthony SB Thanasayan
Published: 2 March 2015
There's a new problem in town lately. Whether or not it will be a real
one, is left to be seen. And it isn't only my disabled friends who are
worried sick over it.
It's regarding all this talk on the media – both in the electronic and
printed press (as well as in the social circles) – about whether or not
pharmacies should be the only ones to dispense medication.
Currently, the practice here is patients can get their medication from their doctors after visits to their clinics.
All of my able-bodied friends whom I talked to, don't think that
passing over that sole responsibility to the pharmacies is a good idea
at all.
It's already bad enough, they say, to have to crawl out of bed when one is terribly sick in order to go and see a doctor.
And when they finally do, all they want next is to get the consultation session all over with.
Then, quickly grab their medication – and get home as fast as their
feet and cars will take them, in order to try and sleep the whole thing
off.
But it would be nothing short of a nightmare, they say, if their trip doesn't end at the clinic.
The dreaded thought of having to go and look for a pharmacist
afterwards, in order to complete their doctors' visits in packed towns
and cities with scarce parking around would be enough to make them even
more sick than when they started their day.
For people with disabilities, it's horrendously worse.
It is true that disabled people usually go to government hospitals for
regular checkups. However, if you think that the experiences they face
are a "bed of roses", you are very mistaken.
One of the chief problems is finding a disabled friendly car park.
Wheelchair user S Jeyaraj from Rawang, who makes frequent visits to his
specialist, points out that disabled car parks which should be totally
convenient to disabled patients often never are.
"Not only are our car parks abused by the able-bodied, but they have no
shelter (unlike the able-bodied hospitals' directors') to protect us
from the sun and rain," he laments.
Other issues include steep ramps, excruciating waiting hours, and lack
of physical help from hospital staff when patients have no choice, but
to come without a friend or family member to help them.
Sometimes it is much easier to go to the nearest clinic to your home
for quick help. These include for emergencies like a fever, stomach
upset or a migraine.
Some kind doctors will oblige wheelchair patients by entertaining their
phone calls. They will even step out from their clinics and attend to
you in your car. This makes it a whole lot easier than attempting to get
into private clinics which often lack wheelchair access.
When compared to a government hospital, at least the disabled are able to get to some sort of emergency help faster.
It's not unusual for a disabled patient to be ticked off by a doctor in
a government emergency centre for not seeing a doctor during the
regular hospital hours instead of turning up for treatment during off
hours where emergency cases are a priority.
A noble point, but sometimes disabled people find it hard to get their
families to accompany them during their own commitments, and thus can
only come when their helpers are free. Hospitals should make some room
for these situations.
As for non-wheelchair accessibility, local councils have also to take
the blame. Clinics and banks are great places to start with sheltered
car parks, along with the necessary wheelchair ramps.
Excuse me, but isn't this already an obvious thing for our governments
to do with an increasing disabled and elderly population?
Pharmacies, if you ask me, are no better. There are many pharmacies
which sell wheelchairs, but provide no wheelchair access whatsoever to
users who visit them to buy their products, whether they be persons with
walking difficulties, wheelchair users or the elderly.
Often their wheelchairs are kept upstairs and out of sight. Potential
buyers are unable to physically test them out before making a purchase,
even though some of them can cost RM1,500 and above.
We are showed pictures of them in brochures instead.
This also goes for medications and other types of products.
Instead of being able to get right to them where I can see and examine a
whole array of selections in order to make a right choice, I am forced
into a situation where I have to depend on a salesperson or shop
assistant to bring them down to me.
They usually don't bring them all down, but what they think are the
"best three", even though they have no clue as to what I need.
Then I am forced to make a decision, even though I am dissatisfied with
them, because I feel "guilty" for having made them walk up and down for
me for the products.
A customer in a wheelchair should never be subjected to situations like these which is wrong and unethical.
Shouldn't it be their moral and social responsibility to provide
wheelchair friendly facilities to us, especially as disabled people, we
are often the end users of their products from which they make good
profit?
Also to the fact that we will keep coming again and again as repeat buyers?
On the subject of medication, there have been times when a pharmacist
had suggested another medication which he claimed was an "improved
product" instead of the one prescribed to me by a government doctor. It
was for a particular pressure sore that I had.
There was no way where I could call up the specialist there and then to
check if the cream suggested by the pharmacist was "better" for my
wound instead.
Weeks later when I met the specialist on my appointment day, I was told
that the one recommended by the pharmacist was a wrong one and that I
should stop using it at once as it was eating away at my skin.
In conclusion, the planners and policy makers should spend more time in
urgently and significantly working hard to get such basic wrongs in our
society and infrastructure RIGHT before thinking of any outlandish
measures for the next generation. – March 2, 2015.
* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and
does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.
- See more at:
http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/opinion/anthony-sb-thanasayan/article/getting-wrong-thing-right#sthash.wT3wT8c5.dpuf
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