January rolled out and February has rolled in without a hitch. Time waits for no missionary. I can't believe how fast the months are ticking away. We've missed some important birthdays. Our Grandson Matt, my favorite Matt in the whole world turned 18 the end of January. Our son Dan marks another year on the 6th of February, then the month speeds up with James, Julia, Ray, Len, Hannah and before you know it it is May and our Mission is more than half over.
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Office selfie: we tried to send a birthday wish to our grandson Matt. We are not all that great at computer stuff but we are sure better than we were last July when we arrived. |
We've been spending a lot of time in the office attending to all the paper work that goes with this job. Getting a project approved takes time, energy and a good deal of research. We are working on several new projects. Elder Webb actually submitted three this last week which are now approved. One with the Department of Health, which is kind of a follow up to the immunization project we did last year and one with a hospital with Neonatal equipment. The details are uninteresting (NOTE FROM GRANDPA: We are financing life-saving equipment!) and kind of complicated so we will leave it at that.
We've been in the field as well. We checked out a private hospital that has been working with the poor. It is owned by one man. He has used his own money to build and supply a hospital to serve the poor. Actually he will serve anyone, but his prices are way lower. He charges Philheath + PhP300 which would be a little over $6.00 out of pocket. Philheath is the government insurance. Other private hospitals have prices that are about 40% higher, and the excess is not covered by Philhealth.
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Dr. Bayulot started this hospital and is staffing it with great people and state of the art equipment which he has purchased himself. He comes from a wealthy family but says he feels that money is not what is important it is who you help with it that is the judge of good character. He does not look like a doctor. His energy level is that of a 16 year old with attention deficit; bouncing from one station to the next. But he has created a wonderful space and is the doctor of choice for the good people of Bataan.
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Not a likely looking hospital, looks more like a hotel. Once a person enters the front door there is a very professional feeling to the hospital space.
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Exam room in maternity |
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Elder Webb hobbling the halls |
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State of the art equipment (This looks like a rocket launcher!) |
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Dr Bayulot tells us of his vision ( L to R Dr. Bayulot, Sister Webb Sister Lucila and Elder Webb |
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The hospital has private and semi private rooms with in room bathrooms This is huge. The other hospitals we have been to have wards with 50 to 100 beds and one bathroom with several stalls. This man is charging close to what those hospitals charge. You may look at the picture and say what is the big deal. Go back to my blog post on Fabella Hospital and look at the ward. They do a great job with what they have. They just do not have much.
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The physical therapy room in the hospital is quite large and has any piece of work out machinery one might like.
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The Bathrooms are not luxurious but the are in each room. This is the new luxury in hospital stay.
It is nice to be able to recommend a hospital to someone. We have been told there is only one hospital in all of Manila and it is recommended in emergency cases. If we need surgery the doctor here in the APO say he recommends that we go back to the States. |
You may be wondering how come there are no other people in the hospital pictures. We were there on a Saturday and the surgeries are schedule so patients can go home for the week end. The average hospital stay does not exceed 3 days. An interesting concept. We did see two patients in one ward. Not many people come to this hospital for long term illnesses.
We work with another group that does a lot of vision work. Dr Bayulot is offering use of one of his surgery rooms for the vision work. He still has some space in the hospital he has not designated to other kinds of medicine. We will see what comes of the negotiations. Willie, who works in our office, went down today talk with Bishops in the area to let them know when a member needs a hospital stay under church welfare they can go to Dr. Bayulot's hospital for quality care at a good price.
I share this information so you will know, if you don't already, just how good we have it in the US. We are very fortunate to be able to get quality health care. The more the government gets involved the less quality we receive.