BuCor treatment fit for a drug queen
Convicted drug queen Yu Yuk Lai had been able to stay for 10 months at a private hospital in Manila for conditions that include facial pain and anxiety, while poor inmates in the New Bilibid Prison can’t sometimes be brought to a private hospital for procedures because there’s no gas in the Bureau of Corrections’ vehicle.
This was disclosed at the Senate’s hearing on irregularities in the Bureau of Corrections.
Sen. Richard Gordon criticized Yu’s three lengthy stays at the Metropolitan Hospital and at the Philippine Heart Center ranging from 23 days to 10 months.
Sen. Christopher Go also bared the names of several Bilibid inmates with lengthy stays at the penitentiary’s hospital.
But amid all these, Gordon said he received information that an old, sick inmate died in prison without being brought to the hospital.
Article continues after this advertisement“When the inmate is rich, they can be brought to the hospital of their choice. But if the inmate is poor, there’s no gas for it,” he said.
Article continues after this advertisementAccording to him, Yu spent 10 months at the Metropolitan Hospital for 10 months in 2014 for facial pain, anxiety with depressive symptoms, and a transient ischemic attack.
Correctional Institution for Women acting superintendent May Ann Marasigan said a transient ischemic attack causes stroke-like symptoms, and is a brief episode that is usually resolved in 24 hours.
Yu also underwent laboratory tests, said Marasigan.
Reasonable?
But Gordon questioned whether Yu’s length of stay was reasonable.
“That lady spent 10 months there for a transient ischemic attack and facial pain. How does one get away with that in God’s earth?” he said.
Marasigan said she could not answer that as she was not at the helm of the correctional institute, but she said the doctors in charge then had asked the hospital to return her to prison.
Yu was also able to stay at the Metropolitan Hospital for the second time for 23 days, from May 7 to May 30, 2016.
That time, she suffered from heat exhaustion and hypothyroidism.
Her third lengthy hospital stay was from March 15 to May 2, 2017 at the Philippine Heart Center, where she was brought initially for coronary artery disease and chest pains.
Nutritional derangement
Go, for his part, said an inmate named Wilfredo Arias was able to stay at Bilibid hospital for eight months and three weeks for nutritional derangement and acute gastroenteritis.
Another inmate, Noel Fernandez, had a five month and one week confinement for electrolyte imbalance.
Willy Yang stayed at the hospital for five months and three weeks for omental hernia, while Rommel Capones was confined for eight months and three weeks for hypertension, dyslipidemia, and panic attack.
Bilibid medical officer Ursicio Cenas said that acute gastroenteritis usually has a confinement of two weeks. In the case of Arias, he was for discharge but was transferred to another ward and was thus no longer under his care after that.
Go also asked Bilibid medical officers if it was true that inmates were paying to be able to stay at the hospital even if they are not sick.
Bilibid Directorate for Services chief Ernesto Tamayo said he had heard rumors about this, but had no hard evidence.
Tamayo said it would be hard to point fingers without proof.
Cenas also said he hard about the practice as well.
As for inmates being allowed to be admitted to hospitals outside Bilibid, he said Justice Secretary Leila de Lima had issued a directive that inmates could only be admitted in government hospitals.
He also said Bilibid refers inmates to outside hospitals if they suffer more serious illnesses such as chronic kidney disease, heart disease, and cancer, and if they need proper diagnosis.
Bilibid hospital lacks equipment like chest x-rays and inmates even have to pay for their laboratory exams, he said.
Cenas, after being asked about inmates dying without being brought to the hospital, said there were several procedures that have to be fulfilled before an inmate could be brought to an outside hospital.
There must be a relative that could take care of them and administer medicine, he said.
There is also a need to secure passes for the escorts and for permit transportation, he said. Without these, the inmate can’t be brought out.
No gas
What’s worse, Cenas said, is that if there is no gas in the vehicle, the patient won’t be brought to the outside hospital either.
But he also said medical officers try to expedite the process as well.
Gordon said Bilibid could coordinate with the social welfare department to seek care for the inmate.
The bureaucracy should not be an excuse to delay the medical attention for the inmate, he said.