Single mum struggles to pay for dialysis
Only three months ago Jacky Pascolado’s life took a turn for the worse.
In August, the single mother had returned from the Philippines when she unexpectedly fainted and was rushed into hospital.
Jacky, 31, suffered kidney failure and was immediately put on dialysis.
“Doctors told me that I had to have dialysis three times a week,” she says. “One dialysis session with the injections costs around Dh900.”
Jacky works for a free-zone company in Dubai and earns Dh2,200 a month. She has no health insurance and cannot afford her dialysis. Her employer has agreed to help her pay for a few of sessions.
“My employer cannot pay for all my sessions and I am already grateful that they have helped me so far,” she says.
Because of the high costs, Jacky has limited her dialysis to twice a week, although doctors have advised against it.
She cannot afford to go back to the Philippines where treatment is cheaper.
“What can I do? I don’t have the money to pay for them and need help,” Jacky says. “I am a single mum with a 10-year-old daughter to support.
“If I go back to the Philippines it will be very hard for all us. I have nothing there. I will no longer be able to support her and my family. I need to work.”
The dialysis sessions are very hard but necessary for her survival. During the four-hour sessions she gets dizzy and lethargic, but works every day of the week for eight hours.
“Without the dialysis I will die and without work I can’t support my daughter and family in the Philippines,” Jacky says. “My only worry now is finding support to help pay my treatment so I can continue to work and not be sent back to the Philippines.
“I work very hard to provide for them and give my daughter a better life.”
Jacky came to the UAE five years ago. She worked as a nanny for two years before moving to the Dubai free zone company as an administrator.
Dialysis is free for Abu Dhabi visa holders but Jacky holds a Fujairah visa and has no health insurance.
“It is the responsibility of employers to make sure that their employees have medical insurance to avoid these situations,” says Hisham Al Zahrani, manager of zakat and social services at Dar Al Ber Society.
“Dialysis is very expensive and the costs are difficult for anyone without health insurance to shoulder. Sending Ms Pascolado back to her home country should not be how we resolve this situation.
“Ms Pascolado, like thousands of other expatriates, is here for a better life for herself and family. We hope that individuals or authorities would help support her treatment so she can continue working and supporting her daughter back home.”