Pages

Showing posts with label Hospital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hospital. Show all posts

Community Care for Mentally Ill in Bekasi

Jakarta Globe, Ulma Haryanto | March 26, 2011

While Bekasi hospitals and police have supported the Galuh Foundation,
it has come under fire from medical practitioners for its use of physical
restraints. (JG Photo/Yudhi Sukma Wijaya)

Pak Gendu, I really like what you are doing! It is just too sad to see and hear consistently how the state neglects mentally ill, and also how many families see a mentally ill person in their midst as a stigma which needs to be hidden. A while ago I saw a slide show in an online Australian newspaper which showed terrible photos of mentally ill people in an compound, I think it was in the West Java area, I forgot the exact location and the link to this slides, but what I did not forget were the pictures...

He might not have had any formal education, and was branded a Betawi street fighter by many, but Gendu Mulatip saw people being neglected by the state and set out to help them.

Recognizing that the city of Bekasi did not provide any healthcare facilities for the mentally ill, Gendu, with the help of his most trusted friends, set up a foundation to provide care and treatment for the mentally challenged — usually free of charge.

Gendu took his last breath in January, at the age of 95, but the Galuh Foundation, which stands for “ Gagasan Luhur ” or “noble ideas,” remains his legacy. Its traditional methods might not have the acceptance of the medical establishment, but the foundation is convinced it is doing good.

Set up in 1994, the foundation is now run by Suhanda, 58, Gendu’s eldest son, who took over operations when his father died. Suhanda is assisted by 45-years-old twins Suhartono and Suhandoyo, who are the sons of Gendu’s trusted aide, Amir, now in his 60s.

“The treatment for our patients here focuses on how to prepare them for society. That’s why we never confine our patients or shackle them, unless we absolutely have to,” referring to a traditional method of restraint.

Situated in a 3,000 square meter compound in Rawa Lumbu, Bekasi, the foundaiton has plenty of space for its 245 patients.

“What we have now is a significant improvement on our previous facility,” Suhandoyo says. “We were overburdened with patients before we purchased a bigger property.”

Family

When Suhandoyo says patients are prepared to live with mainstream society, he really means it. The patients at Galuh Foundation live side-by-side with the families of their caretakers.

“For married workers we provide living quarters in the compound,” Suhanda says. “The employees here are social workers. They only get Rp 400,000 [$46] a month.”

Despite the meager pay, Suhandoyo, who was deeply inspired by Gendu, says he learned a great deal from working at the foundation.

“Gendu taught me about patience and to care and love our patients,” he says. “Living here means that we don’t have to worry about accommodation and food, and when it comes to the education of my children, most schools, when they know we work at the foundation, are willing to make exceptions.”

Suhandoyo says about 40 staff help to care for the patients. An additional 15 people — ex-patients — had decided to stay and help.

“Patients who are more stable and can follow instructions are asked to carry out daily chores such as going to the neighborhood shops,” he says. “We usually rotate their chores once in a while.”

The compound has a field where patients can walk around. A large fenced-off building serves as the living quarters for the male patients, while the female residents live in a more closed off area at the back of the facility.

“We have more male patients here. More than 70 percent,” Suhandoyo says.

The foundation does not charge for its services, only asking for a meal fee of Rp 20,000 to Rp 25,000 per patient per week.

“It is up to the patient’s family how much they would like to contribute,” Suhandoyo adds.

Traditional Approach

None of the caretakers at the foundation has a medical degree or background. Gendu never went to school and used to be known as a Betawi street fighter.

“Suhanda is an elementary-school graduate. The only person with a degree here is my father,” Suhandoyo says.

Gendu believed that mental illness could be cured. He said he received the knowledge to cure mental illness from his parents, and he passed this knowledge on to Suhanda.

“Here we use prayers, traditional herbs, counseling, and sometimes, exorcism,” Suhandoyo explains.

“We believe too many foreign chemicals are bad for you,” he says. “That’s why each patient has to undergo a purification process using herbs, followed by a vegetarian diet, no carbonated drinks or sugar and no red meat.”

Suhandoyo adds that general hospitals in Bekasi and even the police have handed over mentally ill patients to the foundation.

However, the traditional methods used at the Galuh Foundation, including the use of physical chaining instead of sedatives, are largely frowned upon by medical practitioners.

Conflict

Dr. Gregorius Pandu Setiawan, a leading mental health expert, points out that the herbs used in the foundation’s treatments are not clinically proven, and therefore it can be hard to judge the real effect on patients’ bodies.

“They use physical restraint with shackles and chains, doctors use sedatives,” he says.

Gregorius views such methods as “an embarrassment,” especially since Bekasi is located so close to Jakarta.

“The hospitals and police officers who send people to the foundation are foolish,” he says

Meanwhile, Dr. Irmansyah, the director of mental health at the Health Ministry, says he regrets that the foundation is not considered a formal health-care facility by the state.

“The ministry and other health institutions such as Soeharto Herjan Mental Hospital, Duren Sawit Hospital and Bekasi Health Office visited the facility a couple of times to check the conditions,” he says.

However, offerings of medical assistance were rejected by the foundation. “Every individual suffering from disease should be treated, the state should provide medical facilities, including for those with mental illness.”

Irmansyah says he does not have anything against traditional medication, “as long as it does not make someone worse.”

“We realize that there are places that medical science has not reached yet, such as Galuh, but we hope this would not last for long,” Irmansyah says.

Read more

Hospital Guards Allegedly Ditch Mentally Ill Man in Field

Jakarta Globe, Zaky Pawas | February 18, 2011

Related articles

Police have questioned four security guards from a Bogor hospital after they allegedly dumped a mentally ill man in a field near the North Bogor Police subprecinct station.

Adj. Comr. Ilot Djuanda of the North Bogor Police confirmed on Thursday that the victim, identified as Angga Nugraha, was now being treated at Marzuki Mahdi psychiatric hospital in Bogor.

Ilot said that when police discovered the victim, they rushed him to a 24-hour clinic, which sent him on to Salak Hospital for further evaluation. Angga needed psychiatric care, so he was then transferred to Marzuki Mahdi Hospital.

“We received a complaint from a resident who I shall only identify as Suratman,” Ilot said. “Suratman told our officers that he saw four security guards from Azra Hospital carrying the man, Angga, and dumping him in a field nearby. So, we checked and yes, we found him.”

Ilot said Angga was discovered curled up in an empty field not far from the North Bogor Police station. He said residents who came across Angga initially feared he was dead because he was so still.

“When police arrived, we found him sleeping and in a very poor condition,” Ilot added. “He was wearing shorts and a white T-shirt. He was walking by the time we got to Salak Hospital, but was limping. The limp looks like it is from an old injury,” he said.

Ilot added that police had questioned the four security guards from Azra Hospital and said they admitted to taking Angga, who was not a patient there, to the field. According to Ilot, the security guards said Angga, a resident of Darmaraja district in Sumedang, West Java, was causing a disturbance in the hospital parking lot.

When Angga wouldn’t leave, the guards decided to carry him to the field, Ilot said, adding that the security guards had suspected he was suffering from mental illness.

“Whatever the reason, what they did was inhumane,” Ilot said. “Why didn’t they just bring him to us at the station?”

North Bogor Police subprecinct chief Comr. R. Lubis said the security guards had just been questioned and no formal charges had been laid.

“We regret their actions,” he said. “Our subprecinct office is so close to the hospital. Why didn’t they call us?”

Meanwhile, Suwignyo, human resources manager at Azra Hospital, denied that the security guards had “dumped” the sick man in the field, saying that they had just “moved” him to another location.

“Our security guards tried to get rid of him, but he refused to leave,” he said. “And then he ended up sleeping near the security guard’s post, so they had to move him. It was just across the road, nobody dumped him.

“The security guards thought he was just a stressed out sick man who lived nearby.”

When asked why the hospital did not contact police about this man, Suwignyo said, “the guards said he looked clean and had clean skin. We did not want to alarm anybody.”

Mentally ill people often fail to receive proper treatment in Indonesia. According to a 2007 Health Ministry survey, 4.6 percent of the population suffers from serious mental disorders, including schizophrenia.

Read more

Now doctors prescribe herbal medicines

Antara News, Andi Abdussalam, Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Since time immemorial, herbal medicines have been used by forefathers in Indonesia to heal different kinds of diseases, yet they have not gained recognition, at least until recently, by the medical world to be recommended in doctor`s prescriptions.

Seeing the healing power and economic potential of at least 3,000 kinds of herbal medicines in Indonesia, the government is now however preparing 12 hospitals throughout the country to open herbal clinic services where doctors can prescribe herbal medicines for their patients.

This is a government effort to promote herbal medicines in Indonesia as a complementary healing to modern medication. "Thus, herbal medicines have now become alternatives at hospitals for the people to cure their diseases," Chairman of the Indonesian Herbal Medical Association (PDHMI) Hardhi Pranata said recently.

The 12 hospitals where the government is now preparing to open clinic services for patients willing to use herbal medication included the Cipto Mangunkusomo general hospital (RSCM), the Dharmais hospital, the Persahabatan hospital in Jakarta, the Sardjito hospital in Yogyakarta, the Hasan Sadikin hospital in Bandung, West Java, the Dr Soetomo hospital in Surabaya, East Java, and the Shangla hospital in Bali.

For this purpose, doctors who are assigned to cater patients at the hospitals` herbal clinics are given education and training on herbal medicines.

"After attending the training, the doctors will get a certificate which authorizes them to provide herbal medication prescription for their patients," Hardhi said adding that the Indonesian Medical Association had also been determined to take herbs as a complementary medicine to modern medication.

Besides training doctors, the government is also trying to promote herbal medicines through a `scientification` process at the Agency for Assessment and Application of Technology (BPPT).

"Scientification will provide scientific evidence for herbal medicines on their effectiveness to cure a disease," BPPT Head Marzan Azis Iskandar said.

It has so far taken a long time and big cost to conduct a research and clinic test to turn a herbal medicines into a scientific product.

"Now technology has been available that can shorten the process with low cost. But to do that cooperation with all sides from the government, private institutions and the experts is needed," he said.

Technology is important which according to natural medicine researcher Prof Dr Subagus Wahuono of the Yogyakarta-based Gajah Mada University, is needed to enrich the active compounds of herbal medicines.

"There are two important things for the development of herbal medicines, namely to enrich the active compounds and their frames of the a herb material," he said.

He said that although Indonesia had abundant medicinal plants yet their active compounds that could be extracted were relatively low. "For example, from one kilogram of a medicinal plant, only about one milligram active compounds could be extracted," the professor said.

He said that the active compounds provide herbal medicines with the ability to cure a disease. The higher the active compounds of a herbal medicine product had, the higher ability it had to cure a disease.

Subagus said that active compounds and their frames could be enriched with a bio-technology development. "But conducting a bio-technology research will need a high cost," he said.

That is why, only a small number of herbal medicine products in Indonesia have undergone a scientification process.

Head of the Research and Development of Medicinal Plants and Traditional Medicines of the Ministry of Health, Indah Yuning Prapti said that of the 3,000 kinds of herbal medicines circulating in the country, only four had undergone a scientification process.

"The four are herbal medicines for inflammation, gout, hypertension and cholesterol.

There are still a lot of ones that need scientification process," she said.

In the meantime, to advance herbal medicine researches in the country, Soegijapranata Catholic University (Unika Soegijapranata) in Semarang, Central Java, and Providence University in Taiwan have agreed to cooperate in herbal medicine research.

"A team from our university currently visiting Providence University in Taiwan reached the cooperation agreement with the hosts," Unika Soegijapranata spokesman Antonius Juang Saksono said recently.

Antonius said Unika Soegijapranata Rector Prof Budi Widiaarko who led the team to Taiwan had reported that the two universities had reached an agreement to cooperate in various fields of research including herbal medicine.

He said both parties would carry out a research on the prospects of herbal medicine industry to go international.

"One of the researches which had been agreed on is about the prospects of herbal medicine in Indonesia and its development in the future," Antonius said.

Indeed, with their economic and healing potentials, herbal medicines promise a good business prospect in Indonesia.

This has led publicly listed state-owned drug and cosmetic firm PT Kimia Farma (KAEF) to consider acquiring a number of herbal medicine companies in East and Central Java worth up to Rp40 billion.

"Herbal medicine business in Indonesia is offering a big chance in the future so that KAEF is considering to acquire a number of herbal medicine companies," KAEF Corporate Secretary Ade Nugroho last week.

Read more

70% poor insurance cardholders denied quality health treatment

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 12/24/2010

The Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW) says 70 percent of patients entitled to various government health insurance schemes for the poor have complained about the hospital services they have received.

Citing results of a recent survey by the anti-graft watchdog, ICW’s Febri Hendri said Friday that 70 percent of 986 poor patient respondents still found many things to complain about even though health insurance schemes, including Jamkesmas, Jamkesda, Gakin and SKTM, had been in place for some time.

“The complaints are about administrative services, nurses, doctors, facilities, down payment, costs and other hospital services, among other things,” Febri said in a press release as quoted by Antara.

The ICW’s Citizen Report Cards 2010 surveyed respondents about treatment received at 19 public and private hospitals in Greater Jakarta.

The survey also found that many poor patients were reluctant to use their state-supported health insurance cards for fear of being rejected by hospitals.

Many of the hospitals still reject poor patients, using excuses such a lack of available beds, insufficient medical equipment and a shortage of doctors or medicines to treat the patients, the ICW said.

Read more

Women Looking for Missing Child Beaten by Aceh Mob

Jakarta Globe, Nurdin Hasan | December 14, 2010

Banda Aceh. Two women in Aceh are in critical condition after being beaten on Saturday by a mob of villagers who mistook them for kidnappers.

The victims were identified as Yuniarti, 45, a survivor of the 2004 tsunami in Banda Aceh, and her friend, Syafira, 40, a civil servant in Tamiang district.

Authorities said the women had gone to the Gempong Kuala elementary school in Langsa to visit a sixth-grader named Febi Gebriana who looked like Yuniarti’s missing daughter.

The child was last seen six years ago, before the Dec. 26 tsunami, which claimed the lives of over 160,000 people in Indonesia and thousands more in countries around the Indian Ocean. Yuniarti has been looking for her daughter since.

Yosi Muhamartha, chief of the Langsa District Police, said the women’s visit to the school seemed suspicious to the villagers, who were on edge over text messages warning about alleged kidnappings in Aceh.

Yosi said some residents brought Yuniarti and Syafira to the village chief’s office for questioning over why they wanted to visit a particular student.

The women, meanwhile, said they simply wanted to see Febi and had gotten permission from the school’s principal to do so.

A witness said hundreds of villagers soon marched into the office and attacked Yuniari and Syafira, refusing to stop even when police arrived and fired warning shots.

“The residents have been worried because of rumors about abductions,” Yosi said. “The angry mob didn’t care. They beat up the two women until they were in critical condition.”

The same witness said police were able to carry Yuniarti and Syafira away from the mob and into a waiting patrol car. Even then, the witness said, villagers chased after the vehicle.

The victims were rushed to a nearby hospital, but Syafira had to be transferred to a bigger hospital in Medan because she had a collarbone fracture  and wounds all over her body.

Yuniarti also sustained serious injuries and had to undergo intensive medical treatment at Langsa General Hospital.

Yosi said both women had “good intentions” when they visited the school and it was unfortunate that villagers resorted to violence when they confronted the victims.

The police chief said he suspected someone in the village persuaded other residents to attack Yuniarti and Syafira.

Some suspects have been questioned by the police in Langsa, but none have been arrested for the attack, according to Yosi.

Authorities have warned residents in Aceh against vigilantism, saying the text messages about kidnappings in the province were unfounded.

In Aceh’s western coast, however, villagers have formed patrols in their areas and begun conducting checks on passing cars at night, in response to the text-message warnings.

Yosi said police and regional government officials were working together to correct this misinformation.

“The rumor is baseless, started by some irresponsible people to create fear within the society,” he said. “So far, there have been no [recent] kidnapping cases in Langsa.”

Read more

Bali to build int’l standard hospital

The Jakarta Post | Fri, 11/26/2010 10:52 AM

The Bali administration announced plans to develop an international-standard hospital in Sanur to cater to local and foreign visitors.

Bali Governor Made Mangku Pastika said Thursday that his administration was conducting a comprehensive feasibility study on the construction.

“We have allocated Rp 4 billion [US$446,000] from the 2011 provincial budget to plan and design the project,” he said, adding that an additional Rp 100 billion from the 2012 budget would be used for the construction.

“We expect to complete the project by 2013 when Bali hosts the APEC meeting,” Pastika added.

The hospital, which the administration claims would feature high-tech facilities, would be built on 3.4 hectares in Sanur.

“Bali is an international tourist destination. We have to provide excellent healthcare services for our guests. Visitors may be able to spend their holidays while also having medical check-ups done here,” Pastika said.

There are a number of so-called “international” hospitals in Denpasar despite the Health Ministry’s ban on using the word “international” in the names of the hospitals.

In addition to an international hospital, the local government also announced plans to build another hospital for patients covered by Bali Mandara Healthcare Insurance.

The scheme is a free healthcare program for Balinese residents across all eight regencies and one municipality. The program began in 2009 using Rp 181 billion in funds from the local budget.

The scheme allows residents to get free medical treatment at Denpasar’s Sanglah General Hospital and a number of other hospitals.

Pastika said profits from the operation of the planned international hospital would be used to fund the Bali Mandara hospital.

Karyasa Adnyana, the deputy chairman of the Bali Legislative Council’s Commission IV, said he fully supported the idea of a “cross-subsidy”.

“The development of an international-standard hospital will certainly enhance the image of Bali as a world-class tourist destination. Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia have been doing this for a long time,” he added.

Adnyana said the construction of the two hospitals would be funded by the provincial budget, and that therefore the administration had to be cautious in using public money. “We hope the money is spent in a transparent manner.”

— JP/Ni Komang Erviani

Read more

Maids Share Stories of Nearly Being Worked to Death by Saudi Employers

Jakarta Globe, Fitri R. | November 21, 2010             

Mataram. Selvia, a 27-year-old former maid from Sumbawa, a district of West Nusa Tenggara, has been partially paralyzed since 2007.

Activists in Malang, East Java, demanding the government
 investigate allegations of torture of Indonesian maids in
Saudi Arabia. (Antara Photo) 
 
It happened when she worked as a domestic worker in the Saudi Arabian city of Nabuk, where she says her employers nearly worked her to death.

“They didn’t torture me, but they frequently scolded me and I had to work very hard, lifting heavy objects like gas canisters,” she says.

The back-breaking work did just that — it broke her back, and now Selvia cannot walk properly.

Such stories are common, but only receive sporadic attention, such as the recently discovered horrific abuse of Sumiati, an Indonesian maid, by Saudi employers.

Selvia returned to Indonesia in July 2010.

“When she tried to walk, bent over, I could see that it was costing her a lot of effort,” says Endang Susilowati, an activist from the Panca Karsa Foundation (PPK), which helps former migrant workers who have suffered abuse. “Now her condition is getting worse.”

Endang accuses the government of ignoring its obligations to Selvia by not allowing her full treatment the West Nusa Tenggara General Hospital in the provincial capital Mataram without a government-issued insurance card known as a Jamkesmas.

Selvia’s injury, she argues, stems from a workplace accident, and as such the migrant worker placement agency (that sent her to Saudi Arabia ought to pay for her medical bills and arrange her insurance.

Yanti Yusepa, 25, from West Lombok, is another injured former migrant worker who is still waiting for her insurance payout.

She went to Saudi Arabia on Aug. 29 and arrived back in Indonesia on Oct. 6, paralyzed from the waist down after jumping from a second-story window to get away from what she called chronically abusive employers.

Yanti says she worked for three different families in Saudi Arabia, fleeing from the first two after they starved and physically abused her.

She says the third family was particularly cruel. The daughters would burn her with a hot iron while their mother would beat her. That abuse induced her desperate flight.

“I’m still traumatized. I get scared every time I remember mustering the courage to jump from the second-floor window,” Yanti says. “Not a single person was willing to help me when they saw me fall.”

She says she has not received any compensation from her Jakarta-based placement agency, Sinar Berkilau Mandiri, or her Bahrain-based agent, Al Gandir.

She says the agency only gave her Rp 100,000 ($11) to seek treatment at a community health center upon her return.

Yanti says she knows of at least 26 other Indonesian migrant workers sent out by the agent in Bahrain who have also been abused by their employers, in some cases sexually.

“I was afraid to tell this to the agents because they always threatened me and accused me of lying,” she says.

Awajir, a field recruiter for SBM in the province, said the company was fully committed to its obligations to Yanti.

“We even spent Rp 16.5 million of our own to bring her home when her parents got news that she had jumped from the window,” he said.

He added the company was also trying to process her insurance claim, but said Yanti had refused to have her injuries assessed at a hospital.

“We don’t want to be called irresponsible,” Awajir said. “She asked to be brought home, and we did it. She asked for her insurance payout, and we’re working on it.”

Baiq Halmawati, from the PPK, says more than 350 domestic workers from West Nusa Tenggara are currently stationed overseas and may be facing abuse or inhumane working conditions.

Read more

Karawaci to buy Balikpapan hospital for $26 million

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 11/15/2010 2:31 PM

Lippo Karawaci will pay $26 million for a controlling 79.61 percent stake in Balikpapan Husada Hospital, the property firm said in a statement released on Monday.

The hospital will be upgraded with 200 beds, 40 outpatient suites and three operating rooms specializing in neurosurgery, cardiology, orthopedics and emergency trauma.

“The aim is to serve the needs of the people of this resource-rich province who currently must go all the way to Singapore for treatment,” Karawaci said in the statement.

The hospital - the sixth operated by Karawaci - will serve East Kalimantan, which is home to companies such as Pertamina, Petrosa, Adaro, France's Total S.A., the US' Chevron Texaco and Australia's Theiss.

The newly acquired hospital would provide the company a six percent revenue boost in 2011, Karawaci said.

Just two weeks ago, Karawaci announced the $18 million acquisition of a hospital in Jambi, East Sumatra, and said it planned to acquire more hospitals.

Karawaci said it expected post-acquisition hospital revenue to grow by more than 42 percent in 2011. (est)

Read more

Police: Sukhoi supervisors died of methanol poisoning

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 09/15/2010 3:15 PM

A police investigation has found that three Russian fighter jet technicians, who died over the weekend in Makassar, died of methanol poisoning.

“We found methanol in their stomach, kidneys, liver and lungs,” Brig. Gen. Budiono, head of the National Police’s forensic laboratory, said Wednesday as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

Budiono said among the evidence gathered were two plastic bags, one containing liquor mixed with methanol and the other just liquor.

He said two other Russian technicians, who were rushed to hospital in Makassar Tuesday, were suffering from same thing.

“They have similar symptoms – nausea, vomiting and trouble breathing. Apparently, they consumed less methanol. They are recovering,” Budiono said.

The five were part of a 37-member team, comprising technicians, mechanics, instructors and inspectors, who arrived on Sept. 5 to work on Indonesia’s fighter jet program, which uses Russian-built Sukhoi fighter jets. The jets arrived at the airbase on Sept. 10.


Related Articles:

Read more

Victims die from gunshot wounds in their heads: Hospital

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 09/01/2010 3:51 PM

Buol

A clash between police officers and local people in the Central Sulawesi regency of Buol from Tuesday night to early on Wednesday left four people killed due to gunshot wounds in their heads, a hospital says.

Director of Buol state hospital Abdul Hamid Lakuntu said Wednesday doctors could not save the lives of the victims due to their severe head wounds. The hospital is treating 22 people who were injured in the incident, five of them are in a critical condition.

“The bodies of the victims have been taken to their respective homes for burial,” Abdul said as quoted by Antara news agency.

Police opened fire at hundreds of local people who raided Biau police station on Tuesday night. The attack followed the death of motorcycle taxi driver Kasmir Timumun allegedly from torture while under the police custody on Monday.

The police detained Kasmir following a traffic accident involving a police officer.


Related Articles:

Read more

Patient jumps to her death from hospital’s eighth floor

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 08/13/2010 10:37 AM

A 73-year-old woman plunged to her death from the eighth floor of the Cipto Mangunkusumo General Hospital (RSCM) in Central Jakarta on Thursday, four days after being admitted for chronic liver cancer.

Basariah Naibaho committed suicide by jumping from a window next to her bed in a room at the hospital’s geriatric section at 3:30 a.m. Her son, Lilin Abdil Purba, said that prior to the incident, he had been with her at the room before she asked him to leave.

“She threw her documents, including her ID card and her relief letter [SKTM] out of the window. I was forced to leave her and go down to the first floor to retrieve the documents,” he said.

The SKTM scheme is a complementary healthcare scheme to cover low-income people and is only issued to residents that the administration deems to be living in poverty.

“After I got the documents, I went to the canteen to buy drinks. I heard people shouting that a person had fallen at the parking lot,” Lilin said.

The victim’s nephew, Robinson Siboro, said Basariah had been treated at the hospital four times before.

“Three years ago, she suffered from cirrhosis caused by chronic liver cancer,” he said.

Cirrhosis changes the structure of the liver and the blood vessels that nourish it.

“She was unintelligible since being admitted on Monday and repeatedly asked to go home. But the doctor didn’t let her go,” Robinson said.

“She forcefully removed an intravenous needle from her arm two days ago,” Rukiyah, Robinson’s wife, added.

North Jakarta Police crimes unit chief Comr. Budi Sartono said that after questioning three witnesses, the police confirmed the victim had committed suicide.

“The victim was probably stressed out due to her chronic disease,” Budi said. (rch)

Read more

Papua political prisoner finally given surgery

The Jakarta Post, Associated Press, Jakarta | Sat, 07/31/2010 8:55 PM

A high-profile prisoner sentenced to 15 years' jail for raising a banned flag in Indonesia's Papua province returned to prison Saturday after surgery for a potentially life-threatening prostate ailment that had been denied for nearly a year.

Felip Karma, 51, told The Associated Press that many other Papuan separatists held in the easternmost province also urgently need medical care. He reiterated allegations that many had been abused in prisons.

"Many prisoners in Papua have been brutally tortured," said Karma, who returned to the Abepura prison in the city of Jayapura on Saturday.

Candran Listiyono, spokesman for the Directorate General of Prisons in Jakarta, told AP last month he was not aware of any mistreatment of inmates and promised to investigate.

Abepura prison chief Liberti Sintinjak said no inmates have been tortured since he took over in May.

Karma's case - and those of several other high-profile prisoners of conscience in far-flung separatist-torn regions - was highlighted in a 40-page report released last month by New York-based Human Rights Watch.

Karma had been denied medical treatment for the prostate ailment for almost a year. He was granted permission to go to a hospital in the capital, Jakarta, arrived two weeks ago and underwent laser surgery.

Read more

Indonesia's Disaster Awareness Plan Targets Schools, Hospitals

Jakarta Globe, Nurfika Osman, July 29, 2010

Jakarta. If there was a fire in her neighborhood, 10-year-old Emili Rihanda says she would be at a loss for how to respond.

“I also do not know what causes fires,” Emili told the Jakarta Globe on Thursday.

Meanwhile, Zafira Salian, 9, said she knew of some disasters, such as floods, fires, earthquakes and eruptions. But she does not know how to respond.

“When my home is flooded, I don’t know what I can do. All I do is sit at home,” said Zafira, a student at SDN Jati Pulo 01 state elementary school in West Jakarta.

Despite Indonesia being prone to frequent disasters, from earthquakes to volcanoes, floods and fires, millions of children and adults are not unlike Zafira and Emili in being clueless in the face of such peril.

In response, the government on Thursday launched a public disaster-awareness campaign known as One Million Safe Schools and Hospitals.

“I urge local health agencies and medical officers nationwide to formulate programs and allocate a budget for disaster risk education in hospitals,” Health Minister Endang Rahayu Sedyaningsih said during the launch of the campaign, which will last through November in 1,000 schools and 100 hospitals nationwide.

“Emergency exits and access for evacuation must be well established. All health officers and medical practitioners should understand and be very aware of potential disasters in their individual regions,” Endang said.

The Coordinating Ministry of People’s Welfare, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of National Education and the National Disaster Management Agency, or BNPB, are collaborating on the program.

Fasli Jalal from the education ministry said that the 1,000 schools chosen to participate were spread across disaster-prone regions such as North Sumatra, West Sumatra, Bengkulu, Yogyakarta, East Nusa Tenggara and Papua.

“We will be providing education to teachers and students about preparation for disasters. We are fully committed to this campaign,” Fasli said. As part of the campaign, teachers must establish a special forum to discuss disaster response.

Separately, Syamsul Maarif, who heads the BNPB, pointed out that even as the 2007 Law on Disaster Mitigation requires every region to have its own disaster risk map, few have them.

Jakarta, East Java, Aceh and West Kalimantan had adequate disaster risk maps, he said, but they are the exceptions.

“The disaster risk map for West Sumatra is in the pipeline now. My hope is that these maps are drawn not only on a provincial level but also on the subdistrict level. When a disaster strikes, it does not normally strike an entire province,” Syamsul said.

Separately, Coordinating Minister for People’s Welfare Agung Laksono said that preparedness should be the main priority of disaster planning.

“However, disaster preparedness gets only the smallest bit of attention and priority in our society. We need to work more on this as every citizen needs to be protected,” Agung said, adding that readiness should start at the community level.


Related Article:

Read more

Heartbreak as Hospital Forces Mother to Sell One of Her Newborn Twins

Jakarta Globe, July 08, 2010

A poor mother of newborn twin girls has been forced to sell one of the children to a staff member from the state-owned Indonesian hospital in which they were born because she did not have enough money to pay her medical expenses.

Suparti, 41, from Gunung Kidul district in Yogyakarta, told state news agency Antara that she gave birth by caesarian section to the twins in the Wonosari General Hospital on June 29 but did not have enough money to pay the Rp 6 million ($662) bill.

While Suparti remained in the hospital for a week, her husband, Sarimin, 50, who makes just Rp 15,000 a day doing odd jobs, attempted in vain to get a loan from relatives.

She said during her stay a staff member from the hospital offered to pay her bill if she allowed one of the twins to be adopted by another hospital employee.

“I had to sell one of my twin girls, who I gave birth to only 10 days ago, because I couldn’t pay the bill at the Wonosari General Hospital,” Suparti said. “On Tuesday, I was allowed to go home. One of my babies was taken by Mbak Rina [the hospital staff member]. I was not allowed to see [my baby],” Suparti said

Suparti said she had to pay the medical bill because she had not registered for Jamkesmas, the national health insurance scheme for the poor.

Jakarta Globe/Antara

Related Articles:

Read more

Toddler improving after tiger attack

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 06/29/2010 2:22 PM

A holiday turned sour for 3-year-old girl Angelica Rosa after she was mauled her Monday by a tiger bred at the Indonesia Safari Park in Prigen in the neighboring East Java town of Pasuruan.

She is undergoing treatment at Lavalette Hospital in Malang.

Hospital director Arif Wijanto said Angelica had undergone plastic surgery shortly after she was transferred from Panca Darma Hospital in Pasuruan on Monday night.

“The patient’s condition continues improving and she is able to communicate. But she cannot eat and drink independently yet due to facial injuries,” Arif said as quoted by Antara news agency.

Angelica and her parents were walking past a section inside the park when the 10-month Bengala tiger leapt onto and mauled her, according to the park’s spokeswoman Tisa.

“The tiger broke free from its handlers who quickly regained control of the animal following the attack,” Tisa said.

She added that park management would cover medical costs that Angelica, a resident of Genduk Indak housing complex in Semarang, Central Java, requires.

Read more

Seven killed after drinking homemade liquor

Nana Rukmana, The Jakarta Post, Cirebon | Fri, 05/07/2010 7:52 PM

Seven people were killed and seven others were being treated in hospital in Cirebon, West Java after drinking homemade liquor.

Cirebon regency Police Chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Sufyan Syarief said six people died on Thursday and another one on Friday after having a drinking party during a music show on Wednesday evening.

"They have been treated in Arjawinangun Hospital. But their condition were so critical and doctors could not save their lives," he said.

Read more

Cipto Mangunkusumo hospital opens world-class private service unit

Antara News, Friday, May 7, 2010 13:44 WIB

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Health Minister Endang Rahayu Sedyaningsih officially inaugurated a new building housing a world-class private health service unit at the Cipto Mangunkusumo General Hospital (RSCM) complex here Friday.

The new unit was named RSCM Kencana Integrated Service Unit.

"The management must make improvements in order to deliver effective and efficient services," said the minister when inaugurating the four-story building.

Improved health services in the country were expected to attract patients who had so far been seeking medical treatment abroad, she said.

"According to Singapore`s National Health Group survey, around 50 percent of foreign patients seeking medical services in Singapore, are Indonesians, or roughly 12,000 people annually," the minister said.

RSCM President Director Akmal Taher said the state-owned general hospital`s private services were targeting those so far seeking medical services abroad.

The new unit offers a number of health service clusters, among other things general medical checkups, in-vitro fertilization, tumor treatment, integrated breast clinic, aesthetic service, rehabilitation service, dental service, eye care center, and neuroscience.

"Services in all clusters are given in integrated ways by teams, and there is no departmental service," he said.

Several RSCM units, such as the Cardiology Unit, Perinatal Unit, and Radiotherapy Unit, have acquired ISO 9001 Certificates.

Read more

Half kg of roundworm pulled from patient

The Jakarta Post, Thu, 05/06/2010 12:08 PM

BANDUNG: A medical team at Cimahi Hospital removed 500 grams of roundworms from the abdomen of an 11-year-old patient.

The operation was carried out in late March, but was only revealed to the media on Wednesday.

"The patient was admitted here on March 21 and was operated on March 27," Sonya Henny Rangkuti, a service official, said.

She said the patient had complained about being unable to defecate for five days but she would not elaborate further on the disease, saying the official medical report would be released Thursday.

Read more

300 people poisoned by mixed liquor, 22 die in Salatiga

Suherdjoko, The Jakarta Post, Salatiga, Central Java | Fri, 04/23/2010 7:49 PM

Out of 300 people, who were poisoned by mixed liquor and treated in hospital in Salatiga, Central Java, 22 had died as of Friday, a police officer said.

Salatiga Police chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Susetio Cahyadi said that the number of victims would likely grow bigger.

Susetio said that the victims were poisoned by the mixed liquor made by Rusmanadi alias Tius, 41, a resident of Tingkir district in Salatiga.

They bought the liquor at Rp 10,000 per liter from Tiur's kiosk on April 16, 2010, Susetio said, adding that one day after consuming it, they started to vomit, experienced breathing difficulties and had headache.

Those who died had been seen since Sunday and their number could possibly rise, he said.

Susetio further said that the police already named Rusmanadi as suspect in the poisoning case and detained him at the Salatiga Police headquarters.

Rusmanadi could be charged under Article 80 Paragraph 4 of Law No. 23/1992 on health with jail sentence of up to 15 years. He could also be charged under Article 204 Paragraph 1 of the Criminal Law with jail sentence of up to 15 years or life if the victims died.

Read more