THE MONTH of May has three significant dates for our family: Mothers’ Day, Mama’s birthday and her death anniversary.
My mother, fondly called Mama Linda, died on May 17, 2002 due to pericarditis and lymphoma three days after she celebrated her 61st birthday on May 14. One year and a half later, Papa joined Mama.
Lymphoma is a cancer of the lymphatic system, which is part of the body’s germ-fighting network. The lymphatic system includes the lymph nodes (lymph glands), spleen, thymus gland and bone marrow. Lymphoma can affect all those areas as well as other organs throughout the body.
Out of nine siblings, Mama is one of four sisters who passed away due to cancer.
I celebrated this year’s Mother’s Day, which coincided with my mother’s birthday, with the cancer-afflicted children and their mothers at the CHILD Haus, or Center for Health Improvement and Life Development Haus.
No ailment has sustained as strong of a negative stigma as cancer, especially on children.
The World Health Organization (WHO) noted that an estimated 4,700 children (aged 0 to 19 years) are diagnosed with cancer each year in the Philippines.
Leukemia accounts for approximately 49% of childhood cancers while other cancers affect the brain and nervous system (9.7%), lymph nodes (9%), retina (7.5%), kidney (3.4%), and bone and soft tissues, gonadal, and germ cell sites.
Deaths from childhood cancer are estimated at 1,700 each year. A cousin of mine, Lawrence, died of leukemia at the young age of eight years old.
The Department of Health (DOH) said malignancies in children are difficult to detect because they may present similarly as other common childhood diseases.
The DOH noted that parents should have their children undergo regular medical check-up and be alerted to the following symptoms which may be associated with cancer in children: prolonged, unexplained fever or illness; unexplained pallor; increased tendency to bruise, unexplained localized pain or limping; unusual masses or swelling; frequent headaches, often with vomiting; sudden eye or visual changes; sudden or progressive weight loss.
A child’s chronic disease, like cancer, affects every sphere of their life.
Childhood cancer is a “stressful experience” for parents as caring is an emotionally exhausting task, causing physical, mental, social, and economic well-being to decline as the disease progresses.
The effects and consequences include the risk of developing anger, resentment, guilt, adjustment pain, anxiety, psychosocial distress, and burnout, often leading to a deterioration of mental well-being.
Recurring issues include limited access to health facilities, long waiting times, prolonged hospital stays, lack of chemotherapy drugs, and limited or inadequate information about their child’s disease condition and treatment.
The long-term emotional effects of childhood cancer can include depression, and fear of the cancer coming back.
Established in 2002, CHILD Haus is a temporary shelter for indigent patients from different provinces who have cancer or other dreaded diseases and have no place to stay in Metro Manila while undergoing medical evaluation or treatment. It provides free room and board to its residents.
CHILD Haus run along the principles of hospice care and promotes the concept of holistic healing through its various programs, services and activities.
CHILD Haus is a seven-story multi-purpose complex located on Agoncillo Street in Paco, Manila which is walking distance from the Philippine General Hospital (PGH) where most of the kid patients seek treatment.
Members of the Maritime Law Association of the Philippines (MARLAWPh) usually gather every May at CHILD Haus as part of the “birthday wish party” of our former president Atty. Pedrito Faytaren,
In 2015, I celebrated my 45th birthday in CHILD Haus in honor of my mother who died of cancer.
It was also that year that the movie “CHILD HAUS” written by Socorro Villanueva and directed by Louie Ignacio was shown; it featured child stars Miggs Cuaderno, Therese Malvar, Vince Magbanua, Felixia Dizon, Erica Yu, and Mona Louise Rey.
A mother has the ability to love selflessly as the pillar of strength in everyone’s life.
No one could ever surpass the love of a Mother to her own child; a love that requires a sacrifice that only a Mother can do.
She is the one without whom life is incomplete as she bears the pain of child birth.
With childhood cancer, her pain continues as she endures a child’s “why me” and “disease as a divine punishment” self-pity perceptions.
Her spirituality is a source of the child’s strength and bravery.
For the cancer-afflicted children and their mothers, CHILD HAUS accords them hope of a future free from cancer.
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“Peyups” is the moniker of University of the Philippines.
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Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the seafarers’ division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan law offices. For comments, e-mail info@sapalovelez.com, or call 09175025808 or 09088665786./PN