LAHORE: Kidney pa
tients suffering from chronic kidney failure in Lahore will no longer have to wait for their turn in the list of advanced booking, as Mayo Hospital has started offering
dialysis services a life-saving procedure for those who want it on an emergency basis.
A patient requires a minimum of two
dialyses a week. Once the kidneys of a person stop working, regular
dialysis is the only way of keeping the patient alive. A kidney transplant is a long-term solution to kidney failure, but the surgical procedure costs a minimum of Rs 3 million to Rs 4 million.
Pa
tients needing this life-saving procedure in an emergency situation on a daily basis are refused
dialyses at public hospitals, because the facility was only available to booked pa
tients and not to emergency pa
tients. Hence, anyone needing a
dialysis used to get a card made at some
dialysis unit and then they could get
dialysis.
A source told Daily Times that a meeting had been held on December 21 to finalise the development of the emergency treatment facility at Mayo Hospital. He said that Mayo Hospital Chief Executive Officer Prof Asad Aslam Khan chaired the meeting, while East Medical Ward Chairman Prof Irshad Hussain, North Medical
Ward head D
r Sajid Abaidullah, Urology Department head Dr Junaid Habib Khan, Associate Prof Urology Unit-I Dr M Akhlaq, West Medical Ward AP Dr Nasir Farooq Butt, West Medical Ward AP Dr Rabia Rathore, Nephrology Dept AP Dr Irfan Elahi and Saeed Ahmed attended the meeting.
The meeting discussed in detail the matter of provision of
dialysis facility to those pa
tients who come to the emergency ward in the evening or night, and had been advised emergency
dialysis by the physician. He said that after the input from all the participants, it was decided that the departments of Nephrology, Urology and East Medical Ward would keep two machines available for such pa
tients in the evening and night. The hospital’s administration will provide two nurses – one each for evening and night shifts – in East Medical Ward and two nurses and two attendant peons in the Nephrology Department. Any person requiring emergency
dialysis will be referred to the on-duty deputy medical superintendent (DMS) in the evening and night shifts, who will then contact the Nephrology, Urology and East Medical Ward about the availability of the
dialysis machine, and then refer the patient to that unit.
It was also decided that a patient or his/her attendant would
not be asked to shuttle between the wards to find out if the machine was available. The Nephrology, Urology and East Medical Ward will provide monthly duty roster of medical officer in-charge of the
dialysis machine in the evening and night shifts. Mayo Hospital’s Dr Salman Kazmi said there was no emergency
dialysis facility for kidney failure pa
tients in the past. “They had to visit the nearby private hospitals and pay a high price.” He said that now machines had been reserved at Mayo Hospital for pa
tients coming to emergency ward, and it would save a number of lives on a daily basis. He stressed that the same protocol of emergency
dialysis facility needed to be followed at other government hospitals.