Web Radio
May 28, 2008
» Midday Update

ST Forum
Min:26 °C Max:32 °C
» Weather Details
January 25, 2008 Friday
Home > ST Forum > Story
Jan 25, 2008
Make some medical-fee waivers permanent
ON JAN 16, my wife and I helped to take Ms Ivy Tham, a 44-year-old Down's syndrome woman with the mental age of a two-year-old, to the Toa Payoh Polyclinic. She is not related to my family.

Her three-month waiver of medical fees had expired last September. The counter staff member insisted that Ivy had to pay first for the visit. I said that she is a disabled person with no income but she stood firm on payment. I told the staff that if she insisted, she could collect the money directly from Ivy - a physically and mentally disabled woman in a wheelchair. The staff relented and waived payment.

On Jan 18, a staff member from the Diabetes and Endocrine Centre at Tan Tock Seng Hospital called me to say that Ivy needed a series of injections as her blood count was very low. I was given a list of medicines to order from the pharmacy.

After collecting the medicines, I was told to pay. I informed the pharmacist that Ivy was scheduled for a waiver review on Feb 19. He promptly took the medicines back from me and insisted that payment be made first.

After I protested that the hospital should not deprive the poor of medicine, he referred the matter to his superior and later gave the medicines back to me.

For the waiver review, I had to make separate appointments with Toa Payoh Polyclinic and Tan Tock Seng Specialist Centre, narrating the history of Ivy twice.

If Ivy could be given a short-term waiver after each review, could she not be given a long-term waiver?

Her congenital and financial conditions are obviously not going to get better.

Hong Geok Hua

Best viewed at 1152x864 resolution with IE 6.0 or FireFox 2.0 and above
Copyright © 2007 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn No. 198402868E | Privacy Statement | Terms & Conditions