9 September 2016 12:00 am Views - 7166
Representatives of the government, religious leaders,
donors, celebrities and prominent media personalities made an appeal in March this year to help raise funds to buy medical equipment for the National Cancer Hospital in Maharagama. Numerous donors responded immediately while the media took on the responsibility of creating awareness on this urgent need of the hospital. Within a matter of months, a sum of an estimated 230 million rupees was raised by the fund. Some people tirelessly campaigned for the fund. Corporate bigwigs coined it ‘social responsibility.’ The common citizens doled out whatever they could, in the hope of contributing towards the worthy cause. The officials who were tasked with the responsibility of securing a PET scanner for the hospital encouraged all parties interested in making sizable contributions to the fund, and patiently stood back awaiting the 200 million rupees to be raised. Almost three months have lapsed since the target sum was raised and yet the Maharagama Cancer Hospital is deprived of a PET scanner.
Several groups who took note of this dire need engaged in various efforts to raise funds to purchase a PET scanner for the Maharagama Hospital. After months of untiring campaigning by generous donors, both local and foreign, funds were raised to buy the much-needed scanner. However, their efforts are yet to see fruition as numerous bureaucracies have hampered the installation of the scanner. Dailymirror The learns that although a staggering 200 million rupees was raised to assist the grim needs of the Maharagama Cancer Hospital, funds are now lying idle in the hospital account, disheartening benevolent donors who wish to see their contributions, however big or small, ease the healing of needful patients. Several months after the hospital hailed that the PET scanner fund received an excess 20 million in addition to the 200 million required, the Health Ministry is yet to call for tenders to buy the scanner.
“Once the evaluation report is submitted to the Cabinet-appointed Procurement Committee, tenders will be called to buy the scanner,” Navavi said. When asked how long the approval of the report would take, he said according to the guidelines set by the procurement committee, the procedure would take up to four months.
The PET scan is a nuclear medicine imaging test in which a small amount of liquid radioactive material is injected into a patient’s body. Detailing the preparations of the hospital for the installation of the machine, Dr. Wilfred said a building within the hospital premises had already been approved by the Atomic Energy Authority for the assembly of the scanner.
“Since this diagnostic technique is a branch of nuclear medicine which employs radioisotopes, the construction of the building and installation of the scanner has to be approved by the Atomic Energy Authority,” Dr. Wilfred said, implying that the installation would be further impeded.
The installation of PET scanners presents somewhat different design requirements to conventional nuclear medicine departments, and therefore requires careful deliberation. However, this cannot be new information for the authorities concerned. The grounding for the installation of the scanner could have been forethought while the vendors, tenders and other discussions involved in buying the scanner could have been anticipated and prepared for. However, it is regretful that the authorities failed to do the needful when the public did not act in haste to assist the needy.
The Dailymirror also contacted the Deputy Director General of Health Services and the Chairman of the Tender Committee
Dr. Sarath Amunugama. According to
Dr. Amunugama, the Technical Evaluation Committee last week submitted its report to the Procurement Committee appointed by the Cabinet.
“The approval of the Committee has to be sought before the tenders can be called,” he said. Nevertheless, Dr. Amunugama expressed confidence that tenders would be called for to buy the PET scanner by next week.
As the Dailymirror reported on a previous occasion, among the neediest of this PET scanner are children whose lives depend on the results of a PET-CT scan. Unlike in the case of adults, the spread of malignancies among child patients is considerably faster. Thus, the need to diagnose, detect and monitor the effectiveness of treatment and therapy is greatly facilitated by the information gained from a PET-CT scan. The authorities, instead of depending on intricate bureaucracies, could have expedited the process of installation, had there been appropriate measures to circumvent delays in facilitating critically-ill patients with essential care. Time waits for no one, and neither does Cancer. Countless lives are affected with each passing day that the hospital is deprived of essential facilities in the treatment of its patients. Let this note be a reminder to all parties concerned that time is of essence in saving innocent lives which have fallen prey to this deadly disease.