Babar
smiles at the one year old baby crawling and babbling on the floor near him,
and says “Can you imagine this mischievous little boy being so sick that he
would cry all day and night long?”
“Two
months after Abdul Rehman was born, he started getting a chest infection. We
thought it was the usual way babies get sick sometimes. We took him to a
neighborhood clinic and got some medicines for him,” narrates Abdul Rehman’s
father Mohammad Babar Bhatti.
“Abdul
Rehman would cry all night. He was in constant pain and had a bad cough all the
time. We were so concerned and took him to multiple doctors and different
hospitals for months. We were going from one doctor to another who would keep
prescribing medicines which wouldn’t improve Abdul Rehman’s health,” Babar
continues.
Babar
was eventually told to get an echocardiogram done for Abdul Rehman as a doctor
suspected the baby had a hole in his heart. This was confirmed from the test
results. “We were terrified when we heard this. Our other two children had no
such problem. Doctors told me to just continue giving Abdul Rehman medicines as
they could not operate on such a tiny baby,” says Babar.
Babar’s
eyes well up as he speaks, “I can’t tell you what pain my tiny baby was in. The
medicines were not helping at all. He would cry all the time. His body would
tense up from the pain. I can’t describe what it feels like when you see your
child going through such torture.”
By
the time Abdul Rehman was 6 months old and the situation had not improved, a
friend of Babar’s suggested he take the baby to Aga Khan University Hospital
(AKUH). Babar met Dr. Waris Ahmad, a Clinical Assistant Professor in Department
of Cardiothoracic Surgery and Dr. Shazia Mohsin, an Assistant Professor in the
Department of Paediatrics and Child Health who is a paediatric cardiologist.
They confirmed the baby had a hole in his heart and would need emergency
surgery. “When they told me the treatment cost was Rs. 850,000, I knew I would
not be able to afford it as my salary is only Rs. 22,000,” says Babar, “So we
just took Abdul Rehman home; but then he got really sick and we had to have him
admitted to the ICU of another hospital.”
Dr.
Mohsin got in touch with Babar on her own accord. “Dr. Shazia asked me why I
wasn’t getting the surgery done at AKUH and I told her I can’t afford it. She
told me to just come to the hospital and she would get the finances sorted
out,” states Babar. He continues, “She sent me to the Patient Welfare
Department at AKUH where they asked for documents showing my financial
situation. Usually the Patient Welfare covers treatment costs partially. When
they assessed that I really had no other alternative, they covered almost the
entire treatment cost. I only had to arrange Rs. 100,000 out of the 850,000.”
“For
me, Dr. Shazia is like an angel. She treated us like family. She was like my
mother or sister. I cannot appreciate enough the medical expertise and
emotional support she provided. Aga Khan University Hospital was the only place
we came to where they said yes we can operate on your baby and we can fix the
problem. No other hospital or doctor said this. I wasted so much time going
between doctors and hospitals where we were talked to rudely and heartlessly,” says
Babar.
Babar
describes AKUH as something out of this world. “The hospital is so organized;
the doctors and medical staff are kind and polite and the Welfare Department
will go out of the way to help even financially disadvantaged people like me,”
he says.
Abdul
Rehman looks up mid-crawl and grins cheekily at his teary-eyed father, bringing
an instant smile to Babar’s face. “I cannot thank AKUH enough for saving my
little boy and removing all that pain and suffering from him,” beams Babar.
Abdul Rehman's treatment was made possible with the generous support received from Faysal Bank Limited.