A whole new world for a girl with `new’ eyes

04/08/2011



Aspiring beauty queen gets corrective eye treatment

Even at the tender age of 4, Kia Mae Dandana already felt the pain of being teased and laughed at. In the neighborhood where she lives, her playmates – sometimes even the adults – called her libat (squint-eyed), which often forced her to stop playing and run home straight to her mother, Margarita, to seek comfort. She was playful and energetic, but hearing people make fun of her always made the child both angry and sad. To ease Kia’s pain, Margarita would just hug her tight. At times moved to tears herself, she would tell her only child: “When we have the money a doctor will treat your eyes.”

Just recently, Kia, now 6, received the proper medical treatment she needed. No, her family didn’t have the money, but the mining company where Kia’s father, Roger, is employed – TVI Resource Development Philippines, Inc. (TVIRD) – noticed the little girl’s condition and provided her and her parents the required support

(Please see related blog via this link). . Through the company’s Community Relations and Development Office (CReDO), Kia was linked up with Tzu Chi Foundation, a Buddhist charity organization founded in Taiwan, which provides, among others, medical assistance to the poor. Tzu Chi are Chinese words for “compassion” and “relief”.

Now, barely two weeks after her operation, Kia is a “new” girl in her neighborhood.

Kia Mae (in glasses) and mother, Margarita, 10 days after the girl’s eye surgery. “She wants to be like Venus Raj,” mom says of daughter.

“I’m pretty sure she feels better now that she won’t be teased by her playmates anymore,” Joel Alasco, CReDO Superintendent, said. “She will grow up confident that she has normal eyes like most people around her.”

“Before her operation, Kia told me that when she grows up, she wants to be like Venus Raj, the Filipina who emerged fourth runner-up in the 2010 Miss Universe beauty pageant,” Margarita said laughing. “Who knows? She definitely has a better chance now.”

Kia’s eye surgery was administered by Dr. Maria Antonette Aguilera-Cases, a Zamboanga City-based eye specialist who traces her roots to Siocon, incidentally the host municipality that encompasses Canatuan, site of TVIRD’s copper-zinc operations. Dr. Cases is one of doctors of the Tzu Chi Great Love Eye Center, a project of the Tzu Chi Foundation. The Eye Center, located at the compound of the Zamboanga City Medical Center, is equipped with state-of-the-art sight-saving apparatuses. The comely doctor told Margarita that Kia was the 16th child she had operated on since the Tzu Chi began providing its services to indigents in Zamboanga City and other parts of Mindanao and the Visayas in 2004.

Above, Kia before her eye operation at the Zamboanga City Medical Center, where the Tzu Chi Great Love Eye Center is located. Below, Kia after the surgery. “She definitely has a better chance now (of becoming a beauty queen),” says her mom.

“Kia was most behaved,” Margarita recounted what Dr. Cases had related to her. “Our girl did not cry when Dr. Cases’ staff began administering the drug that will make her sleep throughout the operation. It lasted three hours.

“Clearly, Kia understood that she will undergo an operation that will correct her eye defect,” Margarita continued. “She just asked me where she was going when I dressed her with the hospital gown that she had to wear inside the operating room. She only cried when she could not see me with the bandage covering her eyes after the operation. But when Dr. Cases assured her she will be able to see the following day after the bandage will have been removed, she immediately stopped crying,” Margarita said.

Margarita related that they had waited for such a long time for the doctor who was then still busy attending to other patients in the Eye Center. She had got frustrated and told Kia that she just wanted to go home because there were plenty of chores that needed to be done at home.

Kia asked her mother: “Ma, do you want me to be called libat for the rest of my life?”

Touched by her daughter’s question, Margarita hugged her daughter and resolved that she will not miss that opportunity to give Kia the chance to live a normal life.

Kia, Dr. Maria Antonette Cases, and Margarita after the bandage was taken from Kia’s eyes. Below, Roger, Kia’s father, works at TVIRD’s Materials Management Department. “Kia was most behaved,” Dr. Cases says.

The child’s eye condition, according to Margarita, was not inborn. “About five years ago, Roger and I were working in a factory in Manila. Kia was left in the care of a relative. While her nanny ran an errand, Kia fell from our small terrace. She was just more than one year old then. The fall affected part of her eyes and head. Her forehead was swollen. It was so big that she looked like a hydrocephalus patient. Five days later, her eyes squinted. Her doctor told us that an eye nerve suffered trauma. But we were assured that her condition can be corrected through an eye operation,” Margarita recalled.

But when she brought Kia to an eye specialist in Zamboanga, Margarita was told to prepare P150,000 (about US $3,400) for the operation. “The amount was totally out of reach for us that’s why I told Roger that we had to save if Kia’s eye condition is to be cured. Since he is the only one working, it would take years for us to raise the needed amount,” Margarita said.

Joel Alasco, TVIRD CReDO Superintendent, shows to Kia and Margarita the photo posted on Facebook that moved the company to provide assistance to the girl. Alasco showed the same photo to Tzu Chi Foundation, which then advised TVIRD to bring Kia to Zamboanga City for treatment. “We will continue to monitor Kia and get her the post-operative care she needs,” Alasco says.

Kia’s condition became known to TVIRD through Facebook. John Ridsdel, TVIRD Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, was going through one of the recent posts of Noelle Nazareno, a former CReDo staff member, when he noticed Kia in one of the photos. The girl’s photo, together with her family, was taken when Nazareno visited the Dandana household to bid them goodbye. Ridsdel immediately called up CReDO’s Alasco and requested the latter to assist the Dandana family regarding Kia’s case. Shortly thereafter, Alasco learned about Tzu Chi and proceeded to coordinate closely with the foundation.

“We’re simply lucky to have TVI(RD) here,” said Margarita. “Besides providing jobs to members of our families, the company has made available to us with sustainable alternative livelihood opportunities for us to be able to move onward even after the company ceases its operations here in Canatuan. And now this gesture of kindness to Kia.”

The Dandanas’ Facebook photo that started it all. From left: Grandpa Alito, Kia, Grandma Zedai, and cousin Joy.

“We will continue to monitor Kia and get her the post-operative care she needs,” Alasco said. “We will do our best to make sure the procedure she underwent will be successful in the long term.”

Margarita thanked Tzu Chi Foundation and TVIRD for giving back to Kia her normal eyes. She said the care and kindness that she experienced from the foundation and company will always be remembered. “That care and kindness touched me to my very core,” Margarita said. “Their gesture will always remind me that truly there is always goodness in the hearts of men.” (Lullie Micabalo)