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Tears of joy [for Health City Cayman]

Screen Shot 2016-02-16 at 8.58.02 AMBY ANIKA RICHARDS From Jamaica Observer

Dad thanks Observer, Health City Cayman for saving his precious 6-year-old daughter

EVEROL Drummond had high praises for the Jamaica Observer and Health City Cayman Islands yesterday, as he recounted how a burden was lifted from his shoulders when his daughter received a critical heart surgery after her story was published in the Observer.

Drummond said he is now a free man and his six-year-old daughter Cassie is living a normal life.

“Thank God for the Jamaica Observer who placed an article. And from that article, there was a good lady by the name of Andrea Sawyers who read the article and that was when the magic all transformed,” Drummond said before also thanking Health City Cayman Islands.

Drummond was speaking at a press conference hosted by Health City Cayman Islands at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel in Kingston to present the health care services offered by the facility to Jamaicans.

Screen Shot 2016-02-16 at 8.59.07 AMThe Observer published Cassie’s story on September 6, 2015. Her doting dad said then that Cassie was diagnosed with having two holes in her heart a few months after birth. However, while one of the holes had closed, she still needed surgical correction of a large atrial septal defect and a small patent ductus arteriosus. The ductus arteriosus is a blood vessel that allows blood to go around a baby’s lungs before birth, while the atrial septal defect is a hole in the wall that allows oxygen-rich blood to leak into the oxygen-poor blood chambers in the heart.
But Drummond could not afford the approximately $700,000 the surgery would cost at the University Hospital of the West Indies. His only option then was to join a long waiting list at Bustamante Hospital for Children.

“The six years with my little daughter with this heart defect, it was not an easy six years,” Drummond said. “I have sleepless nights, long journey, long nights on the road, sleeping in hospitals. But God bless somebody who gave me the Jamaica Observer number and I place an article in the Observer — myself and my little Cassie — because it seemed like there was no more hope,” a reflective Drummond said.

He said Sawyers, whom he now describes as his “guiding angel”, read the article and reached out to him, advising him that she had friends in the Cayman Islands. He said she asked him if she could share his number with them.

Drummond said he was then contacted by Dr Binoy Chattuparambil, the senior cardiac surgeon at Health City Cayman Islands.

“I wanted to call him first because I had the problem, but Dr Binoy called me before I could even call him, and that is when the magic really started working,” Drummond shared.

He said the doctor asked if he had paperwork to support Cassie’s health issue, and he e-mailed them to him. According to Drummond, in a matter of minutes the senior cardiac surgeon got back to him and offered to help at no cost, but Drummond had to get Cassie to the Cayman Islands.

“What I wait for to happen in Jamaica for six years, it took me 30 minutes… There are no words that could really tell you how I felt at the time, and I felt the tears come down — tears of joy,” said Drummond.

He admitted that he was hesitant because he didn’t want to lose his “little Cassie” and he had doubts about the doctors.

“I was wondering if these people were just some people who really trying some things… I was just like, ‘How these people so interested to do this? I wonder if them just want some experience,’” he recounted.

But once he got to Health City and spoke to Dr Binoy and saw other children who they had helped, Drummond said his confidence increased.

He told the Observer that Cassie did her surgery in November.

“And now there is my little Cassie,” Drummond said as he stared at his daughter. “She put on her weight, she started to eat her food, she is living a normal life.”

While also thanking readers who might not have reached out to him, but were sympathetic after reading his story, Drummond said: “You cannot sit down with this problem. You have to reach out, because if you sit down with this problem, you might be in line waiting.”

Since Health City Cayman Islands accepted its first patient in 2014, it has done in excess of 60 paediatric cases at no cost for children across the Caribbean.

IMAGES:
Six-year-old Cassie Drummond (centre) smiles as she embraces her father, Everol (right), and Dr Sripadh Upadhya, Health City Cayman Islands’ senior paediatric cardiologist, at yesterday’s Health City press conference at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel in Kingston to present their health care services to Jamaicans.
Dr Binoy Chattuparambil, senior cardiac surgeon, Health City Cayman Islands, is all smiles as Cassie Drummond gives him a hug at yesterday’s Health City press conference at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel in Kingston.
For more on this story go to: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Tears-of-joy_51888

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