Lumaktaw sa pangunahing content

Alice Eduardo’s Valentine



Construction magnate Alice Eduardo was so shocked one day when, while visiting the child of an employee, who was being treated for dengue at the Philippine General Hospital, she saw all the sick children in one ward. Including those undergoing chemotherapy to vanquish their cancer.

“Paano na sila?” she asked their doctors, who told her of the need for an isolation ward for these most vulnerable of God’s creatures.

According to Alice, she was also told that children with cancer comprise the fastest-growing sector of hospital patients, with their numbers rising by an alarming 30 percent every year.

Dubbed “Woman of Steel” for her various landmark construction projects, Alice told her sister Small Laude, “It’s time for me to build a monument of thanksgiving for all the blessings we have received.”

Alice chose to build the monument, which her friends call her “monument of love,” at the PGH compound. The marker of the ward was unveiled on Feb. 18, 2015 — just after Valentine’s Day.

The donation of the Hematology-Oncology Isolation Ward to the Department of Pediatrics of PGH is part of Alice’s Sta. Elena Construction’s corporate social responsibility program. The stand-alone pediatric cancer ward has a 14-bed facility for children from poor families with leukemia and other killer diseases. It also has in-patient chemotherapy facilities as well as blood transfusion and bone marrow extraction equipment and supplies.

“The isolation ward has done wonders to improve the survival of cancer patients,” says Dr. Gap Legaspi, director of the Philippine General Hospital. “From 20 percent to 80 percent!”

Leukemia is known to affect around 40 to 60 percent of cancers among children. The disease reportedly accounts for more deaths among children than those caused by dengue shock syndrome, sepsis and prematurity combined, according to experts. Its extremely expensive treatments are a shot at the moon for most indigent families.

According to published sources, before the isolation ward was functional, “The survival rate was barely two in 10 children because of the high cost of diagnosis and treatment that childhood cancer entails. Between 50 and  60 percent of these children, however, could be saved with relatively simple and inexpensive drugs and procedures.”

That’s when Alice dug deep into her pocket to build the new ward, which reportedly cost close to P10 million including equipment.

“This new pediatric cancer ward will aid the families who can’t afford expensive treatments for children with cancer, providing them a separate ward, especially since they are more susceptible to communicable diseases,” says Alice.

That’s a lot of children’s lives saved for the country’s future. Who knows one of those saved can find a more affordable cure for cancer someday?

“Actually, these children have been my Valentine,” says Alice, who is a single mother. “It warms my heart to love them.”

***

Because of her devotion to her parents, Alice hopes one day to also build a wing in the isolation ward for the elderly.

“All I have and the fruits of my success I want to share with my family. If it were just me, I can live in a smaller, more manageable house. But I want my family to also enjoy what we didn’t have before. Recently, I had 1,000 mango trees planted in our farm. Not to sell, really, but para may mapitas ang mga mahal ko sa buhay at mga kaibigan (for my family and friends to harvest).”

With power plants, bridges, and the foundation and piling of virtually all structures of the Entertainment City as feathers in her hard hat, Alice says she is content, and still simple.

“The feeling of satisfaction I get now in sitting in my car is just as much as the feeling of satisfaction I got when I drove my first Toyota Corolla 16 valve many years ago. Pareho lang.”

One of her favorite quotes, she says, is from the movie Mahogany: “Success is nothing without someone you love to share it with.”

Philstar Source:

Mga Komento

Mga sikat na post sa blog na ito

Tycoons to solve So. Leyte’s poverty

The “Kapatid Conglomerates” composed of the Philippines’ top businessmen expressed their willingness to support the national government’s program that will help decrease extreme poverty in the countryside. In a recent meeting, Southern Leyte was included as one of the top 10 areas of extreme poverty which the business group wishes to help. Present during the meeting were President Rodrigo Duterte, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III and the country’s top conglomerates, which included the likes of Hans Sy (SM Prime Holdings), Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala (Ayala Corp.), Manny Pangilinan (MVP Group of Companies), Lance Gokongwei (JG Summit), Teresita Sy-Coson (SM Investments Corp.), Tony Tan Caktiong (Jollibee Food Corp.), George (Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry), Erramon Aboitiz (Aboitiz Equity Ventures), Doris Magsaysay Ho (Magsaysay Group), Alfred Ty (GT Capital Holdings), former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Rep. Arthur Yap, Federico Lopez (First Philipp