Senior Investigative Reporter
shaliza.hassanali@guardian.co.tt
Hundreds of patients across Trinidad and Tobago’s public hospitals may be waiting in limbo for critical surgeries—some for months, others for years.
Now, a committee appointed by the Ministry of Health is trying to put hard numbers to those delays.
Tasked with auditing the backlog of surgeries across the five Regional Health Authorities (RHAs), the committee is also documenting how long patients have been waiting for various procedures—including cataract and other eye surgeries.
The findings will be compiled in a report to be delivered to Health Minister Dr Lackram Bodoe by the end of the month.
In a WhatsApp message to the Sunday Guardian on Wednesday, Bodoe said the data would help the ministry understand the scope of the backlog and guide future interventions.
The committee, Bodoe said, would have to come up with “recommendations on ways to expedite these surgeries where necessary”.
Sean Luke's mom fights for sight and survival
The Minister of Health’s comments came just after Pauline Bharat shared her frustration over months of futile clinic visits at the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex, Mt Hope, where her eye treatment seemed to be going nowhere.
After no clear answers were forthcoming, Bharat gave up.
The 62-year-old woman found herself stuck in an endless loop of appointments and delays—until frustration finally forced her to walk away.
Bharat’s experience is not unique as she was one of hundreds of citizens waiting long periods for elective surgeries—cases that the Health Ministry’s review is now trying to quantify and address.
She is also no stranger to pain and perseverance, having endured unimaginable loss in 2006 when her six-year-old son, Sean Luke, was murdered. An autopsy showed US-born Luke died of internal injuries arising from being sodomised with a cane stalk. The murder, which attracted national and international attention, was recorded as one of the country’s most gruesome.
Facing yet another kind of struggle, she tried to navigate what seems to be an overwhelmed public health system.
Bharat’s eye troubles began in 2023 when she yanked a crowbar from the ground and it slipped from her hands, striking her left eye and leaving it swollen and bloodshot.
Her vision later began to fail.
Last year, Bharat was examined by two eye specialists at Mt Hope, one of whom recommended that she pursue private treatment.
“The doctor told me they don’t do anything in the hospital,” she recalled.
She never returned to the public hospital, instead spending her life savings at a private eye hospital in hopes of restoring her sight. Doctors diagnosed her with diabetic macular oedema (DME), a condition where excess fluid builds up in the macula, causing it to swell and resulting in vision loss.
“Each visit cost me $1,000,” Bharat said, but her eyes showed little improvement.
Unable to continue her sewing work, Bharat was forced onto the breadline. To make matters worse, her application for a social disability grant was rejected, she said, because she still retained some vision in one eye.
“They said I was not blind enough,” Bharat explained. “I truly believed that they did not care. It was a cruel and vindictive act.”
From losing her son, her job, and her hopes, to going partially blind, despair and darkness took over Bharat’s life.
The photographs of Luke, which she had held close for 18 years to comfort her aching heart, began to appear hazy.
Although Bharat had crossed the age of 60, she was not entitled to a monthly $3,000 NIS grant as she never paid contributions. And she would have to turn 65 to qualify for a senior citizen grant or pension. There seemed no way out.
“I felt hopeless,” an emotional Bharat said during a recent interview with the Sunday Guardian. Bharat said she had to turn to God for courage and strength because she could no longer cope.
EyesTT restores woman sight, dignity
Last November, Bharat shared her plight in the Sunday Guardian.
Her story moved Sam Basdeo, managing partner of EyesTT, who stepped in to offer eye treatment at the company’s expense.
“Sam helped me in my darkest hour,” Bharat admitted.
After four months of treatment costing over $20,000, her eyesight began to improve.
“Something in me shifted. I knew then that there was something I could do to make a difference,” Basdeo recalled.
“She has been seeing better. It is still a work in progress. We tried to remove all her financial barriers so that she would have a fighting chance of regaining, improving and preserving her existing vision.”
Basdeo noted that Bharat has suffered significant vision impairment in both eyes due to diabetes.
“It is my opinion that it is very difficult for her to be able to survive independently and safely. From a clinical and humanitarian standpoint, individuals in her situation often benefit from additional support, whether it be community assistance or social welfare programmes.
“While we do not make decisions on eligibility, we do hope that her case is given thorough, thoughtful consideration by the relevant agencies. Any assistance given to her could have an astronomical impact on her daily life.”
EyesTT’s chief ophthalmologist Dr Dorian Dwarika provided Bharat with diagnostic scans, laser procedures, and intravitreal Avastin injections.
Dwarika explained that Bharat had “a level of what we call the two blinding characteristics for diabetic eye disease; something called bleeding where there’s actual fresh blood in the eyes and something called swelling, where diabetes causes the back of the eye in a microscopic level to swell”. This, he said, could lead to decreased vision.
He added that Bharat was at a critical stage where treatment was necessary, “or else it could have long-term effects in causing her to lose more vision”. One of her eyes, he said, was in the legally blind category.
“Legally blind is not that she can’t see at all, but it means that level of function was below what we considered to be a level that is considered blinding.”
Dwarika confirmed they were able to stabilise the diabetic damage.
Fresh eyes on Bharat's plea for help–MP Jearlean John
On Tuesday, the Sunday Guardian contacted Bharat’s Couva North MP, Jearlean John, regarding her case.
John said she was aware of Bharat’s matter as her representative.
“I have seen Sean Luke’s mother twice. So I am aware. Now that there is a change in the regime, maybe I want somebody to look at it (file) with a fresh pair of eyes. I am going to flag it to present to the minister,” John said, referring to Vandana Mohit, Minister of the People, Social Development and Family Services.