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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, July 01, 2001 |
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Southern States
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Subsidised heart operation scheme for the poor
By Our Staff Reporter
BANGALORE, JUNE 30. Medical centres and dedicated heart hospitals
must accord importance to research into why an alarming number of
Indians from different social and professional backgrounds are
becoming vulnerable to heart diseases, the Governor, Ms V.S. Rama
Devi has said.
Launching here on Friday the "Subsidised heart operation scheme
for bread winners" of the Narayana Hrudayalaya and Rotary Club of
Bangalore, which is targetted at the working class families who
suffer from heart diseases, Ms. Rama Devi said while India lacked
the state-of-the-art technology and facilities to address rising
health and medical problems in the country, it should be
remembered that no hospital in the West could claim to have the
"human touch."
In the West, patients in hospitals were kept away from their own
families and relatives, "whereas in India we know that being with
loved ones at times of illness is very good for patients.
Narayana Hrudayalaya must be the only hospital where the
relatives stay at the hospital and be there for the patient," she
said, adding that this was eminently worthy of emulation.
Ms. Rama Devi said the good work done by Dr. Devi Shetty,
Managing Director and founder of Narayana Hrudayalaya, was very
well known, and he was held in great awe by most people. "Just
now, as I was getting ready to come here, a politician called on
me.I told him where I was headed, and he immediately decided to
come back another time, as my visit here was more important," she
said.
Dr. Devi Shetty said Indians were three times more vulnerable to
heart diseases than Europeans and Americans. Blockages in the
coronary arteries manifested at a much younger age in Indians
too. "Every fourth Indian has a heart attack before retirement,"
Dr. Shetty said, adding that three per cent of rural and 10 per
cent of urban population suffered from eischaemic heart diseases.
At least 2.5 million Indians needed heart operations annually,
while only 45,000 were able to afford them. The average cost of a
by-pass surgery was around Rs. 1.4 lakhs.
Narayana Hrudayalaya's mission was to help working class families
suffering from heart diseases, for whom special concessions were
available. They would be charged around Rs. 75,000 or Rs. 80,000
per operation instead.
In the new project started in association with the Rotary Club of
Bangalore, Narayana Hrudayalaya would offer a package of Rs.
75,000 and the Rotary Club would donate Rs. 20,000 to every heart
patient from the lower socio-economic strata. Thus a patient
would have to arrange for only Rs. 50,000 to Rs. 60,000 . Phase-I
of the project would help save 50 patients.
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Section : Southern States Previous : Asia-Pacific enterprises summit in Aug. Next : Second phase of municipal elections on July 8 | |
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