The Afzalpur Taluk hospital has no
appointed Gynaecologist or Paediatrician. Travelling to the nearest town of
Gulbarga is possible for some pregnant women despite the bad roads and 60 km
distance to be covered in a crowded bus during pregnancy. Other women, who
cannot afford the travel, resign themselves to fate. The locals do not find it
odd since it has been this way since the last 15 years. Maybe longer…
When the DFS team
first decided to pick Afzalpur Taluk of Gulbarga to try the concept of micro
volunteering through doctors, we did not fully realise what we were attempting
to change.
“Why Afzalpur of all places? When the government, despite offering
Rs.70,000 a month has failed to bring in specialists, how can you even imagine
that you will get the same doctors to volunteer
in a place like Afzalpur?”
| Need assessment in Gulbarga by DFS volunteers (Nov 2011) |
The concept of micro-volunteering by a team of local doctors reduces the burden on any one doctor, and yet ensures that people have regular access to a doctor. By roping in 15 specialists (gynaecologists and paediatricians) to take turns, with each doctor volunteering only once a month, we found a solution to an age old problem of finding specialists to work in remote locations. We realised that attending to simple issues like having a local coordinator as the link between the patients and changing doctors, providing transportation & basic hospitality for the volunteering doctors and by facilitating communication between private practitioners and the government hospital staff, most problems get resolved. Using the existing 100 bedded Taluk hospital premises was another reason why we were able to initiate the process so quickly and with relative ease as compared to having our own set up. The main idea that the volunteering doctors will be from the nearest town of Gulbarga (and not Bangalore just because we have a team here) has been the key to ensuring continuity of the process and ownership by locals.
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| Dr. Rasalkar with Dr. Dayaprasad and coordinator Latha (Apr 2012) |
Without any publicity, the number of patients visiting the Taluk Hospital in Afzalpur has steadily increased in 3 months from just around 5 to 74 patients in July on a single day. With the consistency of volunteering doctors, the government too has been very supportive in offering to take care of the transportation, hospitality of volunteering doctors and providing any additional medicines or equipment as requested by the DFS members.
Yes, there have been challenges, be it in getting the two medical
colleges to volunteer; in finding local coordinators; in finding private
practitioners willing to close their clinic one day in a month; in ensuring
enough patients turn up to keep the motivation going; and in starting from
scratch in a completely new place. However, with strong belief in the concept
of volunteering and the spirit of never giving up, we have so far managed to
address challenges that have come our way.
8 months since our first visit to Gulbarga in November 2011
and 3 months since April 2012 when we started bringing 20 specialists to
volunteer in Afzalpur, benefitting 297 patients, we are glad we took up this
initiative despite all odds.
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