Monday, May 14, 2012

The Return of the King?


I have given some thought to reopening my blog that has layed dormant for, lo, these 3 years. Anyway, short post to see if I can reconnect and generate some interest (in myself) to do this.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Coming to an end

Well, apparently, I have spent the last several days in a sort of black hole of modern technology in Munnar. Munnar is up in the mountains on the western border of Kerala in a range called the Western Ghats. It's essentially a region that is blanketed in tea plantations. It's really quite beautiful. We visited the tea plantations and sa how the families that work the plots live, etc. The plantations used to be owned by the Tata Corporation but now are owned by some other conglomerate. The main reason we visited was to see how the Tata folks were promoting education and health. They have a corporate hospital set up that offers a wide array of medical and surgical services that are free to the workers and their families. Others may use the hospital for a nominal fee. The hospital manages to deliver high quality care to about 50,000 people for about $1 million/year. they get a pretty good value for a relatively small amont of money. We saw the hospital as well as the satellite clinics in each various tea estate. They are not funded through the same soures but manage to coordinate care fairly well. I cannot post pictures at the moment but will soon. Very cool.

However, when we were in Munnar, apparently the internet just "doesn't work sometimes" (like for the 3 days we were there). Also, I exerienced a ell phone failing to get a signal in India for the first time in all my trips here. Bizzare. I did eat some really strange fruits in a market and manage to escape uncontrolled dumping of my guts. So, you win some, you lose some.

Right now, I'm in a seedy internet cafe by a train station in Ernakulum. They have me sequestered in a little booth with a closed door. I can't decide if I should confess my sins or masturbate. More later when I have real internet and computer access.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Trivandrum






The town we have been in thus far is in southern Kerala along the coast. It is called Trivandrum. From what I can tell, it has essentially two main industries, government and medicine. The seat of the Keralan government is here so that's where the governmental aspect comes in. It is a democratically elected communist government, so you see the hammer and sickle all over the city on political signs. Apparently, when the communists were originally elected, they did a lot towards attempting to alleviate the tremendous economic disparities that existed here. They were involved in land redistribution, public education, public health, and job creation among other populist projects. However, the people that I've spoken with here say that the party has softened its stance on populism in recent years and now in many ways is indistinguishable from competing political parties. I suppose that as money becomes more plentiful and available, any sort of popularly derived governmental mandate for egalitarianism diminishes.

As I mentioned above, medicine is another large industry here with multiple medical (private and government), nursing, science and technology schools. There seems to be a fairly large hospital on every corner. Also, there are little pharmacies everywhere (literally one about every 25 feet) as well as imaging centers that offer ultrasound, CT, X-ray and MRIs. It's kind of strange. I mean, there's really not that many people here (<1 million) so it's a small city by Indian standards. I

It is described as quiet and laid back. I suppose it is compared to places like Mumbai and Calcutta. However, it still seems crowded and loud to me. It is relatively easy to find some streets and neighborhoods that have little traffic except some pedestrians, so that has been nice.

Attached are some pictures.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

A looper...

So I jump ship in Hong Kong and make my way over to Tibet, and I get on as a looper at a course over in the Himalayas. A looper, you know, a caddy, a looper, a jock. So, I tell them I'm a pro jock, and who do you think they give me? The Dalai Lama, himself. Twelfth son of the Lama. The flowing robes, the grace, bald... striking. So, I'm on the first tee with him. I give him the driver. He hauls off and whacks one - big hitter, the Lama - long, into a ten-thousand foot crevasse, right at the base of this glacier. Do you know what the Lama says? Gunga galunga... gunga, gunga-galunga. So we finish the eighteenth and he's gonna stiff me. And I say, "Hey, Lama, hey, how about a little something, you know, for the effort, you know." And he says, "Oh, uh, there won't be any money, but when you die, on your deathbed, you will receive total consciousness." So I got that goin' for me, which is nice.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Pallium India





On Thursday and Friday, I spent time with an NGO here in Trivandrum called Pallium India. It is an initiative started by an anesthesiologist here to attempt to adequately address the (essentially) complete lack of palliative care services in Southern India. Of course, a few of the larger hospitals offer palliative care services but these are limited to wealthy people. Additionally, they tend to be in-patient services that simply manage pain at the very end of life. Since most people prefer to die at home with their families, these services really don't offer much.

So, several years ago, Dr. Rajagopal, became interested in this gap in care. He was working in Cochin at the time and starte his group up there, first as an NGO that was later morphed into a government run service. When he retired (forced age of retirement for government employees is 55) he moved back here to his home in Trivandrum. Once again, he noted the lack of adequate palliative care services and basically redid what he had started in Cochin. (Side note -- there is a tremendous amount of reinventing the wheel in medicine here)

He started the program in Trivandrum about 2 years ago, I believe. What they do is provide a variety of outpatient palliative care services to poor people. They have some donated space in a central hospital that they run a clinic 6 days a week. Also, because obviously not everyone from the local area can make it in to Trivandrum to be seen, Pallium India has a number of satellite clinics in the surrounding areas they staff as well. They travel to a given clinic (different village each day) and see patients each day of the week except Sundays. Finally, for those patients that cannot get to any clinic, they will do regular home visits with the frequency depending on the acuity of the patient. For example, we went to the house of a man with fairly advanced metastatic oral cancer who is in pretty bad shape. They said they have been seeing him 1-2 times/week recently.

The group provides medical care, pain management, nursing care (often doing dressing changes), social work services and spiritual counseling. In addition to the cancer patients (about 50% of the patients), the group also acts as primary care providers for poor patients with advanced chronic disease such as arthritis and diabetes. Many of the patients we saw without cancer were elderly women whose husbands had died and had no children living with them. Therefore, they were alone and some seemed to come just to have something to do. There also seemed to be a fair amount of depression being treated. In total, they told me they have about 600 patients on their census.

I think this is the coolest thing I have done here. Definitely not as funny as the condom factory. However, this was somewhat more satisfying and I was able to get some pictures. I found Dr. Rajagopal to be a fascinating man who is incredibly dedicated to his patients. The nurses, volunteers, students and doctors working with him were incredibly gracious and patient. I am deeply thakful to them for allowing me to participate. I learned a tremendous amount about the variety of cultural interactions here that influence the delivery f health care. For anyone who wants to know more about this group, there is a website, www.palliumindia.com.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

This week





So this week, I've been spending some time at the Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology. It is a hospital that deals solely with cardiac and neurosurgical patients here in Trivandrum. I have been following one of the senior anesthetists around and observing some pediatric cardiac surgery. It is interesting to see that, in many ways the technology and training of the practitioners is essentially the same as the US. For example, the monitors and anesthesia machine used here are the same as in Boston or other major US medical centers. I think the major difference, is that there is no systematic approach to quality improvement or safety. There seem to be very few if any systems in place to prevent injury to the staff or the patient. There was discussion about a few strokes that have occurred over the past several months. When I asked what the etiology of the strokes was, I was told they just sometimes happen. There was no review of those cases to find any common threads that could be identified to prevent further events. That sort of approach wasn't even on the radar. So, I think that improvements here ultimately will have little to do with training or technology. Rather, there needs to be a sea change in the approach to evaluating care. There needs to be less of a blame culture and more open, self reflection. I think that this can only come about through the development of systematic approaches to evaluation, such as morbidity and mortality registers, complication databases, and the like.

Tomorrow, I'll be spending time with a remarkable organization. There is an anesthesiologist here who has pioneered a community based palliative care program that operates along community health models to reach poor people who would otherwise be unable to receive such care for end of life issues. More on that to follow. BTW -- I've almost reached my limit on dosa for a while.

Monday, January 12, 2009

And then there was Sunday...


It's been said that a picture is worth a thousand words. Good times in India....