Posts Tagged ‘palliative care’

Dreams to reality….

September 6th, 2010

It’s a beautiful feeling when dreams begin to look real. This week, I spent many “two-hours” smiling to myself just thinking about and experiencing everything that was unfolding around me.
The first round of recruitment of visually impaired guides at the first Dialogue in the Dark centre in India got off to a flying start. The quality of candidates and the enthusiasm that I could feel from the team even though I was many hundred miles away from the scene of action has made me all excited and looking forward to the grand opening in November, 2010. I have often been asked about what’s so special about this exhibition that has made it survive the test of time and impact the millions that it has. I guess it has got to do with the fact that it’s not just about giving the disabled just another job or telling the sighted what it is to be blind. It has got to do with empowerment and respect for the other through a role reversal in a setting that is not preachy and contrived. I have seen the impact this programme has had in many countries where the blind are relatively well taken care of by the state, and I am filled with nervous optimism on what it can do in a country like India. Watch out this space for more updates!
I wrote sometime back about the status of palliative care in the world and how community-driven initiatives like the one run by the Pain and Palliative Care Society in Kerala can be a role model. The EIU report on this subject seems to have generated quite a bit of buzz and spurred an enthusiastic cartoonist to let pictures do the talking. Sometimes, pictures really do the talking, don’t they? http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=13338&id=109063229135563.
Inspired by some of the work that organisations like The Blue Yonder, Ecosphere, Help Tourism, etc. have done for the revival of economy through supporting local community initiatives, I really have come to believe that tourism in many ways can be a change maker in bringing about a paradigm shift in the average citizen of the world by making them more aware on how one can really contribute real time to making the world a better place to live. And it was a blissful day long crash course I had this weekend when the members of Green Circuit, an alliance of a few committed responsible tourism leaders across the Indian sub-continent shared their stories and experiences of how one can bring about sustainable change in remote areas while preserving the local culture and heritage through tourism. A real case study in measuring social impact that has been possible through commercial ventures, and involvement of local communities.

where end-of-life care provides a reason to live….

July 21st, 2010

If someone had asked me at the beginning of this year as to what “Palliative Care” meant, I would have perhaps balked! Other than the dictionary meaning of the word palliative- which means to soothe or sedate (associated with a drug, usually), my knowledge of this field of medicine was grossly poor. Despite having lost my mum to cancer many years ago, and having seen her endure extreme pain towards the end of her life, I didn’t realize there was this entire science behind how terminally ill patients could also be cared for. That is until I heard of Dr. Suresh Kumar and his brand of community driven end-of-life care. When we started chatting over cups of hot tea on a rainy evening in my house, and he started telling me about the work his organization, the Institute of Palliative Medicine in Kerala , and the society he set up, Pain and Palliative Care Society, he filled me with hope and energy about how scientific expertise when combined with local culture and a strong community participation can drive social change. What he has built with his team of 30, 000 (yes, 30, 000!!) volunteers, trained in administering end-of-life care to patients, in the districts around Calicut alone can be a wonderful case in point.
The recent Economist report on palliative care is a wonderful study that compares the end-of-life care indices in different countries and while India is at an abysymally low 40, in a list of as many countries, what stands out that one of the best recognized cases of community-driven palliative care as opposed to a hospice based care is also ironically from India. The system of training volunteers to provide dignity to the dying and the incurable, is based deeply on the culture where the neighbours and family typically take care of those that need attention as opposed to an unfriendly strange hospice. Isnt it a pity that depite WHO recognizing the Pain and Palliative Care Society’s brand of community driven programmes as one of its only kind in the world and conferred on this society, the title ‘Demonstration Project’, when Indian media, chose to report on the Economist report, they chose to ignore even a brief mention of this, only focussin on the negatives. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/India-worst-in-end-of-life-care/articleshow/6174380.cmsThe power of community based programmes like these is that they have the potential to become a movement and a catalyst of change, impacting positively many other associated issues in the community, even though providing palliative care could be the main driving force. As Dr. Suresh tells me, in North Kerala, whatever the volunteers work on, be it supporting hygiene education or cleaning up the environment, in the minds of the local people-everything is “palliative care”! I firmly believe now that what this organization has started in Kerala can be emulated in other parts of India and the world on one hand, and using this as a platform, there is a strong potential to rope in a wider net of concerned citizens around the world who wish to be a part of this movement. Any naysayers?