In sickness and in health

Last week I was working on a health-related story that required me to visit several hospitals in the city. They were, as expected, overflowing with sick patients, all thanks to the mosquito menace that Bangalore has been crying about.  

I happened to visit both public and private hospitals. The rich-poor divide is so blatantly clear at these hospitals. At the private hospitals it wasn’t so bad. Waiting rooms were packed, they were clean, and it all looked ok. 

It’s the government hospitals that are a sight. People lying on the floor, spitting in corners, broken chairs, wailing babies. It’s not the best scene.  

And then you enter the Medical Superintendent’s office and it’s another world. Air conditioned room, huge sofa set, freshly made coffee, everything’s perfect. All this, while people outside are waiting long hours to see a doctor.  

How does a Medical Superintendent of a government hospital get this posh and luxurious room to himself while the sick people are left to lie on the floor? 

And a BBMP official complains that most people go to private hospitals instead of government ones because they think they won’t get proper treatment.

Comments:

  1. Srikanth Parthasarathy says:

    When Government Speaks about good Health and Infrastructure, i think they mean it only for themselves and not for the general public. This is no surprise that the Medical Superintendent’s office has all the required facilities. They do not understand that it is the public money and public should benefit from it. Private hospitals will have better facilities for the public but at a higher cost. In fact sickness will grow high as soon as a patient visits a government hospital because of its poor condition. How do we get someone sitting in a AC room to understand all these?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

Beyond eco-anxiety: Climate wheel helps Chennaiites map emotions to drive awareness

Care Earth Trust's experiment reveals communities feel anger, hope, and uncertainty about climate change; mapping these emotions could help shape policy.

Amid global crises like climate change, concepts such as solastalgia (distress produced by environmental change), eco-grief, and eco-anxiety are becoming familiar. Climate change’s impact on mental health has only recently cropped up in research, with studies finding connections between the climate and depression, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and suicidal thoughts. Around 50% of Indian youth aged 14 to 25 experienced increased stress due to worsening climate, according to a survey by the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE). Other studies have found that repeated experiences with flooding, which occur particularly in eastern and southern India, appear to contribute to…

Similar Story

Reproductive health missing in Heat Action Plans, says climate expert Vidhya Venugopal

In an interview, Professor Vidhya calls for heat policies that address overlapping risks shaped by gender, caste and disability.

Across India, temperatures are soaring, and the impact is evident, from 300 suspected heat-related illness cases reported in Andhra Pradesh to 200 in Maharashtra, say news reports. Heat is unequally felt, with informal workers bearing the brunt of income loss and illness during the blazing hours. Another overlooked impact is heatwaves’ toll on menstrual and reproductive health, where access to washrooms and clean water exacerbates summers for women in low-income settlements, experts say.  Extreme heat exposure overlaps closely with marginalisation, says Vidhya Venugopal, Professor of Climate Change, Occupational and Environmental Health at Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education and Research…