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E-Governance

NMC proposes CCTVs in 176 squares

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The Times of India          04.09.2013

NMC proposes CCTVs in 176 squares

NAGPUR: There's a ray of hope that the city would soon get CCTV surveillance. Nagpur Municipal Corporation (NMC) has submitted a proposal to the state government requesting Rs 47 crore to install closed-circuit televisions (CCTVs) at 176 squares. Minister of state for planning and finance Rajendra Mulak has taken the initiative in this regard, to control rising crime in the city.

Stressing on the need for CCTVs, Mulak told TOI the city badly requires the system due to its rapid growth and increase in crimes. "The city is a happening place and one of the major cities in the state. The union government too has been pressing states to ensure CCTV surveillance in major cities. This makes the city safer and also helps the police department curb crime rate by tracking culprits, especially in hit and run cases. I am taking the effort, but all depends on the government. Hope for the best; I am hopeful of getting the proposal approved," he said.

Municipal commissioner Shyam Wardhane said the proposal has been submitted to the state urban development department.

NMC's electrical department prepared the proposal after studying systems installed in Bhopal and Pune. A senior NMC official said installation will be done by the civic body while operation and maintenance will be with the police department.

"Like traffic signals, there will be CCTVs in 176 squares. The state-of-the-art system will have audio-video capability, allowing conversation with a person at the square from the control centre. Traffic police have six divisions in the city. Our proposal divides the 176 squares into six divisions, with each division having a control centre for CCTVs installed in the division. There will also be a centralized system to track all CCTVs," he said.

Sources at NMC told TOI, Mulak asked the civic chief to prepare the proposal after discussion at government level. "Mulak also wrote to the civic body, asking for a proposal, making us hopeful about a nod from the state government."

The police department had first come up with a proposal to install CCTVs at major squares in the city a couple of years ago. The department also installed a CCTV at Variety Square on trial basis, but removed it after some time.

 

E-system to track newborns in hospitals

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The Times of India          04.09.2013

E-system to track newborns in hospitals

PUNE: Cases of newborn babies being stolen or swapped are likely to become a thing of the past in hospitals run by the Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC). The civic body will introduce electronic tags for both mother and child in the hospital premises and also take their fingerprints and footprints to prevent swapping of babies.

To start with, the PMC will introduce its "bio baby protect" system at the Kamla Nehru Hospital on a pilot basis in a month's time. It will be introduced in other hospitals in the future, PMC's health department chief S T Pardeshi told TOI. The PMC standing committee on Tuesday gave the go-ahead for the project.

The computerised system will permanently store details of every newborn and its parents, such as names, contact details and addresses, Pardeshi said. "The mother's fingerprints and the baby's footprints will also be stored in the system. The biometric details will help identify the mother and child in case the latter gets swapped. In an infanticide case or where a baby has been found abandoned, the system will be able to track down the mother if the child has been born in a corporation-run hospital," he said.

Pardeshi said an electronic tag will be tied to the ankle of every newborn and on the wrist of the mother to prevent thefts of babies. "These tags will be interlinked between mother and child. Should the child be any more than 50 feet away from the mother, the tag will send an alert by way of a beep or a siren sound to the tracking system. The staff operating the tracking system will rush to the ward," he said.

At the Kamla Nehru hospital, as many as 130 tags will be used for mothers and babies and 20 for the staff, including ward boys and nurses. Pardeshi said the project is expected to cost Rs 75 lakh for this hospital alone. Nearly 200 births are registered at the hospital every month. As many as 50,000 births are registered across the city in different hospitals each year.

According to PMC's records, there have been three cases of babies having been stolen from the Sassoon hospital since 2003.

How the system will work


Electronic tags for both mother and newborn baby.

Tags will be linked with tracking system.

Beep or siren sound if distance between mother-child tags is more than 50ft.

Mother's fingerprints, baby's footprints will be stored in system to preventing swapping of child.

 

To check thefts, newborns, mothers to be e-tagged

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The Indian Express         04.09.2013

To check thefts, newborns, mothers to be e-tagged

To check theft or exchange of newborns in civic hospitals, the Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) has decided to installing an electronic system by which the mother and the newborn is tagged till their stay in the hospital.

The civic administration initiative is part of the bio-baby project that was approved in the standing committee meeting. The project will be implemented on a pilot basis in the Kamla Nehru Hospital.

"The intention is to stop the cases of thefts, exchange of newborn in the hospital and also check female foeticide," said standing committee chairperson Vishal Tambe pointing out the theft cases of newborns.

He said the electronic registeration of each pregnant women would be done when she is admitted for child delivery.

The newborn and the mother would be registered with the hospital, which would invlove taking impression of footprints of newborn and fingerprint of the mother through electronic machine.

The wireless safety tag with coding would be put on the knee of newborn baby and on the wrist of mother. The tags have a computerised registration so every movement of the baby in the maternity home can be tracked on computer. This will help in stopping the theft or exchange of a newborn in the hospital.

"If the baby is taken to a distance more than 50 ft from the computerised reading then there is automatic siren that alerts the staff," he said. The coding of the tag on baby and mother ensures that there is no exchange of babies. The computer-registered impression of footprint of newborn and fingerprint of mother will also help in identification of the baby that is found after being stolen.

"The PMC will have 150 tags of which 20 would be used for civic hospital staff and the rest for newborn and mother. The project would be implemented at a cost of Rs 75 lakh and would be extended depending on the performance," said acting PMC health chief S T Pardeshi. Around 200 birth take place every month at the Kamla Nehru Hospital, the highest in any of the civic hospitals, he said.

 


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