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108 ambulance service touches more than one lakh lives

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The Hindu 29.08.2009

108 ambulance service touches more than one lakh lives

Staff Reporter


All 29 districts are covered under the Arogya Kavacha scheme

By 2010, number of ambulances is to be increased to 517


Bangalore: Continuing its services in providing integrated and timely emergency response services for medical, police and fire emergencies, the 108 Arogya Kavacha service in Karnataka has touched 1,21,224 lives from November 1, 2008 till date.

Announcing this at a press conference on Thursday, Bharat Radhakrishnan, Chief Operating Officer of GVK EMRI (Karnataka), said more than 55.6 lakh calls had been serviced so far. These include calls attending to delivery complications, injuries, acute abdomen related problems, respiratory, cardiac and poisoning emergencies.

Following the memorandum of understanding signed between the Government of Karnataka and GVK EMRI in August 2008, all the 29 districts are covered under the Arogya Kavacha scheme with 248 ambulances. “We plan to launch another 82 ambulances in the second phase. This will ensure a deeper coverage for the entire urban and rural population in the State. By 2010, we will increase our ambulances in Karnataka to a total of 517,” Mr. Radhakrishnan said.

Beneficiaries — Jagadisan of Malleswaram and Shekarappa of Venugopalnagar — who were present at the press conference, narrated their experience.

“I had never imagined a government ambulance would help in saving my son’s life. He was unable to tolerate a piercing pain in his abdomen when I returned home from work two months ago around 11 p.m. As it was very late, we were not able to get an autorickshaw and it was then that it struck me that I should call 108. I am a BMTC bus conductor and I had heard people talking about 108 in the bus. To my surprise, the ambulance arrived within 10 minutes of my call and my son was shifted to K.C. General Hospital in another 15 minutes after which he was operated upon for appendicitis,” Mr. Shekarappa said.

Mr. Jagadisan, a senior citizen who lives alone, said his brother-in-law who also lived alone near his house, called up one night saying he was feeling uneasy. “He asked me to take him to a hospital. It was a government holiday and I tried calling up various hospitals for ambulances. They would pick up the call and disconnect it. Finally, the watchman of our building suggested I call 108, and to my surprise the vehicle arrived in 10 minutes. Although we were able to shift my brother-in-law to a multi-speciality heart hospital, he died after some days because of other complications,” he added.

Last Updated on Saturday, 29 August 2009 01:24
 

Delhi, Mumbai rank among world’s cheapest cities

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Indian Express 28.08.2009

Delhi, Mumbai rank among world’s cheapest cities

Delhi and Mumbai, the country’s leading metropolises, rank among the world’s cheapest cities, according to the latest “Prices and Earnings” study released by UBS, one of the world’s leading financial firms. The study is based on a standardised basket of 122 goods and services among data collected from 73 countries between March and April this year. According to the study, the basket costs the least in Kuala Lumpur, Manila, Delhi and Mumbai.

The study further reveals that an average employee in Delhi and Mumbai earns merely one-fifteenth of the hourly wages of his/her Swiss counterpart after taxes. To clearly establish the disparity between wages, the UBS drew upon how long it would take employees to earn enough money to buy a globally uniform product, in this case an iPod nano.

Employees in Zurich and New York would be able to purchase an 8 GB iPod nano after working nine hours, whereas employees in Delhi would need to work 122.5 hours to buy the same product. Employees in Mumbai would need to work 180 hours to buy the iPod; 20 times more than an average Swiss employee.

Delhi employees also have one of the lowest rates for payroll deduction for taxes and social security in the world.

World's most expensive cities
Oslo, Copenhagen, Zurich, Geneva, Tokyo and New York.

World's least expensive cities
Kuala Lumpur, Manila, Delhi and Mumbai

Highest net wages in the world
Zurich and Geneva

Lowest net wages in the world
Delhi, Manila, Jakarta and Mumbai

Longest working hours in the world
Cairo and Seoul (600 hours per year more than employees in Western Europe)

World’s most expensive luxury hotels
Tokyo (US$ 630 per night) Paris (US$ 540) and Amsterdam (US$ 520)

World’s least expensive luxury hotels
Jakarta (US$ 140), Kuala Lumpur (US$ 140) and Mexico City (US$ 130)

Most expensive cities to dine in
Tokyo, Oslo and Dubai

Least expensive cities to dine in
Delhi, Johannesburg, Kuala Lumpur, Manila and Rio de Janeiro

Last Updated on Friday, 28 August 2009 11:11
 

‘Rainwater harvesting a must'

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The New Indian Express 26.08.2009

‘Rainwater harvesting a must'

BANGALORE: Rainwater harvesting is a prerequisite to meet the growing water needs of the urban cities, observed U R Rao, former chairman of ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) at the Jawaharlal Nehru Planetarium premises on Tuesday .

After inaugurating the planetarium’s rainwater harvesting project here on Tuesday, Rao said that in all the major cities in the world, 60 per cent of their water needs is met by recycled water .

He did some number crunching on the occasion too. “The current urban and rural population ratio of the country is 35:65 and around 70 per cent of the growth has been seen in urban population .

Right now, there are 400 million people who are living in the urban areas and in the coming future it would be a great challenge to meet their water needs.” The rain water harvesting project at planetarium is estimated to cost around Rs 11.62 lakh and plans to harvest around 30.16 lakh litre rainwater annually. The project is being supported by Bangalore Association for Science Education, Technology Informatics Design Endeavour and other Charity partners ADOBE and CAF.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 26 August 2009 12:48
 


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