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Public Health / Sanitation

Kudumbasree to launch health-care centre for poor

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The Hindu      Kerala (Kozhikode)           01.09.2016

Kudumbasree to launch health-care centre for poor

The Kozhikode Corporation Kudumbasree will launch a healthcare centre for the poor.

The centre will be based on the old corporation office premises near the Kozhikode Beach where the Kudumbasree office is also located. The purpose of the centre is to provide medical support equipment such as wheel chairs, air beds, water beds, walking sticks, stretchers and commode chairs free of cost.

“The equipment we have collected are new. People can return them after use, especially the costly equipment such as aid bed,” said M.V. Ramsi Ismail, project coordinator (in-charge).

The beneficiaries of the centre will be patients from poor families whose annual income is below Rs.50,000. Those who need the services of the centre should approach it with a letter either by the ward councillor or the respective secretaries of Kudumbasree Area Development Societies.

The funds for the centre will be sourced from voluntary organisations. “Many organisations have volunteered to provide their utility funds to purchase equipment,” he said and added that their support was necessary to ensure public participation in the project.

Drug Bank

The Kudumbasree is also planning to revive its Drug Bank and attach it to the centre. “We are planning to focus on medicines for diseases such as cancer and renal failure. Other medicines will also be available,” he said.

There are also plans to revive the counselling centre which was launched a year ago. “Both Drug Bank and counselling centre will be fully operational in a month,” he added.

 

Corporation’s move to reward best cleanest ward receives setback

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The Hindu      Karnataka (Managaluru)       01.09.2016

Corporation’s move to reward best cleanest ward receives setback

A move of the Task Force on Swachh Mangaluru headed by Mayor Harinath to reward the best cleanest ward in the city with monetary benefit received a setback at a meeting of the Mangaluru City Corporation council on Tuesday with some members opposing it.

The Mayor announced that the first best cleanest ward would be given Rs. 25 lakh for development works. The second one would get Rs. 15 lakh.

But some members said that wards in the central business district area in the city with concrete roads looked neat and clean. They could not be compared to the wards on the outskirts which did not have concrete roads.

The Mayor said that condition of roads had nothing to do with the selection. The reward would be based on maintaining cleanliness.

Not satisfied with this, the members wanted to know the basis on which the selection would be made. The Mayor said that he would call a meeting to this effect within a fortnight to discuss the subject in detail and take a final decision.

 

Corporations gear up for dengue with mosquito nets

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The Hindu      18.07.2016    

Corporations gear up for dengue with mosquito nets

From mosquito nets for patients to additional beds in hospitals, the Capital’s municipal corporations are getting ready to face the onslaught of dengue cases in the coming months. With monsoon being active this past week, the expected increase in cases of the vector-borne viral disease has made the municipalities ramp up preparations.

Though only 39 cases of dengue have so far been reported in the city, the number is set to rise in the next three months as the weather gets cooler. Last year, Delhi had seen a record-high 15,867 cases of dengue, up from 995 in 2014.

The North Delhi Municipal Corporation, which operates two large hospitals, will be using insecticidal mosquito nets for patients suffering from dengue. All the three corporations are in the process of distributing these nets, which have been made with a chemical-laced fibre that repels mosquitoes, to vulnerable communities. In North Delhi, Mayor Dr. Sanjeev Nayyar has directed the hospitals to give these nets to patients as well.

“Hospitals are zero-tolerance zones, so we cannot allow the disease to spread from a patient. The patients will be kept under their mosquito nets till they are being treated as the virus stays in the blood for up to one week,” said Dr. D.K. Seth, the Director of Hospital Administration of North Corporation.

The North Corporation’s Bara Hindu Rao Hospital and Kasturba Hospital will both stock these nets. In addition, the civic body has stocked 15 lakh paracetamol tablets, IV fluids, the blood bank has been augmented and 438 additional beds prepared.

The East Delhi Municipal Corporation will also be handing out mosquito nets to patients, spokesperson Y.S. Mann said. He added that the civic body had distributed these nets to residents who are at risk of contracting the disease.

While the South Delhi Municipal Corporation does not have any major hospitals, it has ramped up inspections to curb mosquito breeding, apart from distributing the mosquito nets.

 


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