Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
India

This Indian-American Surgeon Aims To Save Lives On Indian Roads

IANS, 20 Dec, 2015 01:02 PM
    An Indian-American surgeon is hoping to raise $25 million to train 1.5 million first responders - the first rescuers to arrive at an accident scene - in five years to prevent over 1,000 deaths on Indian roads every day that cost the nation $50 billion annually.
     
    Rajasthan University-educated surgeon Dr. Dinesh Vyas, an assistant professor in the Department of Surgery at Michigan State University since 2011, has already trained over 4,000 first responders in India using a $200,000 simulator dummy.
     
    He is now leading a strong international multi-disciplinary team to India from December 26 to January 4, 2016 to win support for the programme from Indian auto, IT and healthcare industries by way of corporate social responsibility (CSR).
     
    "This programme will generate $5 billion business for auto, IT and healthcare industries and will save a lot of lives," Vyas told IANS in an interview.
     
    "Trauma and roadside epidemic is one of the biggest health concerns for India," he said. "Unfortunately, it has been neglected for a long time and with a three percent annual increase in deaths, we have more than 1,000 deaths everyday and 5,000 severe disabilities."
     
    Over the last eight years, Vyas' team has established five centres in Rajasthan which have trained 2,000 first responders in person and another 2,000 through an online course with the help of 200 trainers under its umbrella. Training 1.5 million first responders at 50 centres in the next five years would stall a three percent increase in mortality, he said. "Our next five-year goal will be to reduce the mortality to one percent annually, at par with any developed nation."
     
    The idea behind taking an international delegation to India, Vyas said, was "to address the trauma problem holistically".
     
    "We are concentrating systematically on all the aspects of trauma, to prevent a burden on the health system," with a focus on pre-hospital cae while simultaneously building a platform on prevention.
     
    The aim is to develop and build a contextual training programme in multiple aspects of trauma in various Indian languages starting with Hindi, Bengali and Telugu.
     
    The international delegation comes with major strengths in fields ranging from surgery and trauma and critical care to mass media and communication to health legal issues and highway engineering.
     
    The delegation includes faculty from US and Britain, with several endowed professors from Pittsburgh, Michigan State and other major universities.
     
    Dr. McSwain from Tulane University, one of Vyas' collaborators, developed in 1980 a four-tier system in the US that goes from online education to highly sophisticated trauma programmes for surgeons.
     
    "The technology we are using is not available even in most of the centres in the US at this time," Vyas said. "We are designing a programme that will eventually help even developed nations in building a cost efficient programme."
     
    To raise money for the programme, Vyas and his team are making presentations to various foundations and IT companies both in the US and India.
     
    During his visit to India, Vyas would be visiting Jodhpur, Jaipur, Hyderabad, Manipal, Bangalore, Karimnagar and New Delhi.
     
    He would be addressing, among others, the National Police Academy in Hyderabad and the Rajasthan Police Academy and meet officials and fellow professionals to gain support for his mission.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017

    With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017
    The minister inaugurated a 1 MW solar energy project set up by Britain-based NRIs Avtar Singh Kang and Raovarinder Singh Kang in their ancestral village Lallian Kalan in Jalandhar district with an investment of Rs.7.25 crore.

    With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017

    Land Bill Sent To Select Panel; Rahul Says Government Murdered UPA Act

    Land Bill Sent To Select Panel; Rahul Says Government Murdered UPA Act
    The Lok Sabha on Tuesday referred the land acquisition bill to a joint committee of the two houses after an spirited debate in which Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi accused the NDA government of "murdering" the legislation passed by the previous UPA regime.

    Land Bill Sent To Select Panel; Rahul Says Government Murdered UPA Act

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket
    Despite apprehensions raised by some BJP MPs about a proposed India-Pakistan cricket series, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is determined to break the ice with the neighbouring country through "cricket diplomacy", informed sources here said.

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh
    India has credible information that underworld don Dawood Ibrahim is in Pakistan and we will not rest till he is brought back, Home Minister Rajnath Singh said on Monday. But Pakistan denied the fugitive is present there.

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh

    Modi And Manmohan: 1 Year, Spot The Differences

    Modi And Manmohan: 1 Year, Spot The Differences
    The economy rebounded; exports and imports declined, foreign-exchange reserves grew; coal production, electricity generation and petroleum consumption rose, non-performing assets (NPAs) in banking soared.

    Modi And Manmohan: 1 Year, Spot The Differences

    78 Percent Don't Want Land Bill, 63 Percent Say Modi's Image Anti-poor: Survey

    78 Percent Don't Want Land Bill, 63 Percent Say Modi's Image Anti-poor: Survey
    A nationwide India TV-C Voter opinion poll, telecast on Monday, said that External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj leads the union ministers in terms of performance. 

    78 Percent Don't Want Land Bill, 63 Percent Say Modi's Image Anti-poor: Survey