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Tata
Steel backs Lifeline Express
Arindam
Sinha
Ghatsila, Nov 19: Lifeline Express, the world’s first
hospital-on-wheels and promoted by Impact India for the remote
rural areas of the country, launched its 51st project here
Monday. Jharkhand Chief Minister Babulal Marandi inaugurated
the facility. Sponsored by Tata Steel for the seventh time
during its decade-long career, the fully-equipped moving medical
facility without a doctor, would remain at the service of
the most marginalised rural communities around Ghatsila in
East Singhbhum, West Singhbhum, and the Seraikela-Kharswan
districts of Jharkhand.
The hospital-on-wheels is to stay put at
Ghatsila till December 21 and an estimated 3,500 patients
are to undergo corrective surgeries of the eye, post-polio
deformity, cleft lip, etc, and “get their productive lives
restored.” Distribution of hearing aids, callipers, spectacles,
etc and post-surgery follow-ups for two years is also part
of Lifeline’s objectives . Doctors from Tata Steel’s Tata
Main Hospital (TMH) and the Jamshedpur Eye Hospital (both
located in Jamshedpur) are to perform the surgeries at the
four-coach hospital having a diagnostic test room, operation
theatre, an eye correction cabin, a recovery room and a discussion
centre. An estimated Rs 20 lakh is to be spent by Tata Steel
on the month-long project.
Speaking on the occasion, Tata Steel managing director B Muthuraman
said the country needed many such Lifeline-like projects for
the poor in the country. Impressed by the Indian project’s
success, he said, China too adopted the idea. At the time
of UK’s handing over of Hong Kong to China in 1997, Impact
India transferred the Lifeline Express technology to China.
Acceding to the Chief Minister’s request, Mr Muthuraman announced
that Tata Steel would sponsor the hospital-on-wheels again
in January 2002, this time for the economically backward people
of Jasidih of the state.
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