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Doctors & hospital care in rural India

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Husbands wait beside their motorbikes on the periphery of a monthly antinatal clinic in Semariya village run by the JSS. The Chhattisgarh government's decision to completely disinvest in public transport makes accessing healthcare particularly difficult in this largely rural state. Most of the husbands who take their wives to such clinics on motorbikes or bicycles prefer to wait outside while health workers discuss reproductive health issues and contraception.

The JSS (Jan Swasthya Sahyog or People's Health Support Group) is a public-health initiative established in 1996 by a handful of committed doctors, all of whom trained at elite medical schools in India. While many of their peers secured high profile, high earning posts in premier hospitals in India, the US and the UK, the doctors at JSS provide a service for poor and marginalised rural communities in Bilaspur district in the eastern India.

The JSS operate out of a hospital in Ganiyari, near Bilaspur. Relying on grants and donations, the JSS provide a first-class service for a community that would otherwise rely on underfunded and poorly resourced government facilities. Though JSS hospital boasts 30 beds, two operating theatres, a fully-equipped lab and three outpatient clinics a week, the service provided by JSS is over-subscribed by a community of 800,000 people from 1,500 villages.

To address the malnutrition, the JSS offers training on new agricultural techniques. The JSS has a well established outreach program of village-clinics and employs over 100 village health workers serving 53 villages. They also operate an ambulance service and assist with transport costs for a community who's access to essential services has been undermined by the Chhattisgarh government's decision to completely disinvest in public transport.

Photo: Tom Pietrasik
Chhattisgarh, India.
March 2010
Copyright
©Tom Pietrasik
Image Size
5616x3744 / 8.5MB
Husbands wait beside their motorbikes on the periphery of a monthly antinatal clinic in Semariya village run by the JSS. The Chhattisgarh government's decision to completely disinvest in public transport makes accessing healthcare particularly difficult in this largely rural state. Most of the husbands who take their wives to such clinics on motorbikes or bicycles prefer to wait outside while health workers discuss reproductive health issues and contraception.<br />
<br />
The JSS (Jan Swasthya Sahyog or People's Health Support Group) is a public-health initiative established in 1996 by a handful of committed doctors, all of whom trained at elite medical schools in India. While many of their peers secured high profile, high earning posts in premier hospitals in India, the US and the UK, the doctors at JSS provide a service for poor and marginalised rural communities in Bilaspur district in the eastern India.<br />
<br />
The JSS operate out of a hospital in Ganiyari, near Bilaspur. Relying on grants and donations, the JSS provide a first-class service for a community that would otherwise rely on underfunded and poorly resourced government facilities. Though JSS hospital boasts 30 beds, two operating theatres, a fully-equipped lab and three outpatient clinics a week, the service provided by JSS is over-subscribed by a community of 800,000 people from 1,500 villages. <br />
<br />
To address the malnutrition, the JSS offers training on new agricultural techniques. The JSS has a well established outreach program of village-clinics and employs over 100 village health workers serving 53 villages. They also operate an ambulance service and assist with transport costs for a community who's access to essential services has been undermined by the Chhattisgarh government's decision to completely disinvest in public transport. <br />
<br />
Photo: Tom Pietrasik<br />
Chhattisgarh, India. <br />
March 2010