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Articles
The Lifeline Express
The World's First Hospital on Rails
by
Dr. Anjana Maitra
The
Lifeline Express, one of the projects of Impact India Foundation, is the world’s
first hospital on rails. Launched on 16th July 1991, it reaches those who cannot
reach hospitals. Its main function is to provide medical and surgical treatment
to the disabled in rural and tribal areas and the beneficiaries are mostly from
the most underprivileged sections of society.
This unique project is the dream of Sir John Wilson, a prominent British
advocate for the disabled, who founded Impact Worldwide, a non profit health
service provider and a British NGO. Leaders of Impact India took up the
challenge of turning Sir Wilson’s idea into reality and created the Lifeline
Express (Jeevan Rekha), which brings the benefits of modern medicine free
of cost to millions of poor villagers in rural India. Disability being a global
phenomenon, Impact UK wanted to spread out globally and chose India for setting
up their counterpart in view of the magnitude of the problem as well as the
potential to tackle it effectively.
The Tata Group of Companies offered handsome support to the project and Impact
India Foundation (IIF) was born in 1983. A registered public trust, promoted by
the United Nations Development Programme, UNICEF and WHO, IIF was inspired by
the vision of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru who dreamt of taking essential services to
the disabled by using the Indian railways, the largest network in the world.
The Lifeline Express was flagged off from Victoria Terminus station at Bombay on
16th July 1991 for Khalari, Bihar, as a heartening implementation of that dream.
With full co-operation from the Indian Railways, this unique train began its
journey to perk up the lives of those stunted by disabilities. Since its
inception in 1991, the world’s first hospital train has been rolling to reach
the magic of medical intervention to far flung areas of the country’s vast
interiors.
The Lifeline Express offers on the spot diagnostic, medical and advanced
surgical treatment for preventive and curative interventions for the handicapped
using the Indian Railway network which is the largest in the world, having over
63,500 kilometers of tracks.
Over 4 lakh Indians have so far benefited from the remarkable train, and other
countries have come forward to start their own Lifeline Express on which major
surgeries have been performed to restore movement, hearing, sight and correction
of clefts.
This Project has been developed in collaboration with the Indian Railways and
the Home Ministry. It has been funded by Impact UK, international charitable
sources, Indian corporate houses and individuals. The Tata Group of Companies,
Rajiv Gandhi Foundation and Indian Oil Corporation are among the major corporate
donors in India. More than 80 projects have been conducted all over India and
over 105,000 people have received life-transforming treatment from this unique
train.
Four old railway carriages released by the Indian railways were completely
re-designed and restored by engineering and medical consultants and refurbished
into a fully air conditioned hospital equipped with all modern medical and
surgical facilities including training facilities for up to five medical
persons.
This mobile hospital has 2 surgical operation theatres with three fully equipped
operation tables each (so that 3 operations can be held simultaneously), a
sterilization room, two powerful generators (to ensure 24 hour power supply),
recovery room for patients, a meeting room, residential area for medical staff,
a kitchen, changing room, store for medical supplies, ophthalmic room, X-Ray
room, Auditorium and training facilities, toilets etc. Lt Col Randhir Singh
Vishwan is the Chief Executive Officer and oversees each project.
Actually there are two such identical trains in India and they visit different
parts of the country, usually rural areas with insufficient medical facilities,
or areas hit by natural disasters etc and stays in each place for several days
or weeks while medical care (routine plus major surgery) is provided to the
local people. Lifeline Express projects are held in smaller towns/villages which
are connected with broad gauge railway lines. The active involvement of the
local Govt and Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs) as well as business houses,
volunteers and local businessmen is necessary for the success of each project.
The time period at each place varies is approximately 6 weeks, but may vary
depending upon the response and the number of people treated. The current
location of the Express can be seen on the internet.
Before the Lifeline Express arrives at the designated place, the District Health
Officer conducts a Publicity campaign in the neighboring villages and suburbs to
make the people aware of the facilities. Personnel from the Primary Health
Centers talk to the local people personally to make them understand the benefits
they can get through this project. A light motor vehicle fitted with
loudspeakers is also often used to make announcements and pamphlets are also
distributed in the surrounding areas.
The District administration and Railway authorities usually provide a
room/shed/enclosed place on the railway platform or near it for the doctors to
screen the patients and advise them about the surgery. For post operative care,
a hall or rooms are taken close to the railway station so that the patients’
condition can be monitored by the medical staff. The doctors and specialists are
usually housed in Circuit Houses, Guest Houses or hotels close to the station
while the nursing staff and attendants stay on board the train. Local contacts
are crucial to the success of the mission because they can speak the local
language and instill confidence in the rural people, many of whom have never
seen a doctor, leave alone a hospital or an operation theatre.
In February 2005 the Lifeline Express visited Orissa and set up a facility of a
300 bed hospital for pre and post operative as well as in-patient care. Needy
patients were given corrective surgery and appropriate aids and appliances. When
Gujarat was torn apart by a massive earthquake on 26th Jan 2001, the Lifeline
Express was rushed there to provide aid and relief to hundreds of victims.
The Lifeline Express was at Rourkela railway station for three weeks from 11th
July 2006 to 5th Aug 2006 on its 84th project. Medical personnel on board
conducted a large number of operations including those for lip cleft, polio and
clump foot, ear and cataract. A large number of people from the nearby villages
and tribal areas benefited from the advanced medical care offered on the train.
The local District administration provided all possible help and Doctors, Nurses
and para-medical staff from hospitals and Nursing Homes in Rourkela offered
their voluntary services. Specialists and Plastic Surgeons were also brought
from Bhubaneswar, Kolkata, Lucknow and Jamshedpur.
The author visited the Lifeline Express and also interacted with three foreign
medical personnel on board. They were Mr Marcus Schettle of Germany (a final
year medical student), Ms Laila Benoit of The Netherlands ( a nurse) and Mr
Guillame Aurias of France ( a nursing attendant specializing in surgical cases)
who were giving their voluntary service in the train. In their conversations
with the author, they were full of praise for the Indian people whom they found
very simple and friendly and said that they loved this beautiful country. They
also said that they learnt a lot about surgery on the Lifeline Express and
worked hand in hand with the Indian surgeons and specialists.
The author had also invited the trio to two Rotary Club meetings at Rourkela and
also to the Max Mueller Bhavan and Indo German Club. Mr Schettle was pleasantly
surprised to know that German classes are very popular at the Max Mueller Bhavan
in Rourkela and was taken around the German section in the library as well.
Raju, a ten year old child afflicted by polio, living in a tribal village near
Rourkela, was totally awe struck by the ‘magic train’. After being provided the
calipers he was overjoyed and said, “I could never imagine that I could walk
properly like my friends”. His parents were in tears after seeing his improved
condition. Sixty year old Yudhisthir, a slum dweller in Rourkela, who had lost
most of his eye sight due to cataract couldn’t believe that his vision now is
almost normal. “I was used to living in a dim world, it is a re-birth for me”,
he said. Most of the patients and their relatives the author talked to were full
of praise for the unique service offered in the Lifeline express and blessed the
doctors and staff for their great services.
The following services are offered by the Lifeline Express:
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Restoration of
movement to polio and orthopedically affected people by surgery and
providing calipers.
-
Restoration of
sight through cataract operation and providing intra ocular lenses.
-
Restoration of
hearing through surgery and supplying of hearing aids.
-
Correction of
clefts through surgery.
-
Counseling and
referral services.
-
Follow up of
patient’s progress through arrangement with the local authorities.
-
Preventive
services including immunization and provision of nutrients.
-
Opportunity to
medical and voluntary personnel to work in a unique field situation.
-
Teaching surgeons
working in smaller towns the finer skills of micro surgery.
-
Training health
workers, doctors and NGOs on various health issues.
-
It also involves
itself speedily and deeply in disaster management of natural
calamities/emergencies.
-
It provides food
and lodging for the patient as well as an attendant as well as medical
accessories like calipers, spectacles, intra ocular lenses, hearing aids etc
free of cost.
-
To address the
grass roots problem of low health awareness it also conducts health
awareness camps among the deprived sections in neglected rural areas.
The Lifeline Express
has become a model of transfer of Indian appropriate technology to setting up
similar projects in China (which has 3 similar trains), Zimbabwe, and a hospital
river boat, “Jibon Tori’ in Bangladesh.
As per available data, from Jan 2005 to June 2006 the Lifeline Express has
visited Rae Bareli (U.P), Jajpur (Orissa), Guna (M.P), Palghar (Maharashtra),
Jharsaguda (Orissa), Itarsi (M.P), Kariar Road (Orissa), Nihalgarh (U.P), Sini
(Jharkhand), Babrala (U.P), Ashok Nagar (M.P), Rewa (M.P), Bishrampur (Chhatisgarh)
etc. During this period it has registered a total of 73894 patients out of which
555 are for orthopedic cases, 210 for cataract, 4197 for intra ocular lenses,
1465 ENT cases, 1101 for clefts and 50 for other ailments.
In Nov 2004 the Lifeline Express was on display at the National Rail Museum in
New Delhi. The 3 day exhibition saw 50,000 students, parents and teachers catch
a glimpse of the magic train and scores of doctors and para-medical staff
pledged to donate their voluntary services on board as and when required.
Many renowned persons have lauded the unique efforts of the Lifeline Express
(LE) and the dedication of its staff who offer voluntary services in far flung
interiors of the country. The LE has received the UN Award for Excellence in
Public Service Worldwide in 1994 and other awards have been pouring in.
Taking advantage of the vast railway network, the train transforms any empty
railway siding into a temporary hospital and brings all sophisticated medical
care to the people who have virtually no access to the same. It is estimated
that there are 90 million disabled people in rural India, crippled with polio,
blindness, deafness and other disabilities. The ‘magic train’ provides yeoman
service to ensure that these people are not robbed of health, productivity and
joy. The unique train tirelessly criss- crosses the interiors of India in a
silent crusade against disability and has been rightly christened the ‘harbinger
of hope’.
December 3, 2006
Image courtesy impact.org
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