Satyam Launches
Comprehensive, Mobile Healthcare Program for Rural Indians
•Fully
equipped Mobile 104 vehicles provide basic healthcare for residents of
remote areas of AP
• Innovative healthcare program integrated
with hugely successful Emergency Management Research Institute’s ‘Call
108’
HYDERABAD, India,
August, 2008: Satyam Computer Services Ltd. (NYSE: SAY), a leading
global consulting and information technology services provider, announced
that it has embarked on a revolutionary program to deliver world-class
healthcare to remote villages in India. The public/private partnership
between the government of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh and Satyam
provides a fleet of healthcare vans—mobile health units (MHU)—that visit
villages on designated days to deliver healthcare services to rural Indians,
many of whom have never been seen by medical professionals before.
The program, known as 104 Mobile, is designed to expand the scope and
delivery of healthcare in rural areas. The technology-enabled, comprehensive
offering provides a range of health services to villagers located more than
three kilometres from public health service providers. While it will help
cure numerous afflictions and prevent countless others, the program is
expected to make a transformational difference with regard to maternal and
infant health problems, as well as chronic ailments. It is also especially
effective at delivering preventive medicine, which is lacking in most
villages.
“Mobile 104 will enhance the lives of rural Indians dramatically,” said
Satyam Founder and Chairman B. Ramalinga Raju. “Too many villagers are
troubled by ailments that are entirely preventable or easily cured in this
day and age; they simply need access to basic healthcare, which this program
provides. Satyam is proud to participate in the initiative and we will
leverage our expertise with other rural healthcare programs and
public/private partnerships to ensure that its expansion is rapid and
seamless.”
Much of the expertise Raju menitioned concerns the Byrraju Foundation and
the Emergency Medical Research Institute, organizations he founded. Satyam
works closely with the Byrraju Foundation, which establishes basic
infrastructure elements in Indian villages, including sanitation, education,
clean water and healthcare. The Foundation works on the premise that people
must be healthy before they can tackle other problems. As such, healthcare
is its primary concern. Additionally, Satyam established EMRI, and was
integral in the creation of Call 108, an emergency number based on 911 in
the United States. Both Byrraju and EMRI have been tremendous successes;
their programs, which began in Andhra Pradesh, are being replicated
throughout India.
With each MHU serving villages of about 1,500 people for four hours per
month, each vehicle will be able to visit approximately 56 villages every
month. The “fixed-day” approach will enable villagers to adjust their
schedules to accommodate MHU visits. For instance, residents of a particular
village—via posters and other marketing initiatives—will know that the
vehicle will show up on the 3rd of each month. By November, the service will
deploy 475 vehicles and cover 50,000 rural villages—40 million people, most
of whom live below the poverty line.
MHUs include paramedics, pharmacists and lab technicians. The modern,
state-of-the-art vehicles are equipped to carry numerous drugs and can store
blood/urine samples for testing. They even feature a television that can
show public health education programs. Services they provide include pre-
and post-natal checkups, height and weight monitoring, nutritional
supplements for mothers and children, basic blood and urine lab
investigations and screening, advice and medicine dispensation for chronic
illnesses such as diabetes, hypertension, epilepsy and anemia. When
seriously ill patients show up at an MHU, an ambulance is summoned via EMRI
(Call 108) and the sick person is brought to an Andhra Pradesh hospital.
Moreover, because cultural sensitivities in many rural areas prevent some
women from pursuing care they may need, the 104 Mobile program trains female
health volunteers (known as ASHA workers) in rural communities. These female
healthcare providers conduct beneficiary visits and provide villagers with
24-hour access to 104 advice, often via mobile phone. Eventually, Andhra
Pradesh will feature 40,000 ASHAs.
Satyam is enabling much of the technology that drives the program. Its
engineers designed the vehicles—with rural India in mind—and have
established the infrastructure to support a rapidly growing initiative.
Other examples of how technology enables the Mobile 104 abound:
Each patient is assigned a number, which is stored in a secure database. The
tracking number, when accessed, will provide a patient’s entire medical
history. This will facilitate care and prevent distribution of drugs to
which a patient is allergic.
The program is web-enabled; patients can communicate with the call center
via phone, fax, chat, SMS or email. In addition, ASHA workers can send
patient data from field visits via SMS. Medical information is uploaded
immediately to hospitals, enabling immediate follow-up. Results of each
patient contact are tracked daily in a database. Villagers are connected
with other healthcare services for which they qualify. Mobile units use GPS
to find remote villages quickly.
“We are proud to apply our world-class technology and healthcare management
expertise, along with all we have learned with EMRI and the Byrraju
Foundation, to help make Mobile 104 a success,” Raju said. “The
comprehensive, integrated virtual platform will enable Satyam to collaborate
with healthcare delivery networks—government and private hospitals, clinics,
etc.—to transform the way rural Indians receive medical treatment.”
Reachout's News
Bureau
-Aug' 2008
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