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Service to Humanity"

by Leela Menon

Kochi, April 30: The Amritanandamayi Institute of Medical Sciences (AIMS), to be inaugurated by Prime Minister A B Vajpayee on May 17, is set to transform the health scene of Kochi - not only in providing state-of-the-art medical care facilities but also in providing free medical care to indigent patients.

The AIMS is indeed a unique mixture of compassion and skill, superior infrastructure and the ultimate in technology - in fact the last word in quality medical care which can match or excel the West, according to AIMS director Dr Prem Nair.

When completed, the 800-bed tertiary hospital will be a referral hospital, offering sophisticated medical care, medi-cal research and education, outstanding diagnostic evaluations and expert surgical interventions in a non-profit charitable setting.

Located in 23 acres off the Bypass in Edapally, in Kochi, the 600,000-square-foot hospital has six towers surrounding a central atrium, three towers of which are devoted to the penniless.

Two towers will cater to the fussy elite demanding exclusive attention. "We want to take care of all sections of the population," points out Dr Nair.

Planned in phases, the first phase of the hospital will have 150 beds and 40 ICUs. There will be a heart institute, a lung centre, a 'centre for vascular diseases, a digestive diseases institute, a kidney centre, an imaging centre and a clinical laboratory and a blood bank in the first phase.

In the second phase, there will be 140 ICUs, a neuroscience institute, a transplantation centre, and a prenatal centre. An oncology unit will be set up after clearance is obtained from the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre.

The Heart Centre will have an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) 'heart attack' programme, with a 24-hour telephone hotline and rapid response emergency and intensive care mobile service units providing life-saving assistance to those in critical need.

A cardiac catheterisation unit, balloon angioplasty, cardiac electrophysiology lab, digital high-resolution ultrasound equipment with stress echo capability and treadmill testing, monitoring services, a pacemaker clinic and rotablator procedures are also available here.

Says Dr Nair: "We aim to give total heart care, both preventive and diagnostic. There will be paediatric cardiology, neonatal cardiology and adult cardiology services as well a cardiac rehabilitation scheme." Specialists to attend to the different branches of this super-specialty hospital will come from all over the world to ensure a strong and competent medical and technical supporting staff, apart from a strong voluntary team.

The hospital infrastructure will include staff quarters, patient lounges for relatives, a nursing college, a pharmacy college and post-graduate training programme in medical, surgical and other specialties.

The Imaging Centre will have the latest equipment, a state-of-the art filmless radiology unit, retrievable anywhere in the hospital with a picture archival communication system (PACS). The installed network allows radiological physicians and technicians to move images from one modality to another and to view throughout the hospital.

Teleradlology facilities through ISDN and Internet is another first for India, according to Nair. These allow Instant consultations on complex problems with major centres in the US and in Europe.

All the latest in diagnostic imaging such as spiral CT scans have already been installed. A site is being readied for magnetic resonance imaging, nuclear medicine with gamma cameras and a wide variety of isotope scanning capabilities.

A sterilisation department provides automated washers, ultrasonic cleaners, gas sterilizers and microprocessor-controlled steam sterilizers which connect directly to the operating rooms.

In gastroenterology, there will be a complete digestive diseases programme, medical enterology and a centre for swallowing disorders. Therapeutic endoscopy with lasers balloons, stents and lithotripsy for gallstone diseases will also be made available.

A liver transplant programme is also on the cards.

A centralised electrical substation is being set up for stabilising power and ensure uninterrupted power supply through a field generator back-up. A central gas plant will dispense oxygen and nitrous and compressed air.

A centralised laundry will provide automatic washing, drying and pressing facilities for patients and staff. There will be a centralised effluent treatment plant for providing purified water, special diesel incinerator for disposal of hospital waste and centralised boilers for the kitchen.

A reverse osmosis plant will give high-quality, bacteria-free water for labs, dialysis and operation theaters.

"We have planned and integrated it into the hospital infrastructure," Nair said. As benefits a spiritually motivated institution, volunteers will give free service to the hospital to defray cost of taking care of patients.

Volunteers can work for two days a week, two months or more, to serve as receptionists, or assist in various therapies like IV therapy or paediatrics or physiotherapy. An exercise in trashing the ego.

 

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