Whenever an ambulance arrived with a critically sick affected person, Dr R Mubarak’s coronary heart would sink. His small nation hospital in Bagepalli, like most rural authorities hospitals in India, had no intensive-care unit. Households needed to take the affected person, who was maybe on the point of demise, on a two-hour drive to the final hospital in Bengaluru.
“Usually the affected person got here again in the identical ambulance, useless. They by no means made it,” says Mubarak. “I knew I may very well be signing their demise warrant by sending them however I had no alternative.”
His hospital sits on flat farming land in jap Karnataka, a dry belt, the place farmers eke out a subsistence dwelling rising peanuts and millet. It’s, nonetheless, related by freeway to Bengaluru.
On a sizzling, muggy morning, Mubarak and a colleague, Dr GB Sudarshan, are beaming like fathers displaying off a new child as they supply a tour of a brand-new 10-bed intensive-care unit at Bagepalli hospital.
“By no means in my desires did I believe we might get an ICU fitted with the newest gear,” says Mubarak.
In the present day, the intensive-care unit has 5 circumstances of dengue fever; two feverish and dehydrated infants, certainly one of whom, Mahesh Babu, lies listlessly in his mom’s lap; a 3rd child with pneumonia; and Ansh Hegde, an aged man affected by seizures, which makes his meals go down his windpipe.
Any certainly one of these circumstances may need proved deadly with out the sufferers’ fast admission into an ICU. The brand new unit is the results of a undertaking referred to as 10 Mattress ICU, which was conceived by Srikanth Nadhamuni, a know-how entrepreneur, to fill a gaping gap in crucial care in India’s healthcare system.
The thought got here to Nadhamuni in the course of the Covid pandemic. Because the second wave scorched a path throughout India in 2021, he acquired frantic calls from associates asking whether or not he knew of hospitals with ICU beds, as a result of folks had been dying for lack of obtainable areas.
This was within the cities however within the countryside, nobody had ever seen an ICU.
“I realised with a shock that rural hospitals don’t have an ICU. All they will handle is deliveries and minor surgical procedures. Critically sick Indians in rural areas must journey very removed from residence to the closest metropolis hospital to get intensive-care therapy,” says Nadhamuni.
Within the hilly north-east of India, it will probably take greater than a day on potholed roads to achieve a metropolis ICU – too late for sufferers affected by strokes, coronary heart assaults, aneurysms, head accidents and a number of different situations.
Because of donations from philanthropists comparable to Vinod Khosla, with whom he co-founded the startup innovator Khosla Labs, Nadhamuni has raised sufficient cash since 2022 to create greater than 200 10-bed items.
Every unit prices about $53,000 (£40,000) and the installations, which include the required electrical and oxygen provide, meet World Well being Group requirements.
In rural India, folks can’t afford the price of an ambulance or taxi to carry an sick individual to the town
Dr Sathyanarayanan Karunanidhi
The scheme is run in collaboration with state governments, which give the area at hospitals, docs and nursing employees, in addition to medical provides.
Nevertheless, because the gear began being put in, an issue arose as the shortage of educated ICU docs and nurses, more and more often called “intensivists”, turned obvious.
It takes 11 years to qualify as an intensivist and, as soon as certified, few need to work in distant, rural hospitals.
Nadhamuni’s resolution was to deploy a tele-ICU system, connecting the agricultural hospitals with intensivists at a hub medical faculty or tertiary hospital through the cloud. The ICU specialists can remotely information employees within the ICU from a command centre within the hub hospital.
In Bagepalli, Mubarak and Sudarshan are making their rounds, stopping at each bedside and consulting skilled intensivists, Dr Aravind B Guleda and Dr Sathyanarayanan Karunanidhi, who’re sitting 60 miles (100km) away within the command centre at Victoria hospital in Bengaluru.
Guleda and Karunanidhi can view the Bagepalli sufferers from a number of angles via pc screens outfitted with high-resolution cameras and dwell entry to their medical particulars, lab checks and imaging. They supply live-streamed recommendation on therapy for the 9 sufferers.
For the dengue sufferers, they advocate fixed monitoring of oxygen, platelet and hematocrit [red blood cell] ranges to forestall haemorrhagic dengue fever, which could be deadly.
As soon as Guleda and Karunanidhi are completed at Bagepalli, they flip their consideration to a different unit, additional away at Nanjungud, the place a pair have suffered burns after their garments caught hearth whereas burning dry leaves.
The medics information the native employees on treating an an infection with high-grade antibiotics and monitoring the spouse’s falling blood strain.
Karunanidhi says: “In rural India, folks can’t afford the price of an ambulance or taxi to carry an sick individual to the town, nor to lose their each day wages. It’s psychological agony for them. On this mannequin, the ICU mattress is nearer to residence and the household can proceed working.”
He and Guleda now oversee 55 sufferers throughout 10 hospitals. Guleda says: “If the affected person has extreme burns, head accidents or trauma, then after all they must be introduced right here to us. The native employees can’t deal with such circumstances, however at the least they will stabilise the affected person.”
The undertaking has eased the strain on overcrowded large metropolis hospitals, with a 70% discount in transferrals from hospitals with the brand new items. Dr NN Siri, Karnataka state programme supervisor, says: “Earlier than, some rural sufferers ended up crowding metropolis hospitals only for oxygen or for minor infections.”
Native docs have benefited too, because of the each day consultations with specialists.
Mubarak says: “Below their steerage, I inserted a catheter into the thoracic cavity of a affected person to take away over three litres of fluid. I had by no means achieved it earlier than. If I had delayed the process by half an hour, the affected person would have died.”
Sudarshan recollects a case in Bagepalli, which he was positive was viral fever. The group in Bengaluru, nonetheless, urged additional investigations. These revealed a gall bladder cyst.
“I’m happy with what I’m studying from them,” says Sudarshan.
To this point, about 65,000 sufferers have been handled within the items, and Nadhamuni says the purpose is to set one up in each a part of the nation.
On the Bengaluru command centre, Karunanidhi is winding up his session with the Bagepalli docs earlier than he heads off to take care of his personal ICU sufferers within the hospital.
“Sitting right here, you’re feeling omnipresent. Right here I’m, distant, pulling somebody again from the brink of demise, somebody who by no means dreamed of getting specialist care,” he says.