Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 State ART centres on sick bed; compound plight of HIV patients Ravik Bhattacharya Kolkata, August 22: Come September and thousands of under-medication HIV-positive patients from West Bengal, Bihar and Orissa will be at the receiving end as Anti-Retroviral Therapy (ART) centres throughout the state, including the School of Tropical Medicine (STM), Calcutta, the largest centre in the eastern region, is due to collapse owing to a shortage of doctors and staff. The STM, which is recognised by WHO and NACO as an ART training centre, at present is being run with a single doctor who has already resigned and is scheduled to leave by September. The ART programme is part of the nationwide NACO and WHO initiative to provide free medical treatment to critical HIV positive patients. Interestingly, the newly-inaugurated ART centre at Siliguri, North Bengal is also under-staffed. Two other ART centres in Burdwan and Midnapore medical colleges are on the verge being shut down as they were operating without mandatory NACO permission. At the School of Tropical Medicine, the senior medical officer had resigned and left in July. Since then, the onus of running the ART centre had been on one medical officer, who has already resigned and is scheduled to leave by September. The centre has no pharmacist which is mandatory according to medical norms. The STM centre is the largest in the region catering to nearly more than 1,200 HIV- positive people. Apart from Kolkata and various other districts, people from Jharkhand, Bihar and Orissa throng the hospital too for medication. Every day, around 70 HIV-positive people visit the ART centre at STM for medication. The newly-inaugurated ART centre at Siliguri, North Bengal, at present, has only one doctor and a counsellor. " The centres at Burdwan and Midnapore needed the mandatory permission from NACO, which is running the programme throughout the state. But for some reason the permission was not taken by the West Bengal State HIV AIDS Prevention and Control Society. Even the state health secretary was kept in the dark regarding the centres. There are specific guidelines by NACO that no ART centre should be started without trained personnel and necessary manpower, " said an official from the health department. According to the ART programme, critical HIV-positive people are provided with free drugs to keep the disease under control. Each patient is given two tablets apart from the general symptomatic treatments. http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=198004 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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