This story is from June 16, 2023

NH launches mobile cardiac care drive

NH launches mobile cardiac care drive
Bengaluru: In a bid to make cardiovascular care accessible for all, Narayana Health on Thursday launched Healthcare on Wheels, an initiative wherein mobile screening vehicles will provide complete and advanced heart screening to the needy.
“We will have two vehicles for screening provided by Volvo and Shankaranarayana Constructions Pvt Ltd. Narayana Health will manage the screenings.
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The services we offer include ESG, ultrasound, and blood screening, among others. Screenings will be done all over the state, free of cost,” Dr Devi Shetty, founder and chairman of Narayana Health told TOI. The equipment cost around Rs 3 crore. “The vehicles may be parked outside government hospitals. If they don’t have Xray machine or echo machine, they can send the patients to us,” he added.
Patients detected with heart problems will be referred for consultation. “Every other day, you hear that someone collapsed and that it was a sudden heart attack. There is nothing like a sudden heart attack. A patient who had a sudden heart attack could have saved his life if he had undergone an echocardiogram, ECG and a CT scan. One can prevent a sudden heart attack. Such patients have structural problems in the heart before it stops. A normal heart can’t stop,” said Dr Shetty.
Dr Shetty suggested every Indian past the age of 40 must undergo preventive health checkups.
“They should know whether they are diabetic, hypertensive. All the data should be in their phone. That can potentially save lives.” In his practice, a good number of time it’s not the young son bringing in the aged father for a bypass surgery. “It is the other way round. So, there’s a huge shift in the patient profile,” he said.
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About the Author
Mini Thomas

A health journalist for over 15 years, Mini is currently an Assistant Editor at The Times of India. She is living her childhood dream. \n\nMini has received numerous awards for her work, including The Statesman award for rural reporting and the PII-ICRC award (twice). Her story on FGM titled The Cut and the Hurt won her special mention at the Chameli Devi award and KC Kulish International award. \n\nShe believes that hard work pays off, sooner or later.

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