The Case Against The NRI Doctor

Posted on 4 April 2012 in Uncategorized by admin

In recent years, there has been much brouhaha over medical tourism and the use of telemedicine to get opinions from doctors far away. While these concepts are beneficial in certain specific situations, they can be dangerous if not applied prudently.

Globalisation of medicine is not as straightforward as setting up a call centre in a country where the cost is lower or employing a software engineer in a developing country to make a product for the first world.

Plus, patients as well as their doctors are less portable across the globe than say an iPad or its maker.

Aspects of patient care

The Indian government is in the process of enacting laws to allow doctors who hold the Overseas Citizens of India status to practise in India and even become faculty members in medical colleges.

In a country where allopathic doctors are in short supply, even though this may seem like a good move, it is not necessarily so, unless adequate measures are put in place. Most countries allow doctors trained elsewhere to practise only after going through rigorous requirements including passing their licensing examination and training in their country.

These processes are absolutely necessary to make sure that the practitioner is aware of local diseases as well as social, cultural, and ethical aspects of patient care that are unique to the region.

Imagine an overseas citizen of India who could be born, raised and trained as a doctor in the United States going to rural India to work for a few months with little understanding or experience of treating infectious diseases like tuberculosis and malaria or inherited diseases like thalassaemia.

All of these are much more prevalent in India and someone trained locally would be better qualified to treat them. Even for those who were born and trained in India, it would not be easy after practising abroad for years.

This move by the Indian government is obviously to woo the large number of non-resident Indian doctors in the U.S. and the United Kingdom. It seems ill conceived if we are to believe recent media reports of the possibility of allowing them to work in district hospitals for short periods without registration and necessary clearance.

India needs good general practitioners more than super specialists, who seem to be in abundance nowadays in the urban areas. It needs doctors for the poor and the rural population and not necessarily for corporate hospital patients who can afford such facilities.

These are the circumstances where the “foreign” doctor is likely to be all at sea while trying to treat diseases which are not commonly encountered in the western world. This is also likely to be the scenario for faculty positions, which are most often in medical colleges affiliated with government hospitals.

The Indian diaspora is pushing for new rules in the hope of satisfying the inner yearning to give something back to the homeland. This ambition of brief stints by a handful does not warrant a major policy change that may result in the creation of loopholes in the system or even adverse patient outcomes.

The western world is coming up with stricter requirements for doctors to maintain certification like ongoing periodic examinations, continuing medical education and documentation of satisfactory patient care in local conditions.

To allow a doctor to practise in India without satisfying necessary prerequisites would be regressive. Instead, the government should look to alternative strategies like establishing programmes to train rural general practitioners or physician assistants to address the shortage of health-care providers.

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/article3284705.ece

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Risk of TB for Global World Travellers (Tuberberculosis)

Posted on 28 April 2009 in Uncategorized by admin

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Risk for Travelers

To become infected, a person usually has to spend a relatively long time in a closed environment where the air was contaminated by a person with untreated tuberculosis who was coughing and who had numerous M. tuberculosis organisms (or tubercle bacilli) in secretions from the lungs or voice box (larynx). Infection is generally transmitted through the air; therefore, there is virtually no danger of its being spread by dishes, linens, and items that are touched, or by most food products. However, it can be transmitted through unpasteurized milk or milk products obtained from infected cattle.

Travelers who anticipate possible prolonged exposure to tuberculosis (e.g., those who could be expected to come in contact routinely with hospital, prison, or homeless shelter populations) should be advised to have a tuberculin skin test before leaving the United States. If the reaction is negative, they should have a repeat test approximately 12 weeks after returning. Because persons with HIV infection are more likely to have an impaired response to the tuberculin skin test, travelers who are HIV positive should be advised to inform their physicians about their HIV infection status. Except for travelers with impaired immunity, travelers who already have a positive tuberculin reaction are unlikely to be reinfected.

Travelers who anticipate repeated travel with possible prolonged exposure or an extended stay over a period of years in an endemic country should be advised to have two-step baseline testing and, if the reaction is negative, annual screening, including a tuberculin skin test.

CDC and state and local health departments have published the results of six investigations of possible tuberculosis transmission on commercial aircraft. In these six instances, a passenger or a member of a flight crew traveled on commercial airplanes while infectious with tuberculosis. In all six instances, the airlines were unaware that the passengers or crew members were infected with tuberculosis. In two of the instances, CDC concluded that tuberculosis was probably transmitted to others on the airplane. The findings suggested that the risk of tuberculosis transmission from an infectious person to others on an airplane was greater on long flights (8 hours or more). The risk of exposure to tuberculosis was higher for passengers and flight crew members sitting or working near an infectious person because they might inhale droplets containing M. tuberculosis bacteria.

Based on these studies and findings, WHO issued recommendations to prevent the transmission of tuberculosis in aircraft and to guide potential investigations. The risk of tuberculosis transmission on an airplane does not appear to be greater than in any other enclosed space. To prevent the possibility of exposure to tuberculosis on airplanes, CDC and WHO recommend that persons known to have infectious tuberculosis travel by private transportation (that is, not by commercial airplanes or other commercial carriers), if travel is required. CDC and WHO have issued guidelines for notifying passengers who might have been exposed to tuberculosis aboard airplanes. Passengers concerned about possible exposure to tuberculosis should be advised to see their primary health-care provider for a tuberculosis skin test.

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