PBS Newshour: Eye Hospital in India Restores Sight With Free Surgeries
From The PBS Newshour Jan. 1, 2009. Why does it look like India is doing a better job of taking care of their poor with making sure they have eye care than we are in the United States? This reminds me of the free health clinics that used to be reserved for third world countries going on across the country here. How pathetic is it that the richest country in the world is not doing a better job of tending for those who are the most in need instead of those profiting off of the sick?
I can only imagine what the Republicans would be calling a similar system that grew as large as this one in the U.S. Maybe a socialist plot to make sure old people don't go blind? Who knows. I'm sure of one thing. If an outfit got this big and was cutting into industry profits, they'd be finding a way to demonize them. And they’d be aided and abetted by their Conserva-Dem cohorts who are just as bad.
Friday on the NewsHour, a second look at a Fred de Sam Lazaro report from India on the Aravind system of eye hospitals and clinics, the largest such system in the world. These clinics subsidize sight-restoring surgery for impoverished patients and provide top-of-the-line care for patients who can pay.
Founded in 1976, Aravind has treated some 27 million patients and operated on 3.4 million, mostly to reverse blindness caused by cataracts. The primary surgery now costs just a few dollars more than a meal at McDonald's.
Transcript via PBS.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Aravind is the largest eye care center in the world. The surgical facilities are as modern, the error rate as low as any place in America.
The big difference with Aravind is that its patients are among the world's poorest people, who rarely get treated for eye diseases. Globally, 45 million people have preventable or reversible blindness. Twelve million are in India alone, where the extreme sun and genetics are blamed.
Many people lose their sight and livelihood by their early 50s. Aravind's business success and social mission have long made it a model in public health textbooks. Twenty years ago, this much younger reporter came to the ancient temple city of Madurai, where Aravind was founded by Dr. Govindappa Venkataswamy. Everyone called him Dr. V.
He retired from a government hospital in 1976 and set out to tackle what he called disabling cataract blindness.
DR. GOVINDAPPA VENKATASWAMY: Nothing which disables a man like cataract and poor eyesight.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Aravind itself was a very small operation when Dr. V. started it, with 11 bed and four doctors, three from his own family. The idea was simple. They would serve patients who could pay. The profits would afford free care to the many more people who couldn't afford even the bus fare.
So, Aravind set out to find patients, mainly through screening camps in surrounding rural areas. Groups like the Lions Club provided buses to bring those needing surgery to the hospital, where they entered a brisk assembly line operating room.
Dr. V.'s business role model was McDonald's, or American chain stores in general.
DR. GOVINDAPPA VENKATASWAMY: In America, you have models, whether it Sears tools or McDonald's hamburger or -- you are able to open a chain of shops or restaurants or hotels.
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN, Aravind: You spoke to him here. You were sitting here, and he was sitting there and talking about McDonald's.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Dr. V. died in 2005, but his office is left untouched as a shrine to him. His nephew, ophthalmologist Aravind Srinivasan, manages a system that's grown to five regional hospitals and 25 satellite clinics. This was the first one.
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: This is a 32-year-old hospital. Today, we are about 1,500 to 2,000 patients a day.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Each pays about $1 for a doctor's appointment. That helps fund even more patients, who go next door to a free eye hospital. There's not much profit margin, so a heavy volume of paying patients, satisfied patients, and efficiency are critical.
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: We call this a clinic scoring sheet.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Dr. Aravind, who also has an MBA from the University of Michigan, has continuous productivity reports at his fingertips.
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: And this statistics talk about service time. How many -- what percentage of people were seen within two hours?
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Patients are promised a completed appointment in two hours and a brochure detailing what they can expect.
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: So, registration takes about five minutes. Vision test takes about 10 minutes, refraction check about 10 minutes.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: So, this is sort of like a patients' bill of rights almost?
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: Exactly, so they understand what's happening.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Aravind's reputation is drawing patients from farther and farther away.
MAN: Whenever you say eye operations, everyone says, go to Madurai.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: It's the only reason 55-year-old K.G. Angenealou was coaxed out of a three-year depression that began when cataracts started clouding his vision. He became completely blind three months ago. Angenealou and his wife, Shoba, endured a two-day train journey get here.
MAN (through translator): I was a sportsman. I used to swim. After the cataract, I could no longer move around. I got stuck at home, and I started eating. Then a leg injury made me even more immobile. I had problems being overweight. And I developed high blood pressure.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: By 9:00 the morning after arriving here, he was being prepared to surgery. Already, dozens of patients had gone ahead of him.
So, you have been going for two hours, and you have done 16...
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: Patients, yes?
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Dr. Aravind and surgeons in several operating theaters were first working the routine, mostly cataract cases. The more complex ones, like glaucoma and corneal surgery, would come later.
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: It's an entire teamwork, as you have seen in the front. I'm seeing the patient for the first time in the O.R. So, somebody has done a thorough workup of the patient. And any challenging cases, they show to me earlier. So, we are able to identify our -- those cases which need a little more extra attention is segregated from the whole.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Angenealou was one such case, his hypertension and obesity posing extra risks.
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: You just have a margin of safety of about five to 10 minutes to get the surgery done.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: About 10 nervous minutes later, Dr. Aravind had removed a particularly tough, leathery cataract.
DR. ARAVIND SRINIVASAN: The cataract was a little obstinate, but, otherwise, things went on well. So, when you see him tomorrow, you will see a different man, more confident.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: By the end of this day, Dr. Aravind and his colleagues did about 300 surgeries, about half of them free of charge.
Increasingly, however, patients are seen outside the hospital. Telemedicine connects doctors to satellite clinics. And today's eye-cams offer much more on-site, from grinding eyeglass lenses to digital scans. Near this camp, a satellite truck beamed high-resolution images to doctors at the hospital. It's especially useful in diagnosing India's growing problem of diabetes-related eye disease.
Technology has improved care and it's also brought down costs, notably for the intraocular lenses which are implanted during cataract surgery. They used to be imported.
Aravind began making its own intraocular lenses back in the early 1990s. They used to cost between $50 and $100 each. Today, they are made in this factory for as little as $2 apiece. Aravind lenses are exported to 120 countries, and they own 8 percent of the global market in intraocular lenses.
Whether it's supplies or people, the goal is to be self-sufficient. Aravind now have extensive training programs for recent medical graduates. It also trains thousands of mid-level ophthalmic professionals, mostly women from surrounding rural communities. Some 250 hospitals across India and 40 other countries have adopted Aravind's methods.
R.D. Thulasiraj manages the teaching facilities.
R.D. THULASIRAJ: In this institute, we train organizations to become more efficient. We -- we completely give our intellectual property... Now, they're -- we open up our systems, processes, our -- how much we charge the patients and our records.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: It's the ethos set by his uncle. Dr. V., who was single, never took a salary. In fact, he mortgaged his home to start Aravind. And he coaxed or inspired 34 members of his extended family to work here, starting in 1976 with his sister Natchiar and her husband. Both left surgical careers in America to work here for about $20 a month.
DR. G. NATCHIAR: Today oh, my God, we are very, very happy. In fact, at that time, in the '80s, we were not happy. Even though Dr. V. was happy, in a family life, you know, like me and my husband, two children, it was not easy for us. We couldn't even buy a cycle. At that time, we didn't appreciate his far vision.
MAN: God bless you, madam.
DR. G. NATCHIAR: God bless me. Yes, God bless the surgeon.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: She says the satisfaction of seeing patients like Angenealou restored to full lives makes up for any material privation, although, over the years, salaries have greatly improved for the 220 doctors and some 2,500 other Aravind staff.
MAN: My children are starting school on the 1st, so I want to get going.
DR. G. NATCHIAR: We will give you some dark glasses, just like a Hollywood actor.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: He's one of 27 million patients who have been treated at Aravind and 3.4 million who have had surgery, surgery that now costs just a few dollars more than a meal at McDonald's.
JIM LEHRER: There's more about the Aravind clinics on our Web site, NewsHour.PBS.org. You can see a slide show of images, read a reporter's notebook, and watch Fred's exclusive online report about the partnership that helped those hospitals grow.





The purpose of Crooks and Liars is to keep small-minded individuals thinking in terms of the left vs. right garbage they've been trained to respond to.
The purpose of Crooks and Liars is to keep small-minded individuals thinking in terms of the left vs. right garbage they've been trained to respond to.
That would be considered "charity" to the Capitalist Class.
"Oh that's what they do for all those poor people over there you'd think they wise up and be like us!"
...the replacement for dropping the Public Option in the Senate version of the bill, is 10,000 free clinics. I also Googled around and found that yes, there are some in Dallas. This is similar to the story above. It's happening here, just not much news about it 'cause that doesn't support anyone's hater agenda.
"Courtesy is owed. Respect is earned. Love is given." --Unknown author, found in Guide to Texas Etiquette by Kinky Friedman
better keep that hush hush we wouldn't want anyone to think we're not the Richest Nation on Earth after all.
Capatalist will not do anything for free
I want to change the color of my eyes permanently, from black to vacuum. Will they pay for that?
need it they'll turn vacuum automatically.
and perhaps a lesson for any self proclaimed 'greatest' and or Christian Nations?
I became legally blind from cataracts. My vision had troubled me for about 3 years, requiring glasses, but by age 42 my vision declined rapidly, by the time I visited an opthalmologist, he predicted I would be legally blind in about two months, he was correct. The surgery is quick and painless, about twenty minutes, and you can see almost immediately, well, as soon as they take the bandage off, a couple of hours.
It was amazing how much I had compensated for things, my hearing and touch became more sensitive, but to see how bad things had got... It was amazing re-seeing the color of grass for example. SO GREEN! Fabulous work! The French artist Monet went blind from cataracts, but was cured, check out the timeline of his work, you see the shapes and colors become indistinct, exactly what cataracts do, it's like being in a whiteout.
My 2c worth.
Now just how do you people expect opthalmologists to pay for their airplanes and Porches (and I have real life examples) if they charge so little for this 10 minute procedure?
I mean come ON!
"Someday somebody related to some of these sufferers, these victims, these collaterally damaged souls, may try to kill you. And I have to tell you, I think you’ll have it coming." - Christopher Cooper
This sounds like "SOCIALISM!" Next thing you know, they will be healing the sick, and heping the blind to..........., hey wait...., they already have done that.
Those teabaggers better get into their back yard bunkers before Obama'a army of socialist fascist opthamologists show up to take their guns.
If I were a psychopath, I would join the republican party, and get in on the gravy train taking the Teabircher morons to the cleaners.
But the better thing would be to just remove the republicans from our government we can fix things and make them work again for everyone! Not just the few at the top.
...who are obscenely influenced by lobbyists. Something perhaps even more insidious is the influence of behind-the-scene outfits such as "The Family" aka C Street.
"Courtesy is owed. Respect is earned. Love is given." --Unknown author, found in Guide to Texas Etiquette by Kinky Friedman
"It's not only Republicans who are obscenely influenced by lobbyists."
Absolutely not! Indeed, the Democrats are just as bad as are the Republicans -- even worse, if you ask me. At least the Republicans are open and up front as to whose side THEY are on. The Democrats will string you along and make you think that they are on your side and working for you. Only when you've bought into their scam completely do they let you know what the truth is.
Profiting off of the sick. This is what America has come to.
at the top of the page (on my computer at least) for this thread are three big ads for Eye Physicians, lasik and cataract surgery. No doubt offering their service for free or minimal cost .....
Some day we may wise up and learn that doing for others really is doing for ourselves.
"Egotism is the anesthetic that dulls the pain of Stupidity" - Frank Leahy
Of course they don't say how much they will charge you because it will give you a heart attack and that would cost even more money.
...would immediately turn the United States into a communist hell-hole. The Baby Jeebus would turn on this country and single it out for particularly devastating treatment when he returns (just as soon as American Fundamentalists can set things up in the Middle East).
It is really much better for poor people to be blind, so they can remain poor, a condition they earned and deserve, and one which probably pleases them immensely. I know that the poorer I am, the happier I am.
Yesterday, I heard a report on the radio about open heart surgical facilities in India that have lowered the cost of surgery to a mere $2000. How on Earth does anyone think that would be good for business or that vitally necessary second, or third, home for the surgeon? It is pretty obvious that if anybody tried that kind of thing in the US, 100% of our heart surgeons would leave this country for someplace where they could make a decent living (aka a killing). No way would a red-blooded American ever allow his or her services to be bought so cheaply that just anyone could afford them.
Making things obscenely expensive is what sets this country apart and makes it the "envy of the world." If we start making vital medical services available at affordable prices, it will be no time before we descend into the American Enterprise Institute's worst nightmare -- a humane society that thrives because its people are healthy and can afford to remain that way.
...you've been hitting the Malthus again, haven't you?
"Courtesy is owed. Respect is earned. Love is given." --Unknown author, found in Guide to Texas Etiquette by Kinky Friedman
They seem to be running into a little bit of trouble. The new settlements in the West Bank seem to be running into a road block and Sarah Palin is none to happy about it.
"It is really much better for poor people to be blind, so they can remain poor...."
Let me tell you something, Pal. I was injured at birth back in 1942. I have seen and experienced a goodly amount of bigotry in this country because of its attitudes towards those who vary from the good ole American ideal. I find this statement absolutely preposterous, yet totally in keeping with life in the United States as I have experienced it.
I will simply say this to the Moderator: You can delete this comment if that is your wish. However, it you do not do something about the attitudes in the message I am responding to, you'd better have a damned good explanation as to why my comment is being pulled.
Oh Really was just being sarcastic.
If you have selfish, ignorant citizens, you're gonna get selfish, ignorant leaders.
George Carlin
...it's important to realize when someone is being cynical, sarcastic, ironic, etc.
The point of my sarcasm was that a completely outrageous and offensive statement (that no one should take seriously) can be remarkably similar to what the Republicans dish out every day as their contribution to civilization.
This isn't the first time that I've seen someone take a ridiculous statement (meant to parody the Wingers) seriously. I guess that says something about what passes for mainstream in the GOP today.
So he learned this socialist/commie/Nazi crap from a Michigan University? No wonder there is 25% unemployment in Michigan.
/snark
The unemployment rate in Michigan is 125% and it is all the fault of Obama's socialized health care reform that allows the government to take over 175% of the economy.
I suspect I could fly to Madurai and get cataract surgery and it would still be much cheaper than getting it done here... even with insurance. My out of pocket would be cheaper flying to India than having it done here. I know that is true if I need an MRI on my back. Fly to India have the MRI done there stay in a hotel and fly home and it is less than half the price to have it done here.
...are as good or better than what "the best health care system" on the planet achieves.
The more we embrace Right Wing ideology, the further behind we will fall. At this point we're surviving on the myths we've invented about ourselves. If the people of this country ever wake up and take a good, long breath of reality there is going to be a shortage of anti-depressants that will last for decades.
Who researched their outcome? They do not even appear to have a follow up.
But we in the U.S. have people like that Huckabee freak who claims to be some kind of man of God or some such shit who goes to work for Fox News and claims this kind of Medical care is just unAmerikun.
I do not understand the intent of this article as it appears to be reinforcing the talking point of the "teabagger", which is that those od us advocating universal healthcare are asking for Doctors to render services using skills they have spent all the time, sweat and expense aquiring, free to the people.
If that is the intent of this article, I wish to say that is not what I support by universal healthcare. I support a process where healthcare workers are appropriately compensated and that they be paid by from money pooled together from the money in circulation in the country this money mostly being obtained from taxation of everybody and corporation depending on their income or profits.
if anybody wants to render free treatment to people(charity) that is the persons prerogative just it is not what I am advocating. And lastly in a country like ours people should not depend on charity to obtain healthcare.
"How pathetic is it that the richest country in the world is not doing a better job of tending for those who are the most in need instead of those profiting off of the sick?"
I'm not so sure that this "richest country in the world" is true anymore. Last time I heard, China holds a lot of American paper on the US' bad debt. I would think that "the richest country in the world" would be HOLDING paper that could be redeemed at any time it chose to do so, instead of issuing such paper.
quality of life...
Would anyone really choose to be dirt poor in America over being wealthy in another country?
A google of the best countries in the world to live in comes up with some interesting lists...
just make America less safe
the world hates us for our freedom to choose to pay for this stuff, dagmar!
your name's Lebowski, Lebowski... and your wife is Bunny
who participated in Doctors without Borders, and every year they spent their vacation time going to different places in South/Latin America providing free medical services. Very admirable.
I wonder if they are beginning to do the same at home?
Thulasiraj Ravilla: How low-cost eye care can be world-class
[Edited to fix link-Sitemonitor]
nice disinformation, C&L.
this is obviously charity, run by private citizens. like it used to be in the US before medicaid and before doctors were prohibited from doing so by their insurance companies. they can still offer free care, but they can be sued for a million dollars afterwards.
wonder if that is how it works in india.
Free eye surgery? An eye for an I makes the whirling dervishes go blind.
The jerks off on the rightwing only want quality medical care for the wealthy.
The untouchables are the poorest of the poor. Here is a link to how India treats it's poorest people http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/...
To be fair they do pass laws to protect them but they aren't enforced enough to make any difference.
Multi-millionaire Rush Limbaugh can get access "to the best healthcare in the world" and that's all that matters.
Used to be India was known for the Calcutta corpse squad that would run around at dawn and collect the bodies off the sidewalk. So now the poor get free eye operations? Guess that shows that everything runs in cycles. After the U.S. goes through a stage of requiring morning corpse squads to collect the homeless bodies off the sidewalks, maybe we can transition to a society with free health care too. It's hopeful. _Could_ happen.
We can't be giving free operations to poor people, we can't give a government run healthcare option to our people at all because it would hurt the insurance companies feelings.
And remember how much we owe the insurance companies for taking such good care of us for so long now. mmmm, I wish there was a way I could give more money to my insurance company. - Oh yeah, with the Dems bullshit health care bill I will be able to give them all the money they can shake out of me. - Thanks Obama, we couldn't have done it without you.
All snarkyness aside, I want to say that it is good to see that there are places in the world where they still care about people. It just seems that our "christian" nation doesn't really care about our own people in any way.
...is held by only 1 to 2% of the population. The ONLY way the US will truly be the
"Richest Country in the World" is for the people to rise up and throw off their oppressors. Revolution is the cure for the problems that plague the American people. Only by destroying the ruling class will the people of the United States be liberated.
I don't know if you have the best assignments or if you are the best author... but keep up the great work. Thanks for your insight.
K
Aravind provides these services through a system of donations and charging those with the ability to pay. They use the donations and profits from paying customers to provide free services to those that are unable to pay. They also own a stake in an interocular lens company. They manufacture these lenses for $2.00 a piece and sell them for $5.00. They use the profits from this company and the savings from providing their own materials to keep costs down and to provide free services for the poor.
Weirdly Aravind was founded because the founder said....
The government cannot be expected to meet the health needs of all.
What Dr. Venkataswamy used was old age business strategies - he increased volumes, built efficiencies and reduced costs making every employee realise that every rupee saved helps in treating more patients. His passion for eradicating blindness was contagious and staff members took it up as a mission.
Dr. Venkataswamy as saw his calling as a spirtual mission. He combined his spirituality with a keen business sense to provide top notch services for the people of India. No Socialism involved. Just good capitalistic business sense, religious belief and a wonderful staff.
http://www.indiatogether.org/2008/jun/hlt-bli...
http://www.aravind.org/aboutus/index.asp
This is no different than many US organisations. You know the Mayo Clinic, St. Judes, ect.
Comments are closed on this entry