Indian Railways Incompatibility to terminally ill patients and PH passengers article - Part 3
Indian Railways Incompatibility to terminally ill patients and PH passengers article - Part 3
Apart from physically challenged
persons there are passengers with other kinds of disabilities who need special
treatment on Indian Railways. As of now mentally retarded persons with escort
are eligible for concessions on both seasons’ tickets and 1st and 2nd class tickets
in passenger trains in both mail and express trains; these concessions are
also available on the elite Shatabdi and Rajdhani trains. They also get 25%
concession in 3rd AC and AC chair car in all inclusive fares of Shatabdi and
Rajdhani trains – except Durantho and Garib Rath trains. “In Durantho and Garib
Rath trains concessions are not available because the fares are low in any
case” F. R. Michael Senior PRO South Central Railway Vijayawada Division
clarified.
Concessions are also available for
Thalassemia, cancer patients, TB patients, heart patients who get 75 %
concession in 1st class and 75 % in sleeper and 2nd class… if they are
travelling for periodical check-ups or admission in a recognised hospital /
sanatorium or return, Michael told this writer.
Persons with mental health disorders (like
Schizophrenia or Bipolar Disorders, clinical depression etc.) are not eligible
for train fare concessions even if they deserve accompanying passengers’
concession. Passengers with certain mental health disorders could be prone to
violent behaviour in stressful circumstances - justifying the need for
accompanying passengers.
However in European and North
American trains, persons living with mental health issues with ID card are
eligible for 100% fare waiver for themselves, accompanying passengers as well
as a pet animal. Room is made available for wheelchair, pram and cycle too.
“All persons who have a "Schwerbehindertenausweis"
(an identity card for severely handicapped passengers) can travel for free on
the entire network of Deutsche Bahn AG - the German National Train Service.
Accompanying persons or dogs can travel for free as well” Julia Haas, Sales
& Marketing Executive non-European Markets International Sales of Deutsche
Bahn AG told this writer in an email interview.
Apart from the physically challenged persons,
there are terminally ill cancer patients who are referred to the Kidwai
Memorial Institute of Oncology (KMIO) in Bangalore from all over the country.
Although the cancer patient and his / her attendant gets 75% fare concession
for train travel, it is not in the least comfortable for the terminally ill
patients.
Neither the Indian Railways nor the
Kidwai Memorial Institute of Oncology offer ambulance transfer facilities at
the Bangalore Railway station for patients referred to KMIO in Bangalore.
Ambulances cannot drive upto platforms in most railway stations - so necessary
for terminally ill cancer patients. This ‘ground service’ / infrastructure
connectivity or lst loop compatibility – so to say – is the need of the hour
and is necessary at all railway stations across the subcontinent. I learnt this
from personal experience in February 2005.
Box
item: Hazardous for terminally ill patients (Extract from an article published
by this author in the Statesman Kolkata on 11.03.2007)
“Sixteen year old
Panduranga could barely board the train from Mysore to Bangalore. He had been
injected with drip syringe and his mother was holding the drip bottle.
Panduranga was suffering from acute leukaemia and was referred by the Govt.
Hospital in Mysore to the Bangalore based Kidwai Memorial Institute of Oncology
for further treatment. That prescription / reference for transfer qualified him
and his attendant to travel at 75% train travel concession to Bangalore indeed.
But boarding the train was exhausting for the frail lad. A tall boy, he could
not be carried into the train by his weak and emotionally drained parents
either. Given his terminal illness both his parents decided to travel with the
frail lad regardless of fare concession, understandably. The railway staff in
the Mysore railway station was looking helpless because the doorway to the
train compartment was not wide enough to facilitate carriage of a wheelchair.
How is the terminally ill boy expected to board a train from a platform three
feet below the train steps, that too with the steps being vertical - one under
/ top of the other? We are normally used to climbing in a forward / sloping
motion. But in the Indian trains we need to ascend vertically without
supporting rails.
When I saw the boy
lying on his parents’ lap panting for breath after boarding the train, I was
very moved. I asked them why he couldn’t be taken by ambulance. His parents
told me plainly that they could not afford the service of an ambulance. I felt
upset, guilty, helpless and determined to do something…Mysteriously the K.R
Hospital in Mysore – a government hospital - did not think of sending the boy
and his parents by ambulance to Bangalore. When cancer patients and their
attendants are eligible for 75% concession on Indian trains why would an
ambulance be necessary one might think. But terminally ill patients with a
blood count of 7 with drip bottle and syringes hanging out of his frail body cannot
be expected to board a train and survive an exhausting ordeal.
His arrival in
Bangalore was even more dramatic. The platform at which the train arrived in
Bangalore was far too low for even normal healthy / persons to toss off. Adding
to the nightmare of having to jump off eight feet from a set of three vertical steps
one under the other, was the frailty of the situation. With tears in my eyes, I
requested the law and order policemen present on the platform to facilitate an
ambulance / wheelchair for the boy’s transfer. The effect was enormous. To be
honest I did not mean to dramatise, but I admit I am not one to easily overcome
tears. All the well-built cops went up to the compartment, and literally
carried the boy down. But he was in no shape to stand that hot afternoon.
Seeing the commotion, people on the platform did make way and a bench was
cleared for the boy and his mother to rest. It so happened that on that
particular platform, cargo was often loaded and unloaded so there was a direct
passageway unknown to the public, for cargo vehicles’ movement. The cops hailed
a taxi driver and even pooled in money to offer for the taxi ride because
Bangalore railway station does not have an ambulance service. The boy’s father
was so moved, he started falling at my feet. I was honestly trying hard to
fight the tears in my eyes. I needed to be calm and exercise presence of mind.
The driver of the taxi had been instructed by the cops not to charge for the
ride as they had pooled resources for the drive upto Kidwai Institute for
Oncology.
Three days later, the
boy died because his blood count fell to four. His exhausted parents hired a
vehicle to take the corpse to their native place in Mandya for funeral. This
incident happened on the 10th of February 2005. But even today the railway
stations in Bangalore or for that matter anywhere in India, lack elevators,
escalators, luggage escalators, wheelchairs, ambulatory services and ramps.
Exploitation of porters for carriage of luggage is unfair, but justified in the
name of socialism … employment opportunities”.
Speaking to this writer, the PRO of
the Bangalore based Kidwai Memorial Institute of Oncology (KMIO) (http://www.kidwai.kar.nic.in/) Siddalingaswamy said
“indeed there is a need for coordination for transit of terminally ill patients
referred to KMIO. This needs to be taken
up by the Railway Board at a national level possibly based on the recommendations
of KMIO. For us it is difficult to do this because only about 5% of the
patients referred to KMIO are terminally ill, moreover those who come here get
themselves admitted only a couple of days after arrival in Bangalore. When
terminally ill patients are coming by train, on a humanitarian basis we do send
an ambulance for transit from railway station to the KMIO hospital; but it does
not happen often” he concedes. “Relatives of the patient stay in their
relatives homes. So coordination is also difficult. The best way of doing this
is by offering 100% concession / ticket waiver to the referred patients. This
is the space for NGOs to do their bit for society” he adds.
Not just terminally ill cancer
patients coming to KMIO in Bangalore, patients are referred cross country to
facilities like AIIMS, PGI Chandigarh, and NIMHANS in Bangalore etc. Those
referred to private sector hospitals like Narayana Hrudayalaya in Bangalore or
Medanta Hospital in Gurgaon, Escorts Hospital New Delhi, are not eligible for
train concessions. Thus the need for a dedicated train car in every train is
necessary for critical / terminally ill / severely handicapped / referred
patients. (See box at the end of the
article). That it needs to be staffed by trained personnel needs no
reiteration. Attempts to seek a response from India Inc. through the good
offices of Confederation of Indian Industry met with evasive responses. Ambulances
cannot easily be brought to the railway platforms in most of the railway
stations in India because of inadequate planning.
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Facilities mandatorily
required for physically challenged persons in Indian Railways:
Separate AC train cars
for physically challenged persons with the requisite facilities on each train.
These facilities are, among others:
• Separate handicapped friendly toilets
with room for wheelchairs, mirrors, shelves, sinks, taps, faucets, flush
handles, latches, all accessible for a person seated on a wheelchair
• WCs or western commodes with
disposable paper rims, automatic flushing with biodegradable sanitisers.
• Flexible stairs that can extend to
become a ramp for boarding and alighting wheelchair passengers
• Ramps, ambu-lifts, room for stretchers
and fully equipped first aid / emergency medical staff on call in such cars
• Telephone connection in such cars,
meant strictly for the use of authorised personnel and bona fide physically
challenged and referred terminally ill passengers only.
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The infrastructure
needed at railway stations are inter alia:
- • Escalators, (horizontal and climbing escalators on platforms, wide enough to accommodate wheelchairs)
- • Elevators on every platform at a distance of one serving every alternate train car
- • Luggage escalators / conveyor belts beside every stairway in the railway stations
- • Electric wheel chairs at every platform,
- • Important offices like ticketing counters, waiting halls, cloak rooms, public toilets should be easily accessible by ramp entrance at the front of the railway stations itself.
- • Separate lines for physically handicapped / persons living with mental health issues should be policed for misuse by touts and unauthorised mala fide applicants.
- • Uniform height of all platforms in all railways stations in India. It is hideously dangerous to expect passengers healthy or challenged to jump off trains to depths of 3 metres below the train floor!
- · Toilets in all railway stations should be compatible to Physically challenged passengers and people suffering from mental health issues.
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Sensitising the society
is necessary for the benefit of physically challenged persons:
· Eligibility of tickets / priority for booking
tickets for persons accompanying mentally challenged persons in 2nd class train
travel.
·
While mentally retarded persons traveling with an
escort for any purpose can avail of
concession for upto 75% in II, SL, I, AC CC & AC 3-T and 50% in AC 2-T and
AC I. (for both) 50%
· (for both)… sensitizing staff and crew of their
needs is much more important.
·
Automated services and signboards without the
nuisance of touts are very important in this context.
*********************************************************************************
Malini
Shankar
Malini Shankar is a wildlife
photojournalist radio broadcaster and documentary filmmaker based in Bangalore.
Malini is one of the directors of Digital Discourse Foundation (www.digitaldiscourse.org.in)
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