Ladies and Gentlemen, and
Graduating Students,
I am, indeed, very happy to be here
at the 37th Annual Convocation of the All India Institute of Medical
Sciences. The Institute was established in 1956 with the objective to develop
high standards of medical education in the country. It is now known for its
comprehensive facilities for teaching, research and patient care. I am sure all
those who have been associated with its growth have a justifiable sense of
pride.
I congratulate the students who have
received their degrees and honours today. You represent some of the best talent
in the country, from one of the finest medical institutions. The nation values
you as a highly skilled human resource with great potential to contribute to
building the “brain bank” of India
and to creating a better society.
In the context of the 21st
Century, a strong human development index, which includes good health
parameters, is an absolutely necessity for the economic progress of our nation.
Our demographic dividend will be realized with the steps that we take to
empower our citizens. Providing them adequate health services alongwith
equipping them with knowledge and skills will unleash their productive and
creative potential.
As you begin your careers, you would
no doubt be aware about the health sector scenario in India in terms
of its challenges and its promise. The national objective of inclusive growth
extends into the medical field to mean inclusive health, which means providing accessible, affordable and quality
healthcare to all. I am confident that all stakeholders – Central and State
Governments and well as the private sector will contribute to this endeavour.
The doctor to patient ratio is about
one is to one thousand five hundred, while the recommended ratio is one is to
two hundred and fifty. Aware of this situation, the Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare is making efforts to bring in path breaking changes to overcome
the acute shortage of doctors, nurses and medical personnel in the health
sector. Some of these measures include facilitation for setting-up of more
medical colleges that will include AIIMS-like institutions, paramedical
training institutes and increasing the number of specialists. As part of the
effort to increase the number of medical doctors, I think that big hospitals in
our country which are visited by a significant number of out-door patients and
have a large number of beds as well as speciality centres and faculty members,
can be considered as locations for setting up medical colleges. These can be
established, with minimal effort, and expenditure within the existing hospital
campus, by either setting aside space or constructing an additional block for a
medical college, or finding new premises.
There is an acute shortage of
doctors in rural areas. Millions of our
brethren living in villages have little access to quality medical care. I am
happy that to bridge this basic gap in our health sector, Government has
launched the National Rural Health Mission to provide quality healthcare in the
remotest corners of the country. I am told that since its launch the Mission has added over 7
lakh ASHAs, over 70,000 ANMs and Nurses and over 15,000 MBBS and AYUSH doctors
to the public healthcare system. Work should be undertaken with greater zeal
for the success of this Mission.
I am confident that under the leadership of Shri Ghulam Nabi Azad, the Minister
for Health and Family Welfare, rapid strides would be made.
I urge young doctors of the country
to devote some years of their professional lives to working in rural areas by
responding positively to the call of the Government to take up rural postings,
which are very important. Undoubtedly,
all of you have certain career goals which are important. At the same time you
also have social responsibilities and a duty towards nation building. By
serving in rural areas not only would you be doing good work for the nation,
but the stint will be a valuable addition to your professional experience. It
would also be an opportunity to get to know your country more closely and you
are needed there the most.
We should also look at using
technology in our mission of health for all. The use of tele-medicine must be
encouraged, as this has been found to be one of the most cost effective ways of
servicing a large number of patients some of whom may not always be accessible
through conventional primary health facilities. It also helps in knowledge
sharing between different hospitals and doctors.
New dimensions are
evident in the field of health and disease in the world and in India. The
healthcare systems must be equipped to respond to these emergent situations. In recent times, we have seen the outbreak of
HIV/AIDS, avian flu, SARS, mad-cow disease and most recently swine flu. All
these are the result of new viruses that are mutating and generating new
strains of infections. In a world where people travel more frequently between
nations, these infections spread far and wide. Our healthcare system not only
needs to respond rapidly to these new infections, but also has to co-ordinate
efforts between nations and at the national and state levels.
A glance at the developing disease
scenario in India
shows that the number of those suffering from diabetes and cardio-vascular
diseases is on the rise, essentially because of changing lifestyles. Our health system, therefore, will have to
assume the responsibility of not only treating people but also advising and
guiding them about how to deal and indeed, prevent some of these medical
conditions. Also, I am told that
according to a report in 2006, in India more than one lakh people
died in road accidents. Medical institutions need to gear themselves up to deal
with patients who are undergoing treatment due to traumatic events such as
accidents, those caught up in natural disasters or suffering from trauma on
account of any reason. Always, but particularly in life threatening situations,
people look at doctors as next to God. Cicero, an ancient philosopher, rightly
remarked that in nothing do human beings more nearly approach the Gods, than in
giving health to humankind. This is your work – a noble and a humane calling and
should be undertaken with compassion and care.
India’s health sector is
projected to become the largest service undertaking in the country. Our doctors
have the capability and the dedication to bring excellence to the profession
and to the healthcare infrastructure. This is evident from the high standard of
medical care and talent in the medical science field in India, along
with comparative cost advantages, that has resulted in the country becoming a
destination for medical treatment. India is now viewed as one of the
important hubs for medical tourism, with patients coming from many countries
for medical purposes.
Due to our large population,
government hospitals have the benefit of treating a large variety of cases and
therefore, have many clinical cases on record. This is a rich data base which
can be used for research. Research has been fundamental in finding cures for
many diseases, as also for improving the understanding of the functioning of
the human body. There have been many revolutionary discoveries, but yet the
field is wide open for further work. We
have entered the age of laser surgery and already there is talk of robotic
surgery. In bio-technology and stem cell research there is huge scope for investigations and
findings, in addition to many other fields, which we may not even know
today. It is for scientists to discover
them.
Research is exciting but
also a very demanding activity. Louis
Pasteur, who did pioneering work in microbes, and in popular perception is
associated with the pasteurization process, once said that the secret of his
success and his strength lay solely in his tenacity. Research also requires a sharp sense of
observation. When asked as to how he
discovered penicillin, Alexander Fleming said that it started as a chance
observation, and as a bacteriologist, his only merit was that he did not
neglect the observation and he pursued it as a subject of investigation. I recall this with a view to urge continued
work in the field of research. I am told that the faculty and the researchers
in AIIMS publish about 1,500 papers annually. As a centre of excellence, AIIMS
should aim to create an extraordinary knowledge base for innovation, even as it
attends to high patient loads at AIIMS most of who come from far off villages, looking
to you as the only source and hope of treating their loved ones.
I am confident that in
the years to come AIIMS will work on these issues, so that this Institute shall
continue to maintain its high traditions and its reputation of being par excellence.
I wish the doctors, faculty members and all others working in AIIMS, my good
wishes.
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Thank you.