Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Anantharaj is 21 years old and lives with his parents in a village in Villupuram District, Tamil Nadu. He had studied up to 12th standard Two years ago he was identified of leprosy. The Ulnar paralysis on his left hand could easily be noticed by any of his friends at school. He had taken the treatment for leprosy at the Villupuram District Hospital. Though he has the assurance that he is healed of leprosy, the course of medication and the visible disability of the fingers forced him to discontinue studies. After completing the treatment, he was referred by the district hospital to TLM Hospital at Vadathorasalur to attend to his disability and for further rehabilitative care. At the TLM hospital he underwent a corrective surgery on his fingers (Extensor to Flexor 4 Tail) in November 2010. After coming to Vadathorasalur, he learned about the Vocational Training Centre run for children from leprosy backgrounds, where he could also get trained freely. But Anantharaj is determined to go to college and continue University education. After the surgery and the physiotherapy care, he will be able have normal living and continue his studies.
Anantharaj’s reconstructive surgery (RCS) was sponsored by the Chennai Petroleum Corporation Limited (CPCL) along with 19 others who had different kinds of surgeries at the TLM hospitals in Dayapuram and Vadathorasalur during the last week of November 2010. CPCL had supported towards the RCS and related procedures of 32 patients with a contribution of Rs.6.82 lakhs.
Suseendran
Diagnosis : Left Ulnar Paralysis Procedure: Capsulorraphy & pully advancement
Suseendran (23 years) lives in small village near Vrithachalam. To win his daily bread, he was working as a helper boy at a sweet stall in Tiruppur. He had been identified of leprosy and completed treatment from the nearest government hospital. After treatment, with further complications, he was referred to TLM Hospital by the Govt. Hospital. Suseendran had one year of deformity to his left hand.
Geetha
Diagnosis: Bilateral Ulnar Median Paralysis Procedure: Right opponens plasty using EIP
Geetha (19 years) worked in textile and dress material shop after finishing 12th standard at Kadalur where she lives. Seeing the patches and later developing deformity, she had to quit her job. She completed MDT one year ago and was referred for the surgery by the Kadalur DLO. Geetha and her mother are concerned if news about her disease will be known to others.
Kasthuri
Diagnosis: Left Ulnar paralysis Procedure: Extensor to Flexor 4 Tail Ring finger DFLB
Kasthuri (21 years) is mother of a one and half year old boy. Her husband works on daily seasonal job at a nearby district. Neither her husband nor others in the family knows that she is affected by leprosy. She was diagnosed of the disease at the TLM hospital and was referred for treatment at the nearest PHC. She finished MBMDT four months ago and was referred back to the hospital due to deformity on her left hand. She has come for RCS while her husband is away from home quite some time for work.
Malathy
Diagnosis: Right Ulnar paralysis Procedure: Palmaris Longos 4 Tail
Malathy (26 years) is a BE graduate and works as a lecturer in an engineering college. She is married and mother to a one year old son. She had gained clawed hands seven months ago. All her treatments for leprosy were from private hospitals including an ulnar de-compression surgery a few weeks ago. The hospital had referred her to TLM for the Reconstructive Surgery.
Thanks to CPCL; after the reconstructive surgery at the TLM hospitals, all of them will continue to weave their dreams of a better living without any disability and social stigma.
TLM & CPCL, RECONSTRUCTING LIVES
Chennai Petroleum Corporation Ltd (CPCL) joins hands with The Leprosy Mission Trust India (TLM) in restoring lives disadvantaged and disabled by leprosy, through Re-Constructive Surgeries (RCS). The CPCL sponsored towards the cost of 32 corrective surgeries for leprosy- healed patients from Tamil Nadu, ushering them back to normal living and helping them make a life of their own once again.
Reconstructive Surgery
Leprosy cured persons with physical deformities and ready for corrective operations are helped with reconstructive surgery. Through the surgery, the affected are enabled with improvement in function and the deformity made less noticeable through improvement in appearance. Surgeries are done on hand, leg and eye through tendon transfer and reconstruction of tissues.
The CPCL sponsored towards conducting RCS on 32 patients. All of them were treated and healed of leprosy earlier at TLM hospitals or through the PHCs or district government hospitals. They went through different tests and physical examinations before they were posted for surgery. the surgery will follow several after care procedures and followups to make the corrected organs effective.
The first set of surgeries was conducted in the TLM Hospital at Dayapuram, Manamadurai during 23rd to 25th and at TLM Hospital, Vadathorasalur, Villupuram during 26th to 30th November 2010 for a total of 19 patients. The CPCL team also visited the surgery patients at the TLM hospital, Vadathorasalur on the 28th and interacted with several of them.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Kustuka
Purulia, West Bengal
Kustuka is an agricultural area in Purulia, 27 km away from the city. Before the beginning of summer the area still looked dry and yellowish with harvested fields and almost no greenery around. However, the fields were full of herds. Midway to the village from the main road, there is a dam that keeps people and animals cool in the scorching heat.
CADIP’s involvement in this district has brought many changes into the village, helping and rehabilitating many individuals and families. The project identified new leprosy cases, enabled several physically disabled to access government benefits, initiated 12 Self Help Groups, enhanced several with self employment or business ventures and relocated two families into low-cost houses built by TLM. A few students were assisted with educational grants through CTY programme.
In the days to come several ponds in the area are going to be populated with fish and the harvested fields and pens with goats. Let’s have a quick visit through the area and meet a few of them whose lives were touched through the programme. The local volunteer, Sankar Mahato- a farmer- is helping the villagers to sustain the impact of the project.
*Radha is a 7th standard child who is completely cured of leprosy. Her grandfather, now over 60 years of age, affected and disabled by the disease, was able to identify the disease on her.
Three years ago, he took the child to the TLM hospital for treatment which lasted for six months. Radha’s parents along with her grandfather, live in a new house (LCH) built by TLM. Radha also got an educational grant through CTY.
The lane in the village soon crowded with people, all of them some way or the other a beneficiary of the CADIP Project.
S H Group by the Disabled
*Mukti, 75 years old, affected with leprosy, is the secretary of a SHG for the disabled. He had discontinued the course of treatment during his recent eye operation. The eye surgery was not successful but he was planning to go back to the hospital shortly for continuing the MDT.
Out of the seven members in the group, one is blind; two are leprosy affected and one with general orthopedic disability. The group continues to meet up and save money for helping one another. With the help of the CADIP volunteer, the group received a special grant of Rs.2,000 from the project and later accessed a bank loan for Rs.10,000. The group received a subsidy of Rs.2,000 from this loan and had already paid back Rs.4,500
Women Empowerment Groups
There are twelve local SHGs functioning in Kustuka by the village women. Let us get to know one women-group and meet one of its members.
Matara Swanirbhar Dal (Matara Self Help Group)
The group with ten women members had started three years ago. It is a woman from another group in the village encouraged them to form into a group. They decided to save a Rupee per day and bring it together in one of the two meetings in a month. As they began to meet together, they identified what each of them could do to help themselves. Most of them decided to start something they liked and had some skill. One of the women opted to buy paddy and sell the rice; another decided on goat rearing and yet another one growing some vegetables to sell. Buying a cow and starting a small shop were the plans of other two. To help them, the group took a loan for Rs.5,000. Some of them started off their ventures with this money and they were able to pay the loan back. Next time the loan was for Rs.10,000. After repaying they took another loan of Rs.20,000.
*Kranthi borrowed Rs.2,000 from the group and started to sell rice. She bought paddy from the village and processed it at home. A bag of paddy with 27 kg costs about Rs150. She carries the processed rice in a bamboo basket. At present rates the rice she sells costs Rs.12 per kg and on an average she sells 50 kg of rice a day. Kranthi’s husband and children also assist her at home. Now she is able to manage the home better and pay back her loan by an easy installment of Rs.100 per month.
“Nothing can Disable Us” Sarva Hara Pratipanti Dal (SHG)
The SHG has 5 members and all of them are disabled. One of them lost his leg in an accident; another is polio affected, yet another mentally retarded. The group was started two years ago in 2007 and the members contribute Rs.30 per month. The group took a loan of 25,000 from a bank and shared it equally among themselves and by now they have paid back Rs.7,000. All the group members have disability ID cards though only two of them are getting a monthly pension of Rs.500 each.
*Subodh lost his leg 15 years ago in a truck accident. He is using the artificial limb he received from TLM Purulia three years ago, with the help of CADIP project. He is an 8th passed bachelor and started a general and stationary shop with some personally mobilized investment. The SHG also assisted him with a loan of Rs.15,000. His mother helps him in the business by taking care of the shop when he needs to be away. According to Subodh, his shop had a stock of Rs.1,00,000 and the daily sale amounts between Rs.500 to Rs.1,000. He pays back Rs.300 to the group towards the loan he took from the group.
*Diban is affected by polio. He discontinued his studies after 8th class due to his sickness. He has 1.4 acre of a single crop field in Kustuka where he grows a kind of oil-seed crop. Through CADIP he became aware of the disability rights and also developed a desire of helping other disabled in his area. Near to a pond in the field, he has built an ashram where other disabled people meet regularly for interaction. The tricycle he got through CADIP’s assistance make him more mobile in the dusty village roads. With his share of the loan from the group, he bought two goats and has entrusted it to someone in the village for gracing. He also has plans to use the pond nearby his ashram to grow fish. During the season of programmes Diban also joins the folk troop led by Prasanth, another member the SFG.
*Prasanth is blind but he has a vision to earn a living for his family. He is a folk singer and his troop has eight members. Prasanth composes songs and when he sings, he will be accompanied by an electric organ, tabla, and a flute. During seasons they will be busy through the villages and every week they will have programmes for two or three days. With the loan from the SHG, Prasanth had bought a pair of goats. Now he has five goats, each worth Rs.1,200. He is also planning to partner with Diban to grow fish to earn more for a better living.
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*All the names of individuals are changed
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
What a TLM Community Project Could Initiate in a Village
Valunteer can Venture
More than Just a Volunteer
Bankura,
Uttam Mondal worked as a supervisor for an earth movers company in Bankura. Returning home one day, sitting on the mudguard of the tractor, Uttam never thought, that will be his last ride on a tractor and that he will not return to the site again. He slipped off and the wheel ran over his leg.
The accident was a big blow on his life and the family. The burden of winning bread for the family of three fell up on his wife. Until almost three years after the accident, he was depressed and struggled to pull on. But as days went by, he began to gain confidence and had positive perspectives for life. He began to move in the village with crutches and even managed to ride on a bicycle, peddling with one foot. He was fond of visiting and encouraging those who are disabled and depressed, as he was looking for his own rehabilitation.
Like some of the women in the village, he began to learn necklace making from organic sources available in the area. His concern for the needy and helpless made him an eloquent speaker. Politicians and the local panchayat offices began to take his help in addressing common issues.
It was during this period, Uttam met the CADIP staff who wanted to arrange a meeting in his village. Attracted by the ethos of the project, Uttam did not think twice to commit to assist the CADIP staff. For every components of the project, Uttam was a volunteer ready at any time to go to any village. He was incidental in every activity that followed in the block including the formation of SHGs. There are three very active SHGs - Proyas, Swami Vivekananda and Netaji- in Ranipur where Uttam lives. Uttam himself became the leader of a SHG- Netaji. The seven member group is doing extremely well. Awareness on Leprosy, polio immunization camps, eye-camps, village meetings, school awareness programmes, women gatherings, all fell perfectly in place with the motivation of Uttam. He could see seven school dropout children rejoining school. During the project period, 80 cataract operations were done in Ranipur alone. Eye camps are still arranged in the area with the help of other service organizations.
Commenting on CADIP’s impact in the village, Uttam was happy to take us to his home. Uttam has a son who is studying in 7th standard. His wife recently has found job as a cook for the midday meal provided for students at the local primary school. Up on our visit both were away from home. His wife had gone to school after making his lunch ready. She also makes ‘pop-rice’ for selling, which is a small source of income to the family. Uttam took us around the renovated house with a hall and two rooms. The rooms were kept neat and tidy. He told us that he sold his old black and white TV to Sunil (the basket maker from Proyas SHG) and bought a new colour TV. His wide colourful face revealed his grateful heart about CADIP’s intervention in Ranipur.
Responding to the question on the biggest component of the project in Ranipur, he highlighted, “Self Help Group”. Uttam is a good motivator and a positive thinker. He had led two more individuals to become volunteers with CADIP; Gunamoi Mondal assisted the project activities in the same block and Santhosh Das in the nearby block.
Santhosh Das is an enthusiastic young man. He is doing his second year Bachelors. The honorarium he received as a volunteer was of course an encouragement but his motivation was much more. Even after the completion of the project, Santhosh continues to serve the cause by awareness building. He led us to a high school he had visited recently and arranged an awareness program single handedly. The headmaster of the school and the students, whom he called up on our request, witnessed the effect and sustainability of the awareness building that a volunteer could do beyond the time frame of the project. Santhosh is the son of a leprosy cured person and he was excited about the leprosy eradication and awareness programmes. Nine months ago he also became a Life Insurance agent. He was able to achieve almost the double of the minimum business target of a year! Yet, more than anything, Santhosh cherishes becoming a staff of TLM. ‘Santhosh’ means ‘happiness’ and he is happy that he was part of CADIP.
Uttam has become an opinion leader in Ranipur and his service extends to several other villages, in spite of hurdles on his free mobility. He was happy to accompany his ‘disciple’ Santhosh, who led us to the Japamali D. B. High School where he had arranged the awareness programme.
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CADIP: Community Awareness and Disability Impairment Prevention, an awareness and advocacy project conducted in ten districts in two phases.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Thankam got affected by leprosy at the age of 26 and developed clawed hands. After consulting the primary health centre and completing the treatment from the nearest government hospital, she had arrived at the rehab home.
Along with a few others, Anand and Thankam had come out of the rehabilitation home sixteen years ago and made their hut beside the nearby highway to start an independent life of their own.
Seeking alms, collecting and selling firewood and the like sustained them initially. In due course, along with the others they moved to the small place alloted to them by the govermnet, up on constant request. They built a better hut in the new space and sought ways making their own living including rearing goats. People of the colony and nearby villages used to seek Anand’s help for getting their dress stitched. In mid sixties, his declining vision has affected the family income. He helps his wife who is very industrious too.
The Leprosy Mission's (TLM) community project staff had identified the colony and began to help them establish themselves. TLM along with equal partnership by the government introduced puca houses to the colony dwellers under the Low-cost housing scheme. The project helped them to access all the available benefits.
Now with a disability status certified as 60%, they both get a government pension of Rs.400 each. They also could acquire the National Disability Identity Card, Social Security Card, bus and train passes with concessions.
Thankam in her late forties, no more had enough strength to hold on to the ropes of the goats she was rearing. She decided to switch over to cows. A cow of a reasonably good breed costs around Rs.20,000. Adding the sale proceeds of the goats to a bank loan, she could buy a cow to start with. Now they own two cows - one milking and the other will be ready shortly. She is planning to develop her cattle rearing for better earning.
Talking about the new house they got through TLM’s low-cost housing scheme, and narrating the benefits , her joy had no bounds. The new house has a role in everything in addition to staying safe. Every year they had to find about Rs.5,000 to maintain the palm-leave roof of the hut. Even when she found the money, it was almost impossible to get workers due to fear of leprosy. Twice the huts got fire and consumed everything including the straw stocked to feed the cows.
There is no stigma in
Along with Anand and Thankam there are 25 more families who are proud owners of decent and strong houses of their own, that stand against sun and rain. They are grateful to TLM and the community based rehabilitation project for what it meant to them.
* Names preserved
Philipose Vaidyar
Read more about TLM at: http://tlmindia.org