All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Delhi

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In 2015, the All India Institute of Medical Sciences was rated the No.1 college in the category Medical Colleges in the rankings released by India Today.
 
In 2015, the All India Institute of Medical Sciences was rated the No.1 college in the category Medical Colleges in the rankings released by India Today.
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=Bhim Rao Institute Rotary Cancer Hospital (IRCH)=
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==2017: Reeling Under Patient Load==
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Waiting-time-for-chemo-session-at-AIIMS-Infinite-14012017001045  DurgeshNandan Jha, ’Cancer Centre Reeling Under Patient Load’, Jan 14 2017, The Times of India]
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''' Waiting time for chemo session at AIIMS: `Infinite’ '''
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The number of cancer patients admitted every year: 36,000. The number of beds available for chemotherapy: 36. While not every cancer patient admitted would require chemotherapy , the disparity explains why the wait for a chemo session could be “infinite“ at AIIMS which houses one of India's top cancer centres, the Bhim Rao Institute Rotary Cancer Hospital (IRCH).
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A recent review conducted by the institute says the cancer centre is crumbling under the load of patients since their numbers have only grown while infrastructure has not. The AIIMS report says patients seeking one to two week-long chemotherapy have to wait “infinitely“ for their turn. Those undergoing three-week-long chemotherapy often miss their dates due to unavailability of beds.
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The crisis does not end here. The IRCH does not have a dedicated MRI facility so patients have to queue up with the rest at AIIMS. So they could end up waiting up to a year or more for the crucial diagnostic test. Should surgery be in order, they could be waiting for one to three months.
 +
 +
More than 1.33 lakh cancer patients visit AIIMS every year and around 36,000 are admitted. The institute is now pin ning its hopes on the Na tional Cancer Institute (NCI) coming up at Jhajjar.“There is no space left for expansion of infrastructure at IRCH and hence they are working overtime to complete the 710-bedded cancer facility in Jhajjar to handle the constantly increasing patient burden,“ said V Sriniwas, deputy director (administration), told TOI. “NCI is projected to handle 5.19 lakh patients on OPD basis and 1.41 lakh indoor patients annually once it is fully operational.“
 +
 +
IRCH began functioning in 1983-84 with 35 beds on two floors. At present, it has 182 beds, of which only six are ICU beds, say doctors. “There are 30 beds for chemotherapy on daycare basis,“ Sriniwas added, explaining the “infinitely long“ waiting for chemotherapy . IRCH has only three functional operation theatres and two PET CT scan machines. Cancer patients from across the country come to Delhi for treatment but, health experts point out, barring AIIMS and the newly opened Delhi State Cancer Institute (DSCI), no public sector hospital has an efficient cancer facility. “Poor people cannot afford private treatment for a disease like cancer which can cost anywhere between Rs 5 lakh and Rs 40 lakh,“ said an oncologist.
 +
 +
Top officials said NCI, which will be run by AIIMS, will have 25 OTs and a reasonable number of PET CT and MRI machines. “The 710-bedded cancer facility in Jhajjar is projected to handle 5.19 lakh patients on OPD basis and 1.41 lakh indoor patients annually once it is fully operational. It will be headed by Dr G K Rath,“ Sriniwas said.
 +
 +
India requires at least 1,300 radiotherapy units but has only around 750, said Dr P K Julka, medical oncologist at Max Super Specialty Hospital, Saket. Most of the machines, he added, are in the private sector hospitals. Delhi has around a dozen radiotherapy units, of which four are in government-run hospitals -AIIMS, Safdarjung, Lok Nayak and DSCI. Safdarjung Hospital, sources said, does not have a simulator or treatment planning system (TPS) for precise administration of dosage and has been using Cobalt-60 machines for radiotherapy services when most hospitals have switched to newer technologies such as linear accelerators.
 +
 +
Oncologists say that infrastructure for cancer treatment needs to be scaled up rapidly . “In 1977, when I worked at Lok Nayak Hospital, it had one Cobalt 60 machine. That hasn't changed in 38 years although the number of patients has multiplied,“ said an oncologist.

Revision as of 11:44, 24 February 2017

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

Background

Source:

1. The Times of India, Dec 27 2014

2. India Today

Waiting time for surgeries

The All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Delhi was established by the AIIMS Act of 1956. AIIMS was created to serve as a nucleus for nurturing excellence in all aspects of health care.The institute has comprehensive facilities for teaching, research and patient-care. Teaching and research are conducted in 42 disciplines.

For a long time, it remained the only medical institute of its kind in the country providing super-speciality care at an affordable cost. The act was amended in 2012 and six new AIIMS were established at other locations. The waiting period for surgery in various departments of AIIMS, Delhi shows the immense burden of patients on the institute. There is obviously no waiting period for emergency cases, but for some other cases it can stretch up to five years

Initiatives

Video-Clinic For OPD

DurgeshNandan Jha, Avoid AIIMS rush, consult doc via web, Nov 14 2016 : The Times of India


Video-Clinic Facility For OPD

Getting a second opinion from specialists at AIIMS or seeking their suggestions on post-operative care is now just a click away.

Patients can log in to the institute's website and put a request for video consultation, a feature added recently to the online OPD consultation system. Officials told TOI that the dry run of AIIMS video clinic has been completed successfully. Specialists from 20 departments, including medicine, gastroenterology and cardiology, have consented to taking out a couple of hours daily for the job, they added.

Dr Deepak Agrawal, who heads the IT division, said that this consultation will not be valid for medico-legal purposes as it will be given without the physical presence of the patient.

“The AIIMS video clinic has been developed by Natio nal Informatics Centre. It allows uploading of discharge summary and investigation reports. We will be deputing nurses trained in IT to coordinate with the doctors for video calls in the time allotted for each patient,“ Agrawal added.

The video-clinic facility is expected to help reduce patient burden, apart from easing the hardship and financial impact suffered by patients travelling from other states for a second opinion or treatment without prior appointment.

On an average, doctors sa id, close to 10,000 patients visit AIIMS daily . Of this, 50% are follow-up cases and 40% come for a second opinion. Only 10% are new cases. “Today , majority of specialist doctors are concentrated in metro cities. The use of such technology can help reduce the gap of specialists in small cities and villages as even the local doctors can use it to treat local patients,“ said another doctor.

The waiting period for neurosurgery or cancer treatment is up to a year. Experts say that telemedicine and video clinic can be an additional help, but focus is needed to improving existing public health facilities.

Medical accomplishments, milestones

Heart transplants, 1994-2016

A new first at AIIMS: 50th heart transplant, Nov 02 2016 : The Times of India


13 Surgeries Performed This Year, 5 In 2015

In a milestone surgery , the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) performed its 50th successful heart transplant -a first for any public hospital in the country -on Diwali eve this year.

The institute was the first to conduct heart transplant in India in 1994, but the rate of surgeries went down in the following years due to lack of donors.However, the hospital authorities said that it has improved significantly over the last two years.

In 2015, the hospital conducted five successful heart transplants and this year, as on October 31, the hospital has transplanted hearts in 13 patients suffering from endstage failure of the organ.

“Two heart transplants have been conducted in the past week. A 42-year-old man from Rohtak was operated upon on Diwali eve, while another patient suffering from heart failure underwent the life-saving procedure on October 25. The donors in both cases were road accident victims,“ said a senior official. “We told the Rohtak man, who used to work as a DTC driver earlier, that the transplant was his Diwali gift from AIIMS,“ said Dr Sandeep Seth, professor of cardiology at AIIMS.

He said that the donor, a 35-year-old woman, weighed nearly as much as the recipient and their blood groups also matched, so there was no hurdle in the transplant.

According to Dr Balram Airan, professor of cardiothoracic and vascular surgery , who was part of the team which had performed the country's first heart transplant at AIIMS on August 3, 1994, about 350 heart transplants have been performed in India. “Maximum transplants have taken place in private hospitals. It is good that government hospitals -like ours, where the surgery is nearly free of cost -are also conducting them frequently,“ he added.

“Better coordination among local administration and air and road traffic agencies have helped improve the rate of donations and transplants,“ said Dr M C Misra, AIIMS director.

According to the medical institute, nearly 50,000 people are in immediate need of heart transplants in the country . Dr Seth said the survival rate in heart transplant cases is maximum of 17 years after the surgery .

Patients

2012-15: Statistics

The Times of India, Dec 07 2015

Records show 10 patients die at AIIMS daily  More than 10 patients die daily on an average at the country's premier All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), according to data provided by the health ministry . As many as 4,432 patients were reported to have died in 2012-13, 4,302 in 2013-14, 4,467 in 2014-15 and 2,802 deaths were registered at the institute till October 2015.

Health ministry officials said that the institute is catering to a large number of patients from across the country on a daily basis, who are often referred to the hospital at critical stages. AIIMS attends to more than 8,000 patients every day in its OPDs and around 400 people in the hospital's casualty wing everyday.

The maximum number of deaths were reported from departments like gastroentrology where 536, 448, 403 and 223 people died in 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15 and 2015-16 respectively and the Jai Prakash Narayan Trauma Center which registered 631, 624, 544 and 472 deaths during the same period.

“A large number of critical and serious patients with multiple comorbidities get admitted for treat ment at AIIMS. The institute has created high dependency units (HDUs) in several wards in a bid to reduce the mortality rate,“ said a senior official at the ministry.

He said that keeping in view the admission rate of critical patients at AIIMS, the government has approved additional 85 HDU beds and 106 ICU beds in the last three years.

The official added that in order to keep with the increasing patient load, the government has also taken steps to augment tertiary care facilities, including setting up of new AIIMSlike institutions, strengthening super specialities and setting up of the State Cancer Institutes and Tertiary Cancer Care Centers in government medical colleges.

Ranking among Medical Colleges

2015: 1st

India Today

In 2015, the All India Institute of Medical Sciences was rated the No.1 college in the category Medical Colleges in the rankings released by India Today.

Bhim Rao Institute Rotary Cancer Hospital (IRCH)

2017: Reeling Under Patient Load

DurgeshNandan Jha, ’Cancer Centre Reeling Under Patient Load’, Jan 14 2017, The Times of India

Waiting time for chemo session at AIIMS: `Infinite’

The number of cancer patients admitted every year: 36,000. The number of beds available for chemotherapy: 36. While not every cancer patient admitted would require chemotherapy , the disparity explains why the wait for a chemo session could be “infinite“ at AIIMS which houses one of India's top cancer centres, the Bhim Rao Institute Rotary Cancer Hospital (IRCH).

A recent review conducted by the institute says the cancer centre is crumbling under the load of patients since their numbers have only grown while infrastructure has not. The AIIMS report says patients seeking one to two week-long chemotherapy have to wait “infinitely“ for their turn. Those undergoing three-week-long chemotherapy often miss their dates due to unavailability of beds. The crisis does not end here. The IRCH does not have a dedicated MRI facility so patients have to queue up with the rest at AIIMS. So they could end up waiting up to a year or more for the crucial diagnostic test. Should surgery be in order, they could be waiting for one to three months.

More than 1.33 lakh cancer patients visit AIIMS every year and around 36,000 are admitted. The institute is now pin ning its hopes on the Na tional Cancer Institute (NCI) coming up at Jhajjar.“There is no space left for expansion of infrastructure at IRCH and hence they are working overtime to complete the 710-bedded cancer facility in Jhajjar to handle the constantly increasing patient burden,“ said V Sriniwas, deputy director (administration), told TOI. “NCI is projected to handle 5.19 lakh patients on OPD basis and 1.41 lakh indoor patients annually once it is fully operational.“

IRCH began functioning in 1983-84 with 35 beds on two floors. At present, it has 182 beds, of which only six are ICU beds, say doctors. “There are 30 beds for chemotherapy on daycare basis,“ Sriniwas added, explaining the “infinitely long“ waiting for chemotherapy . IRCH has only three functional operation theatres and two PET CT scan machines. Cancer patients from across the country come to Delhi for treatment but, health experts point out, barring AIIMS and the newly opened Delhi State Cancer Institute (DSCI), no public sector hospital has an efficient cancer facility. “Poor people cannot afford private treatment for a disease like cancer which can cost anywhere between Rs 5 lakh and Rs 40 lakh,“ said an oncologist.

Top officials said NCI, which will be run by AIIMS, will have 25 OTs and a reasonable number of PET CT and MRI machines. “The 710-bedded cancer facility in Jhajjar is projected to handle 5.19 lakh patients on OPD basis and 1.41 lakh indoor patients annually once it is fully operational. It will be headed by Dr G K Rath,“ Sriniwas said.

India requires at least 1,300 radiotherapy units but has only around 750, said Dr P K Julka, medical oncologist at Max Super Specialty Hospital, Saket. Most of the machines, he added, are in the private sector hospitals. Delhi has around a dozen radiotherapy units, of which four are in government-run hospitals -AIIMS, Safdarjung, Lok Nayak and DSCI. Safdarjung Hospital, sources said, does not have a simulator or treatment planning system (TPS) for precise administration of dosage and has been using Cobalt-60 machines for radiotherapy services when most hospitals have switched to newer technologies such as linear accelerators.

Oncologists say that infrastructure for cancer treatment needs to be scaled up rapidly . “In 1977, when I worked at Lok Nayak Hospital, it had one Cobalt 60 machine. That hasn't changed in 38 years although the number of patients has multiplied,“ said an oncologist.

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