Sunday, July 15, 2012

26/11 brave heart left to fend her himself :- 10.6.12 - The Pioneer


Army refuses foot bill for life long ayurvedic treatment
Though paralysed and left wheelchair-  bound in his selfless service to  the nation while saving the lives of 40  persons from Hotel Oberoi during the  Mumbai terror attacks, NSG commando  and Shaurya Chakra awardee PV  Manesh will now have to foot the  expenses of his Ayurvedic treatment on  his own. And the treatment will continue  lifelong.  An unmoved Army Headquarters  has categorically informed the Delhi  High Court that except allopathy, the  forces could not consider reimbursement  for treatment under any other  medicinal systems, since they could  not bend the stringent medical audit  rules of the forces.  In fact, the Army HQ has even  maintained that the option of permitting  an individual to choose the  system of medicine he/she desires is  not in the interest and ethos of a disciplined  force like the Armed Forces.  Incidentally, Defence Minister  AK Antony has been using the  Ayurvedic system of medicine for the  past 15 years and undergoes regular  annual treatment for his spondylitisrelated  problems.  The Pioneer, in its July 20, 2011  edition, had reported the plight of the  NSG commando Manesh, who was in  coma for six months after shrapnel  from the grenade thrown by terrorists  pierced his head.  Manesh, who was awarded the  Shaurya Chakra for the courageous  operation in Hotel Oberoi, Mumbai, on  November 27, 2008, was wheelchairbound  and had an unremovable shrapnel  in his head when he was discharged  after the allopathic treatments from  Delhi and Mumbai Army hospitals.  The right side of his body from  head to toe was paralysed. The Army  gave full salary to him by attaching  him to the Territorial Army unit near  his home town Kannur in Kerala.  For the past two years, Manesh  has been undergoing Ayurveda treatment,  which has now made him walk  around 100 metres. Travelling 300  kilometres to a well-known private  Ayurveda Hospital in Palakad district  twice every month, his monthly  Ayurvedic medicine expenses come to  about _4,000. He needs the treatment  for the rest of his life.  After The Pioneer report, a Public  Interest Litigation was filed by  Advocate Arjun Harkauli at Delhi  High Court. Hearing the fate of the  brave commando, in August first  week, last year then Chief Justice  Dipak Misra and Justice Sanjiv Khanna  directed the Health Ministry, Defence  Ministry, Army, Navy and Air Force to  take a positive approach.  The Bench also reminded the  Government and Forces about the  Central Government’s National Policy  on Indian System of Medicines and  Homeopathy-2002. Observing that all  Central Government employees are eligible  for reimbursement under other  systems of medicines, the bench asked  why this policy had not been implemented  in the Armed forces and directed  the Government and all the Service  chiefs to reply within three months.  The Director General of Armed  Forces Medical Services (DG-AFMS),  representing all the three Forces,  however, replied after eight months.  “The issue of introduction of Indian  Systems of Medicine in the Armed  Forces has repeatedly been considered  and not agreed to due to valid scientific  reasons… The process in the  AFMS is monitored very closely by  allopathic qualified doctors, which  form the hierarchy. The Indian  Systems of medicine are completely  different and the monitoring progress  of patients is outside the purview of  Allopathic System. Any deficiency or  resultant complications would lead to  legal problems,” said Lt Gen Mandeep  Singh, DG-AFMS.  Citing “problems” in allowing  reimbursement of expenses for the lifesaving  Ayurvedic treatment of the  wounded Commando, the Armed  forces said: “The AFMS has in existence  a very stringent system of medical  audit and the other systems cannot  lend themselves to such an audit…  The option of permitting an individual  to choose the system of medicine  he/she desires is not in the interest and  ethos of a disciplined forces like the  Armed Forces, where sometimes strict  measures have to be enforced not only  to keep an individual fighting fit at all  times but also to ensure that a person  is free from any infectious disease,  which may jeo pardise the health and  well being of his fellow combatant.”  Arjun Harkauli, the advocate who  filed the PIL, said he would “go  ahead with the legal proceedings by  challenging the Armed forces’ blind  laws to ensure justice to Manesh and  other brave soldiers who sacrificed  their life for the nation”.  “Armed Forces are clearly violating  the Government policy on other  Systems of Medicines due to the resistance  from certain section of allopathic  doctors in the forces. Forces are deliberately  attempting to avoid merits of the  issue. This reply to court shows nonapplication  of mind and is contrary to  a 10-year-old Government policy. We  are reviewing the reply and shall be taking  appropriate legal recourse soon,”  said the advocate. 

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