Govt. To Encourage More
Cancer Treatment Facility In Private Sector
The Odisha government on Saturday said it would welcome
more facilities for cancer treatment to come up in the private sector even as
the administration was trying to improve matters in the state-run hospitals.
"Cancer is now a treatable and curable disease and
we need more investment for creating facilities for cancer treatment. We will
welcome more such facilities to come up in the private sector," the chief
secretary, Mr. Gokul Chandra Pati said while inaugurating the 1st Sum Cancer
Conclave at the Institute of Medical Sciences and Sum Hospital here.
The government was pursuing a two-pronged strategy of
training the doctors and faculties on the latest technology and creating new
facilities while trying to further improve and extend the insurance mechanism,
he said.
"People are getting benefit from the Rashtriya
Swasthya Bima Yojana as also the Biju Krushak Yojana of the state government
under which the state foots the treatment bill. Patients are able to avail the
benefit under these schemes also in privately-run hospitals," Mr. Pati
said adding "this should encourage the private sector to invest more in
creating state-of-the-art infrastructure."
The chief secretary, who earlier went round several
major departments of the IMS and Sum Hospital, expressed satisfaction over the
facilities available in the hospital saying "the IMS and Sum Hospital has
become a fine example."
Pointing out that the concentration of medical
professionals was more on the diagnosis and treatment of the disease at
present, he said equal emphasis was also needed to be given to the preventive
aspects.
The cancer conclave, organized by the SOA University
under the aegis of the chapter of Association of Surgeons of India (ASI) and
Odisha Society of Oncology, is being attended by doctors from different parts
of Odisha.
Eminent onco-surgeon Dr. Krupasindhu Panda and
President of the Odisha chapter of ASI, Dr. Sreejoy Patnaik also spoke on the
occasion while Prof. D.K.Ray, Vice-Chancellor of SOA University presided.
Dr. Panda said the facilities available in the state
today was awfully inadequate as hardly 500 beds were available for around
70,000 cancer patients. He said that 80 per cent of the patients were not able
to get covered by the complete cancer therapy which was required.
Referring to the lifestyle of present generation which
greatly contributed to cancer in the young, he said he had recently operated
upon a 28-year-old youngman who was suffering from oral cancer caused by
consumption of gutka. Surgery, he said, continued to be the cheapest and best
method to treat cancer.
Dr. Sunil Agrawal, surgical oncologist at the IMS and
Sum Hospital and organizing secretary of the conclave, said the conference
aimed at bridging the gap between latest technologies and the doctors at the
peripheral level who needed to be equipped as they were required to treat
cancer patients as well.
The conclave was being attended by several eminent
cancer experts from outside the state including Dr. R.A.Kerkar from Tata
Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Dr. Sanjay Sharma from Bombay Hospital, Mumbai, Dr.
Ravi Kannan and Dr. Ritesh Tapkire from Cachar Cancer Hospital and Research
Centre, Silchar, Dr. Sumit Goyal from Jaypee Hospital and Dr. G.V.Rao from
Asian Institute of Gastroenterology.
Prof. Ray said that the IMS and Sum Hospital was
developing into a full-fledged cancer treatment centre as all the necessary
facilities were being created in the hospital.
Stating that cancer treatment continued to be a costly
affair, he said that Kerala government had recently decided to provide free treatment
to all cancer patients.
Prof. Neeta Mohanty, Dean of Institute of Dental
Sciences, the faculty of dental science of SOA University, proposed the vote of
thanks.
The chief secretary was felicitated on the occasion on
behalf of the University by the Vice-Chancellor and the Managing Member Mr.
Gopabandhu Kar.
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