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Forbes India Magazine - How An Israeli Organisation Could Help Accident Victims In India
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxAKFlpdcfc]Applause - YouTube[/ame]
An Israeli organisation that has been using volunteers for emergency services is hopeful of replicating its model in Indian cities
On a bright Sunday evening, in a suburb near Chennai, the highway to Sriperumbudur, a manufacturing hub, was almost empty. There were a few men standing by a line of shops, some bicycles, a couple of autorickshaws, and a speeding Ford Ikon. Suddenly, the car swerved to the right, climbed the platform that divided the road and crashed against a lamp post. The bonnet squeezed into a confusion of metal and wires. Two web-like patterns formed on the front glass from the impact of the passengers’ heads.
A woman, her face covered with blood, jumped out of the car and dashed away, then turned back and ran towards the car shouting “Anna!”. A man, with streaks of blood flowing down his face, limped out of the driver’s seat. A crowd gathered around the car and pulled an old woman from the rear seat. She was unconscious, unaware of the confused activity all around. A cyclist from the other side of the road rushed to the scene with a towel; another man came with a few packets of water.
Several minutes passed. Some got down to discussing how it happened, and others what needs to be done. Eventually, someone hailed two autos, helped the couple into one and lifted the old woman into another. The commotion and the confusion eventually subsided, and people went back to their routines.
Such accidents are common on the highways in India. In 2010, 1.6 lakh people died in road accidents and 30-40 times that number were hospitalised with serious injuries. In most cases, the response from the bystanders is confusion. This goes against the rule books which instruct people at such spots to call an emergency service, secure the accident spot from the crowd and not let lay people handle the victims.
But emergency care is at a nascent stage in India. Demand outstrips the supply of ambulances and the crowded roads invariably delay their arrival. Often death strikes during this window. About 30 percent of deaths in accident spots are estimated to be on account of lack of pre-hospitalisation care. What happens between an event—it could be a road accident, a fall or severe chest pain—and the arrival of the ambulance is critical. Across the world, emergency care experts have been struggling to find a way to send expert help more quickly.
An Israeli organisation, United Hartzalah, might have just cracked the code. The idea is simple; it depends on a network of volunteers and smart use of technology. The organisation recruits volunteers, gives them 100 hours of training, equips them with a kit containing medicines and devices that fit on a two wheeler, and lets them get on with their normal lives. When an emergency strikes, it locates the volunteer closest to the scene and alerts him. The volunteer rushes to the scene and provides first aid. There are 1,700 volunteers across Israel and they arrive at the scene in a matter of minutes. Eli Beer, who founded United Hartzalah, says he is aiming to crunch this number to 90 seconds.
United Hatzalah has not only saved hundreds of lives, it has also had a positive impact on the social fabric. Recently, Al Jazeera aired a documentary on how the organisation brought Arabs and Jews together in a region that’s defined by extreme hatred. Mark Gerson, co-founder of Gerson Lehrman Group and chairman of United Hatzalah, says right now they have an oversupply of people wanting to volunteer in Israel. Beer and Gerson hope to replicate the model across the world, including India.
Forbes India Magazine - How An Israeli Organisation Could Help Accident Victims In India
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxAKFlpdcfc]Applause - YouTube[/ame]
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