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They lost both their kids in 5 years, have to repay loan now
1. They lost both their kids in 5
years, have to repay loan now
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2. Contd..
It's said lightning never strikes twice in the same place. Try telling that to
Dinesh Kumar who lost both his children to dengue: son Ankit (11) in 2010
and daughter Menaka (11) last month. His younger brother also caught the
infection in August but survived. Menaka's death has shattered Dinesh's
family as they took every precaution after losing Ankit five years ago. Dinesh,
his brother Sandeep and their families moved out of Begumpur near Malviya
Nagar, where they lived with their parents, and settled in the JJ colony at
Madanpur Khadar. But Menaka stayed on with her grandparents because the
government senior secondary school she attended was near their house.
The old couple always kept a mosquito repellant switched on in their one-
room house. Menaka's grandmother, Vimla, said, âI tried to save her but
couldn't. I had asked her not to go to dirty , mosquito-infested places. She
used to apply Odomos (mosquito repellent) as well. A mosquito probably bit
her in school.â
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3. Contd..
Vimla's worried the âcurseâ will now fall upon her lone surviving grandchild,
Sandeep's son, and makes sure he goes out wearing full-sleeve shirts and trousers
after rubbing mosquito repellent on exposed skin. A tube of the ointment remains
in his bag and he applies it every time he washes his hands.
Dinesh says Menaka complained of fever and headache around August 14. Alert to
the symptoms since losing Ankit, they took her to R K Polyclinic for blood tests the
next day . After the report confirmed dengue, they took her to Sanjeevani Hospital
in Jasola, where, Dinesh recalls, doctors said, âPachaas per cent dengue ho gayaa
hai (the disease has progressed to the halfway mark).â He might not have
understood the doctors properly in his agitation and confusion, but after he had
run up bills of Rs 30,000, the hospital advised them to take Menaka to Holy Family
Hospital where she was promptly admitted after a blood test. Sandeep, who
remained with Menaka in the hospital, said her prognosis was bleak. Ram Prasad,
her grandfather, said, âSafed khoon chadhayaa thaa, plate bhee diyaaâ (she was
given white blood cells and platelets). Menaka showed signs of recovering but
succumbed to the disease at 2am on August 18. Brought to you by
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4. Contd..
âHasti, khelti bachchi yahaan se gayi thhi aur dhai din mein khatam ho
gayi,â (The disease finished her in two-and-a-half days). Dinesh earns Rs
9,000-10,000 a month so the family had to borrow money from
relatives and friends for Menaka's treatment. They spent another Rs
40,000-45,000 at Holy Family Hospital. â After we get over her death,
we have to figure out how to repay the loan,â Sandeep said.
When Ankit fell ill in 2010, Dinesh took him to Madan Mohan Malviya
Hospital in Malviya Nagar and then moved him to Safdarjung Hospital.
This time, disillusioned by the experience of government hospitals,
they took Menaka to private hospitals. âWahan doctoron ne kahaa hum
kuchh nahin kar sakte, bhagwan ke haath mein hai (doctors said we
should pray to God as the case had got of hand).â Brought to you by
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5. Contd..
His bitterness shows when he talks about doctors. âInsaan ki koi value nahin hai.
Unko to yeh lagtaa hai murga aa gayaa, kaat lo (Doctors are busy ripping off
patients),â he says, adding, âWe were told that he had fever. When they couldn't
save him, they said it was dengue.â
He has scathing views against the corporations although his father is a municipal
mali. âNobody from the corporation visits the poorer neighbourhoods for months,
other than for an occasional âchhidkao (spraying)â in the gutters.There's been no
fumigation either. The corporation staff visits mansions, not our homes,â he said.
Sandeep and his neighbours recently cleared their area to stop mosquito breeding.
âWe cleared the waterlogging in the area on our own, yet even now, one family
here has a dengue patient.â
Dinesh, a plumber, says he has lost the will to work. âMan hi nahin kartaa (there's
no will left),â he says without exaggeration, and asks: âMere saath hi aisaa kyon
hotaa hai? (Why me?).â It's hard to tell him that being poor is a curse in India.
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6. This platform has been started by Parveen Kumar Chadha with
the vision that nobody should suffer the way he has suffered
because of lack and improper healthcare facilities in India. We
need lots of funds manpower etc. to make this vision a reality
please contact us. Join us as a member for a noble cause.
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