Friday, September 23, 2016

OTC Treatment

OTC treatment
My closest competitor in my medical practice is a pharmacy down the road.(I have my own pharmacy). He failed his 12th standard but that does not prevent him from being an expert in the diagnosis and treatment of all diseases.
One day a  boy came in for his 16 year booster. His  mother accompanied him.
“Do you know why I don’t come to you for treatment?” she said.
“No.” I replied. I must admit I was curious. Her three children came to me for immunizations but nothing else.
“Well she said, ”it takes too long and it is expensive. I have to wait for the consultation, you insist on talking about diet, exercise and follow up visits---.” She seemed to think my interest in preventive health and lifestyle changes was not to be commended but deplored!
“Where do you go?” I asked.
“Nowhere. I just send my son to the pharmacy with my complaint written on a piece of paper and he sends me tablets.  I have been doing this for years.”
A few days later she developed an acute pain in the shoulder. The son was dispatched to the pharmacy. He was given some tablets which he then administered to the mother. Within an hour she started to swell up. Her son described it graphically.
“She looked like I was pumping air into her with my cycle pump. Her lips became even bigger than Angelina Jolie.  Then she started to itch and scratch.”
Her son ran back to the pharmacy with the medicine.
“Look,” he said, ”my mother is swelling up.”
“Let me see the tablets,” said the pharmacist.
He grabbed the tablets and pushed them into a crevice.
“Give your mother these.”
He handed over four tablets. The boy cycled home.
“How is she supposed to take these,” asked the father ,”one at a time or all together?”
They tried calling the pharmacy but the phone was “unreachable.’’
The son cycled back. The shop was locked.  In the distance he could see the pharmacist racing away on his motor bike.
 Meanwhile the mother was finding breathing difficult. Strange noises came from her throat. Her breathing was laborious and difficult.
The neighbours trooped in, and, after a lengthy consensus, they loaded her in an auto and took her to a hospital.  She was immediately rushed into the ICU. She collapsed and went into cardiac arrest at the doorway of the ICU. They managed to resuscitate her , but they kept her in hospital for ten days. The bill was huge!
They tried speaking to the pharmacist but he denied everything. All the transactions were unbilled in any case. He even pretended not to recognize the lady and her son.


Monday, September 19, 2016

fire extinguishers

Fire Extinguishers
The building inspector came to check my clinic and he accusingly said, ”there are no fire extinguishers!”
He was right. Given the shoddy work done by electrical contractors and  the inferior quality of electrical wires on the market , I realized he had a point. We needed fire extinguishers.
He came sleazily close to me, ”We can make an adjustment. You just pay me. You don’t have to purchase extinguishers. Ask your neighbor.”
My neighbor was running some sort of factory next door in a large shed. He was a shady character. Apparently he just paid off the building inspector every year.
I had visions of electrical fires and my patients being burnt to a crisp.
“I will buy the extinguishers.” I refused to pay the inspector.
As I was leaving I saw the factory owner standing outside. I peeped into the factory and lo and behold there were six fire extinguishers lined up against the wall.
“You have fire extinguishers?” I asked.
“Oh no, “ he said “they are too expensive. I just have empty casings. I have a supplier. Shall I text you his number?”
Much against my manager’s wishes, I ordered four real fire extinguishers and some red metal buckets to be filled with sand. My manager and  the factory owner became friends.  They had animated discussions about by idiocy.
A couple of months later, there was a terrible smell coming out of his factory. Apparently, he stored beedi leaves there. Someone had thrown a lighted cigarette or beedi  through the ventilator. The entire godown was a smoldering smelly mess.
He borrowed my fire extinguishers and tried to spray the inside through the ventilator. I was not sure how the extinguisher worked, neither was he. He decided to chuck the entire extinguisher inside, metal case and all. There was a muffled explosion.
Meanwhile a crowd gathered and some called the fire department. They were very annoyed.
“We just had our parade. There is a water shortage in Vellore. Our truck is only half full.”
The started the hose and a pathetic wispy spray of water came out.
Sand mining from the Palar river bed in Vellore is illegal. That does not prevent people from mining the sand at night. Trucks transport the mined sand through the by lanes near my clinic. One such truck approached. The public stopped it. They formed a line, took the sand and filled the godown with it. The fire stopped. The fire engine left with half its water unused. The lorry driver stood helplessly wringing his hands.
“Oh God ,” wailed my neighbor, “my godown is destroyed, my beedi leaves are burnt----- where will I go for money? It would have been cheaper to buy the fire extinguishers!“
The driver stepped forward, ”don’t forget you have to pay for my sand and my labour!”







Sunday, September 4, 2016

Returning Flights

Returning Flights
My husband had a meeting in Varnasi and he invited me along. I did not really want to go. Even though it was the oldest surviving civilization, I had heard horror stories about the place.
Surprisingly, it had a slick new international airport. Once you left the airport, the city was unbelievable. There were pot holed roads, many vehicles and the locals did not seem to know that  we were living in India (that too Modi’s consistency) where we drive on the left side. Both sides of the road were fair game, as vehicles squeezed through every available gap.
In the hotel I found a travel desk.
“Do you have tours of the city?”
“We can arrange a taxi for you.”
“Who will explain the sights?” I asked.
“The taxi driver knows everything. Do you have a friend to go with you?”
“No” I said. Everyone else was attending the conference.
“Then” he said ,”its better if you don’t go.”
Anyway Varnasi was flooded and people were being rescued in boats. The Vishwanath temple was partially submerged. The roads were ankle deep in water.
When we left Varnasi I told my husband, “I don’t know if I will make my connecting flight. There is only an hour between landing in Delhi and leaving for Chennai.”
“It’s the same airline “ said my husband, “Indigo. They will book your luggage through.”
At Varnasi we found that Indigo had no such deal. We had to rebook. My husband was going to Hyderabad so he had a two hour layover. Our flight landed 10 minutes late, the luggage took ages to arrive and the flight was departing from the next terminal.
I ran all the way to the other terminal (it pays to do half marathon training) and I reached the counter 20 minutes before departure.
“I cannot load you or your luggage, “explained the ground staff, “the flight is already boarding. You have to be here 45 minutes before time!”
I let out a loud wail. ”I am a sixty four year old lady. I don’t know how to book another ticket. I have  to reach Chennai. I came here by Indigo. Your luggage g delivery was late. You did not book me through to Chennai. How can I stay here alone? I don’t know anyone in Delhi.” I cried loudly again.
Passenger sympathy was building up in the rest of the queue. “Arre “ a passenger shouted “don’t harass Mataji.”
“Okay,” she said ,” here is  your boarding pass. Take your luggage and run. We can’t load it”
I ran all the way to the departure gate. My check in baggage was rescreened and my nail file removed.
I ran to the gate. A car arrived to take my suitcase and me to the flight. My luggage was pushed in next to the toilet. I sat down and the flight took off.
Thank you Indigo. BUT I will never again ask my husband to book my tickets!