News
 International
   Global Views
   Asia-Pacific
   America
   Europe
   Middle East & Africa
 National
 Embassy News
 Arts & Living
 Business
 Travel & Hotel
 Medical Tourism New
 Taekwondo
 Media
 Letters to Editor
 Photo Gallery
 News Media Link
 TV Schedule Link
 News English
 Life
 Hospitals & Clinics
 Flea Market
 Moving & Packaging
 Religious Service
 Korean Classes
 Korean Weather
 Housing
 Real Estate
 Home Stay
 Room Mate
 Job
 English Teaching
 Translation/Writing
 Job Offered/Wanted
 Business
 Hotel Lounge
 Foreign Exchanges
 Korean Stock
 Business Center
 PR & Ads
 Entertainment
 Arts & Performances
 Restaurants & Bars
 Tour & Travel
 Shopping Guide
 Community
 Foreign Missions
 Community Groups
 PenPal/Friendship
 Volunteers
 Foreign Workers
 Useful Services
 ST Banner Exchange
  Asia-Pacific
Exclusive Interview with Dr. Rama Kant
Head Injuries Soar Unabatedly: Prof. Rama Kant
By Bobby Ramakant
Asia Correspondent
Prof. Dr Rama Kant, head of the surgery dept, KGMU, India

2005 International Awardee of World Health Organization (WHO), Head of the Surgery Department at King George's Medical University, and former Chief Medical Superintendent of Gandhi Memorial and Associated Hospitals Prof. (Dr.) Rama Kant gave an interview to The Seoul Times. His book in English and Hindi (Head Injury Care Manual) was released today by Honorable Vice Chancellor, to mark the 52nd Foundation Day of Surgery Department, organized by Lucknow College of Surgeons and UP Chapter of Association of Surgeons of India.

The following are the questions and answers with Prof. Rama Kant.

Q1: What is Head Injury and what is its incidence globally?

A1: Nearly 2 percent of population is living with head injury. Remember world famous quote by Hippocrates "NO HEAD INJURY IS TOO TRIVIAL TO BE IGNORED , NOR IS SO SERIOUS THAT LIFE MAY BE DESPAIRED OF." Head injury is a term all of us are afraid of listening, it gives us a sense of panic and makes all of us feel insecure. Head injury is an injury in which the impact is directly or indirectly on the head leading to a visible or invisible injury over the scalp, bones covering your brain, inside the brain or one of its coverings, causing transient or permanent neurological dysfunction.

It is a relatively high-prevalence injury, being 10 times more common than spinal cord injury. It may result in cuts and bruises on the skin of your patient's head or may fracture any of his skull bones with resultant damage to the underlying brain. There could be bleeding in different parts of the brain and blood may get clotted there. Sometimes this bleeding could be severe enough and may start compressing the brain. The brain is a tender and delicate organ, enclosed inside the shell of bones and even a small amount of bleeding can lead to tremendous increase in pressure inside and can compress the brain. There could be fracture of the bones which can get depressed inside the cavity thus leading to direct pressure on the brain, these injuries are those that are best detected by a CT scan of your patient's head. A few of these critical types of injuries may need an urgent operation by a neurosurgeon. Another form of injury occurs which is not visible on a CT scan. It occurs due to changes at the brain cell level. It occurs due to swelling of brain cells and will not need any operation.

This kind of injury in our words is called as "Diffuse Axonal injury." It is treated by medicines, which decreases the swelling of brain cells. Remember right here that there is not much medical treatment to such patients, so do not panic that medicines given to a serious patient are few in number.

The incidence is highest in people in the prime of their lives, coinciding with important events such as completing their education, developing their careers and establishing their families, and thus at a time when they are more likely to have financial problems, i.e. head injuries occur most often among people aged 15 to 30 years.

Young men are more likely as women to suffer a head injury (male: female ratio, 3–4: 1). Much of this sex difference is thought to be related to risk-taking behavior and is therefore potentially preventable.

Two other age groups are at high risk of head injury: the elderly and infants. The elderly are likely to injure themselves in falls; infants and children may be dropped from an adult's arms, stumble down stairs, or fall from highchairs or changing tables. Abused children may also suffer from head injuries. Too often, children are injured in automobile accidents because they were not protected with safety seats or seat belts. Children struck by moving vehicles can also receive head injuries.

Q2: What are the common modes of sustaining head injury?

A2: The common modes of sustaining head injury are:

1. Road traffic accidents most commonly encountered by two wheeler drivers and cyclists,who do not put on helmets.
2. Fall from height leading to an impact on the head.
3. Fall of heavy object on head such as collapse of roof.
4. In cases of assault, hit by a lathi or some other metallic heavy object

Q3:What is the treatment protocol for those who survive?

A3:After receiving treatment in the hospital, the head-injury patients may be allowed to go home to complete the recovery process. Outpatient therapy may be provided at a rehabilitation center or in a hospital with a rehabilitation program. People with more severe injuries, however, will live at a rehabilitation center for some time in order to participate in a more intensive program of physical and psychological therapy. These patients may make periodic visits home. In India however these centers are not so well developed.

Many people who have had a head injury are sad or depressed. Helping the patient cope with these and other effects of head injury is one goal of long-term therapy.

As mentioned above, a number of specialists may be called upon to help rehabilitate the head-injury patient. Psychologists can help patients to understand the consequences of their injury, cope with marital and sexual difficulties for assistance when they need it.
Services offered to he patient include instruction in basic living skills such as bathing, dressing cooking and reading.

Although some patients remain combative, most people progress to a condition of greater control. Whatever the patient's disability, any denial of the problem by the family can subject the patient to more frustration and put pressure on the person to reassume responsibilities prematurely.

Even when a patient recovers, the rehabilitation process can be terrifying to relatives. Distressing effects of personality change and impaired intellectual function — no matter how temporary — can be overwhelming. One research study in Scotland found that an injured person's mental handicap tends to break up a family far more than does a physical handicap.

For more information, please contact PROF RAMA KANT at ramakantkgmc@rediffmail.com



Related Articles
    When People with HIV Can Live Normal Lives ...
    UK's Decision to Consider Vaccinated Indians ...
    Step Up Pace Globally If Universal Vaccination ...
    Will Inclusion and Accountability Take ...
    Were People the Missing Link in Covid Response?
    World Localization Day: Peasants Rise Up to ...
    Save Lakshadweep: Stop 'Reform' Which Is Not ...
    Tobacco-Caused Diseases Are a Bane to the ...
    Do It Right the First Time, Every Time!
    Keeping Workforce Healthy Is Also a Smart ...
    Should Asia Pacific Lead World with Robust ...
    Will Post-2015 Development Agenda Integrate ...
    Nepal Leading Tobacco Control in S. Asia: Will ...
    Regular HIV Prevention Counselling Reduces ...
    Strong Tobacco Taxation Policy Adopted despite ...
    Biggest Killer of Kids Under 5 Is Pneumonia
    Scaling Up Natural Fertility Awareness Methods ...
    Should Asthma Control Us or We Control Asthma?
    Coordinated Approach Needed to Overcome ...
    Lung Health Needs Attention
    Should Tuberculosis (TB)-Preventive Therapy ...
    Responding to TB, HIV, COPD and Tobacco ...
    "Good Health Is India's Basic Need": Easier ...
    Int'l Day Against Drug Abuse, Illicit ...
    World Now in Early Days of 2009 Influenza ...
    One-Third Preventable Deaths Can Be Averted by ...
    Politics: Allocation of Resources
    If G20 Agrees, Health Financing Might Come ...
    Neglect of Tuberculosis Control among ...
    Is It Ethical to Provide TB Treatment without ...
    Youth against Cross-border Tobacco Advertising ...
    Vitamin A Supplements Reduces Child Mortality ...
    Mayawati Ji, Why Did We Get Bulldozers Instead ...
    How Will the World Begin to See TB Care as a ...
    Will recession impede TB care and control?
    Kala Azar Patients Lack Adequate Diagnosis and ...
    Further Dilution of Pictorial Tobacco Warnings ...
    Village Community Radio Will Give Voice to ...
    Citizens of India-Pakistan Stand Up for Peace
    Another Blow to Enforcement of Tobacco Control ...
    Addressing HIV and IDU Issues Vital for TB ...
    Effective Tobacco Control Policies in Nepal ...
    Countries Unite against Tobacco Industry Abuse
    India Agrees That Tobacco Industry Puts ...
    National Partnership for TB Care and Control ...
    Need to Refrain from Communal Politics in India
    India Embraces Smoke-free Policies on ...
    3rd Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008 ...
    Uphold Public Health over Corporate Interests
    Bringing Diabetes to Light
    Andhra Pradesh Should Gear Up to Enforce ...
    Pictorial Warnings on Tobacco Products in ...
    HDN and the International HIV/AIDS Alliance ...
    'We Reject Indo-US Nuclear Deal' Campaign ...
    Help Aamir Khan to Keep Promises and Quit ...
    Indian Court Serves Notice to Amitabh Bachchan ...
    NAPM Opposes the Indo-US Nuclear Deal
    Overcoming State Suppression, Prof. Agarwal ...
    10-Day Fast in Support of Dr. Binayak Sen ...
    Will South Korea Reaffirm Commitment to TB/HIV ...
    Activists to Fast for 10 Days Demanding ...
    Enforce Existing Tobacco Control Legislations ...
    Scaling Up of MPOWER Tobacco Control ...
    Kanpur Land-Sharks Intimidate RTI Activist by ...
    'You Can Control Your Asthma': Dr. Nils Billo
    Will Indian Government Arrest Those Who ...
    Asthma Control Is Appalling in Most Countries
    After 1.5 Years, Right-to-Information Act ...
    Democracy Weeps in Nandigram: NHRC and NCW ...
    Enforcement of Tobacco Ban in Prisons Uphill ...
    Displaced People in India Announce a Massive ...
    Climate Change Has Implications on Public ...
    Who Will Pay US$ 80 Billion to Halve the No. ...
    Can South Korea Stop Drug-resistant TB Too?
    Rising Tobacco Use among Women
    Japan's Obstructionist Position on Illicit ...
    Smoking in Indian Movies Gets Challenged
    'The Padyatra' Linking the Land-rights, ...
    Journalist Reporting on Under-represented ...
    Diabetes Wake-up Call after Years of Neglect ...
    Stop Dow Recruitment in IIT Chennai
    Round-the-clock Burma Vigil in Parliament ...
    Burma Unifies People's Voices in North-East ...
    Mounting Public Pessure against Dams in ...
    Will Independent Commission Increase Judicial ...
    India Ranks 72 in 180 Nations on Corruption ...
    Strengthen Health Systems to Control Dengue: ...
    Young Professionals in US Bring Agri-issues ...
    Mayawati Government to Expedite Justice in ...
    Court Reprimands MP Government for Arresting ...
    News of Three Deaths at IIT Kanpur Confirmed
    Anti-AFSPA Protestors Demand "Free Burma and ...
    Fate of 25,000 Families Hinge on Sept. 20 NCA ...
    IHP Launched to Strengthen Health Systems
    India's Under-nutrition Levels among Highest
    After 20 Years, RTI Is Another Blow to ...
    Public Pressure Mounts against Arrest of ...
    Dhaka Univ. Faculty, Students Beaten Up, ...
    Tobacco Industry Succeeds in Diluting Indian ...
    Activists Oppose the Indo-US Nuclear Deal
    Women Farmers Fast against Reliance ...
    Pepsi to Print 'Public Water Source' on Labels
    Youth Appeal to UN to Prioritise Health
    UN Mid-Point Progress Report on Development ...
    148 Nations Meet as Parties to Global Tobacco ...
    Alert to Protect Global Tobacco Treaty before ...
    Patil in for President's Race Not Only because ...
    Hashimpura Survivors Find Hope in RTI Act
    Hyderabad Blast: Wake Up Call for Secular India
    Health Ministry Alert on Iron-Deficiency ...
    Medical Students Need to Quit Tobacco First
    Integrate Tobacco Cessation in Healthcare ...
    1st Time Indians Get 2007 Human Rights Prize
    Responding to Diverse HIV Healthcare Needs
    Why Should S. Korea Enforce Tobacco Treaty?
    34 Cases of Avian Influenza Found in Egypt
    With Inadequate Cessation Services, What Will ...
    Another Death of Pregnant Woman with HIV Is ...
    Don't Forget The Rise in Violence Against ...
    A Ray of Hope for Medical University Teaching
    Alarm Bells Sound in Nandigram for Indian ...
    Activists Challenge Corporate Control of Water ...
    Vietnam's TB Programs Face New Challenges
    Neglect of Hepatitis C Leaves People with HIV ...
    Tobacco Industries Disregard Nepal's ...
    Link between Tobacco Use and Films
    Integration of TB and HIV Services Urgently ...
    More of the Same Will Brew Drug Resistance
    Is a Priority, Says Indian President Kalam
    Groundwater Belongs to People, Not to Firms
    Tobacco Shown in Movies Influences Children
    Water Is a Fundamental Human Right
    Global Tobacco Treaty Should Be Implemented
    Founder of Surgical Oncology in India Dies
    HIV Prevention Must Address Women' Needs
    Staying Alive with HIV

Other Articles by Bobby Ramakant
     When People with HIV Can Live Normal Lives ...
     UK's Decision to Consider Vaccinated Indians ...
     Step Up Pace Globally If Universal ...
     Will Inclusion and Accountability Take ...
     Were People the Missing Link in Covid ...


Bobby Ramakant, who serves as The Seoul Times' Asia correspondent, is a member of NATT, Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals, and edits Weekly MONiTOR series, reporting violations of tobacco control policies as a senior public health and development journalist. He writes for newspapers in 11 countries and can be reached at bobbyramakant@yahoo.com)

 

back

 

 

 

The Seoul Times, Shinheung-ro 36ga-gil 24-4, Yongsan-gu, Seoul, Korea 04337 (ZC)
Office: 82-10-6606-6188 Email:seoultimes@gmail.com
Copyrights 2000 The Seoul Times Company  ST Banner Exchange