●
Also, appreciated COVID-19 frontline
warriors for containing the virus in Dharavi and across Maharashtra
● Shri Rajesh Tope, Minister of Health, Govt. of Maharashtra was speaking at the World Health Parliament 2021 organized by MIT World Peace University
Pune: The World
Health Parliament (WHP) 2021, a
four-day virtual conference organised by MIT World Peace University (MIT-WPU), the Vishwaraj
Hospital and the MIT-WPU School of
Pharmacy, concluded on an optimistic note. The conference was organised from 21st to 24th January
2021 and witnessed more than 66 speakers in 10
sessions and was attended by more than 7,588 participants.
MIT World Peace University, which is
India's 3rd best private university and delivers holistic
value-based education, organised a conference with the goal of bringing
together important stakeholders to deliberate on important healthcare topics,
especially after the COVID-19 pandemic that hit us last year. The challenges
faced by the healthcare ecosystem and administrators in the face of this
pandemic were unprecedented. It was an insightful discussion where experts
exchanged views on what went right and what could have been done better.
Important stakeholders including doctors, policymakers, the pharmaceutical
industry and the general public were a part of the discussion and highlighted
the need for a self-reliant medical infrastructure in the country.
The
four-day virtual conference was attended by distinguished dignitaries such as Shri. Rajesh Tope - Minister of Health,
Govt. of Maharashtra, Mumbai, Shri. Amit Deshmukh, Hon’ble Minster of Medical
Education, Cultural Affairs, Govt. of Maharashtra, Guardian Minister, Latur, Dr.
Sanjay Oak,
Chairman of Taskforce for COVID-19, Govt. of Maharashtra, Dr. Tatyarao Lahane - Padma Shri, Director, Directorate of Medical
Education & Research (DMER), State of Maharashtra & Head, Maharashtra
State's AYUSH Task Force, Dr. Anbumani Ramdoss -
Member of Parliament Rajya Sabha, Former Minister of Health and Family Welfare,
Govt. of India, Dr. Mani Kumar Sharma
- Hon'ble Minister for Health and Family Welfare, Govt. of Sikkim, Dr. Praveen Togadia – Renowned Cancer
Surgeon, President Antarrashtriya Hindu Parishad, Founder, Hindustan Nirman
Dal, Former International Working President, Vishva Hindu Parishad, Shri. Naba Kishore Das - Hon'ble
Minister of Health and Family Welfare, Govt. of Odisha along
with the other dignitaries.
This
year's theme was Pioneering Disruptive Reforms in the
Healthcare Ecosystem and Atmanirbhar Bharat which covered different topics like India’s response to
COVID-19, Pitfalls and Perils in Healthcare Sector in India, Disruptive Reforms
in Medical Education, improving capability and reach of Paramedic Services,
Role of Public and Private sectors etc. The conference also discussed various
topics, such as Atmanirbhar health system in India, Medical Research, Global
experience and Regulatory reforms in the health sector. The discussion was
insightful and the need to scale up the healthcare system with the help of
newer technical innovations was highlighted.
Speaking at the forum Shri. Rajesh Tope - Minister of Health, Govt. of Maharashtra, said, “I would like to compliment MIT World Peace
University for organizing this relevant program to discuss with the
stakeholders to overhaul the healthcare ecosystem. I express my sincere
gratitude to all the COVID warriors and I’m proud to acknowledge that Maharashtra
now is in a much more comfortable state – active cases are less and recovery
rates have improved drastically. We need to keep following the sanitization,
masking and social distancing norms.”
He
further added, “We were in a very challenging situation
with one of the highest rates in India – numbers were exponentially increasing
in Maharashtra and the number of beds in our hospitals was very less. We took
steps that many states did not follow. We collaborated with the private sector
players and would like to thank them for their cooperation during the
pandemic. I would like to thank all the
private players who really cooperated in this pandemic situation. Secondly, the
affordability of this treatment was also a challenge – we were given a cap on the
bills. The testing procedure also became affordable. Even other medical
procedures such as CT scans and masks were capped with an affordable price,
keeping in mind the poor and economically backward people. The virus was
contained even in Dharavi, the largest slum in Asia inhabiting about 20 lakh
people. I truly salute our healthcare workers who helped us in containing this
virus.”
Speaking
about the new vaccine, he shared, “The vaccine has come – we have vaccinated
more than a lakh in just four days and are vaccinating more than 25,000 people
in just a day following the guidelines of the Government of India. I would like
to appeal to everyone and ask them to be optimistic about the vaccination and
request them to get vaccinated on their terms.”
Shri.
Rahul V. Karad – Managing Trustee & Executive President, MAEER’s MIT and
Executive President, MIT World Peace University, said, “The Covid-19 pandemic has
brought back the focus on the necessity for healthcare reforms in the country.
The global pandemic has generated the need for a self-reliant healthcare
infrastructure system in the country. At present, there was a need for
different stakeholders and policymakers to come to a common platform to
overhaul the medical ecosystem for the betterment of human wellbeing. The
concept behind this year’s World Health Parliament was to create a forum where
stakeholders could come together to discuss, deliberate, resolve and
design strategies to change the country's healthcare ecosystem.”
Dr.
Sanjay Oak, Chairman of Taskforce for COVID-19, Govt. of Maharashtra, said, “I am delighted that MIT-WPU
has organised a global conference on public health and education to encourage
research and innovation in the healthcare sector. Today, a completely
revolutionary approach, supported by strong governance and regulatory reforms,
is required to make the country 'Atmanirbhar' in the healthcare sector. A
fundamental transformation of the healthcare environment is required, beginning
with research in medical education, technological intervention and the
healthcare delivery system. Also, research in the area of medicine needs
disruptive reforms and the ecosystem needs to be robust for the healthcare
facility to be affordable and accessible to the citizens.”
The World Health Parliament 2021 was
conducted with the patronage of Padma
Vibhushan Dr. R. A. Mashelkar - Eminent Scientist, National Research
Professor, Chancellor, ICT, Mumbai and Padma Bhushan Dr. Vijay
Bhatkar, Eminent Computer Scientist
and Chancellor, Nalanda University and is inspired by the revered Prof. Dr. Vishwanath Karad. The conference was
conceptualised & convened under the dynamic leadership of educationist, Shri Rahul V Karad and organised by Dr. Aditi R
Karad, Executive Director, Vishwaraj Hospital
Member Trustee & Joint Secretary General, MAEER's MIT, Pune, Dr. Bhanudas S. Kuchekar, Dean, School
of Pharmacy, MIT-WPU, Dr. B Janaki Ram,
Medical Director, Hospital & Health Care Management, Vishwaraj Hospital,
Pune, Dr. N T Rao, Vice Chancellor,
MIT-WPU, Prof. D. P. Apte, Former Pro-Vice
Chancellor, MIT-WPU and Dr. Ravindranath
Patil, Senior Director, MIT-WPU.
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