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by Caitlin McQuilling

Its all in the follow-up.

Sonu, when he first arrived at the NRC

Sonu, one of our NRC’s most dramatic success stories, was back at the NRC for his second follow up looking positively chubby.  All children who are treated at RMF’s NRC come back every 15 days for 2 months for follow-up clinics to ensure that the children are still healthy and gaining weight.  They are seen by our pediatrician, given a nutritious meal, and given a transportation allowance to allow them to get to the NRC and back home.  These are always our staff’s favorite days of the month when we get to see the children again who we had bonded so much with over the 2-3 weeks they were in our care.

Sonu today!

To the RMF India team these follow up visits are just as important as the in-patient care because they help ensure that the weight gains our children achieved during their time as an inpatient can be sustained over the long term. RMF doesn’t stop after the government’s 4 required follow-ups are completed.  RMF assigns one Community Nutrition Educator to each child discharged from the NRC who visit the family every 2 weeks.  At the home they provide targeted counseling to the caregivers, ensuring that they understand the lessons they learned at the NRC and can apply them to a real life context.

For RMF, the NRC follow-up is never over.

With Sonu, so far so good!

For more information about RMF’s Malnutrition Eradication Program in India, click here.

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We can use any financial help you are able to provide on this project to continue our Education, Treatment and Outreach and help towards our goal of Malnutrition Eradication in this region of India.

To contribute to this initiative, please click Donate button or visit our website at realmedicinefoundation.org.


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By Fabien Toegel

RMF-Jeevan Jyoti HIV care center receives award, Government to make our model a policy

Meghnagar, August 25: The National AIDS Control Organization (NACO) decided last week to expand the function of so-called Link ART Centers (LAC). RMF set up and has been supporting such a center at Jeevan Jyoti Hospital in a public private partnership, which recently received an award as best Link ART Center out of the 5 attached to the main Indore ART Center and is currently treating 44 patients with free antiretroviral drugs supplied by the Government. On Saturday, August 21st, NACO’s data manager from Indore visited our center and was pleased with the thorough recording and reporting.

The expanded role proposed by NACO acknowledges the model of care already provided by Jeevan Jyoti Hospital for more than 200 patients which had been identified with RMF’s support over the past 5 years. The specific LAC services will include enrolling patients into care, pre-ART management including basic investigations and sample collection for CD4 count, following up on patient not yet eligible for ART, screening for HIV-TB co-infection, and tracking of patients who missed appointments. RMF has been supporting these activities which involved taking patients on a weekly basis to 150-km far Indore, a long and expensive journey on bad roads which will become largely redundant under the new program.

NACO has already developed a revised 3-day training module which includes clinical examination for adult and pediatric patients, case discussions in the wards as well as exercises to practice the pill count system, recording and tracking, and RMF will ensure to have the Jeevan Jyoti staff trained as soon as possible. The RMF-Jeevan Jyoti  link ART center was inaugurated on July 25th, 2009 and continues to excel in patient care in the form of a public private partnership.

To contribute to this or any of our other relief efforts, please click the Donate button below or through our website at realmedicinefoundation.org.

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