Woman who delivered on road suffers acute depression

18-Jul-2014

VADODARA: The baby girl, who was brought to Sir Sayajirao General Hospital (SSGH) after her mother delivered her on the roadside in Pratapgunj on Friday, is still deprived of her mother’s love. A psychiatric evaluation of the mother, Najma (name changed), who was believed to be mentally unstable, has revealed that she was suffering from acute depression.

The police have failed to record Najma’s statement as she refuses to talk. According to a staff member of the neonatal department, “She cries inconsolably whenever the baby is brought to her or she is asked about her past.”

The psychiatric department did not comment on Najma’s condition, but according to sources she is being treated for acute depression. Sources added that they could not trace any history of mental illness while the causes of her depression are still unknown. The doctors are waiting for Najma to respond to the treatment and provide clarity to the case.

SSGH has not considered adoption of the baby yet. The mother-daughter will be kept at SSGH until they are declared fit to go. “Najma is not mentally ill. She is in a state of depression. In such cases, the mother legally has the first right over her child. We cannot go ahead with adoption unless she is declared mentally unfit to take care of her child or nobody comes forward to claim the baby,” said a doctor involved with the mother-daughter duo’s treatment.

Najma was spotted in Vikrambaug by residents of Pratapgunj moments after she delivered the baby by the roadside on July 11. The locals informed 108 emergency services that took the mother and the baby girl to SSGH. “The baby is completely fit and doing well,” said Dr Sheila Aiyar, who heads the neonatal department at SSGH.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/vadodara/Woman-who-delivered-on-road-suffers-acute-depression/articleshow/38598489.cms

Drive to help

Meet the volunteers of Agal Foundation, who have rescued and rehabilitated hundreds of destitute men and women in the city

22-Apr-2014

Akila Kannadasan

CHENNAI : Forty-five auto drivers and 10 taxi drivers form the core of Agal Foundation, an NGO that has been rescuing and rehabilitating the destitute in the city. It all began in 1995, when S.M. Venkatesh, the founder, met Selvam. “I found him on the streets of T. Nagar. He was mentally ill and physically in a very bad condition too,” recalls Venkatesh.

Venkatesh was employed in a courier service back then and barely made money to make ends meet. But he decided to do something for Selvam. “I bought two bars of soap, and a shampoo, bathed him in a friend’s car shed and disinfected his wounds,” he says. Selvam recovered miraculously. “He started walking!” smiles Venkatesh. That marked the beginning of his lifelong commitment for the destitute.

He has rescued hundreds of people from the streets and admitted them at rehabilitation homes. This includes the mentally ill, children from broken homes, and the elderly left uncared for by their children. Vasanthi, auto drivers Dharman, Velan, Saravanan and Raja, advocate Udaya Kumar, Muthukrishnan, Surendran, Charumathy, taxi driver Ramesh… Venkatesh made a lot of kind-hearted friends along the way who joined his cause.

Today, he has a reliable network of auto drivers in the city who will drive the destitute to orphanages whenever they receive a call from Venkatesh. “They also call me up when they see someone suffering on the streets,” he says. Agal’s is a coordinated set-up that also gets rescue calls from people in the Police Department. Also, Venkatesh, who currently works at the Secretariat, ensures that he submits memos to the police station in the jurisdiction of where the rescue happened as well as the rehabilitation home.

Each of them in the team has unforgettable rescues. Vasanthi, for instance, recalls rescuing a mentally ill pregnant woman. “This is how she looks now,” she says, extending a photo of a healthy-looking lady. “She gave birth to a little girl called Angel,” she smiles.

Udaya Kumar, who has been part of Agal for 12 years, will never forget the elderly man he helped rehabilitate. “It was approximately 12.30 a.m. when Venkatesh called me for assistance. I had seen the thaatha on and off on near Arumbakkam and was glad to help in his rescue.” It was raining heavily that night; but despite it all, they managed to save a life.

For socially inclined auto drivers such as Raja, Agal is the perfect platform for helping people in need. “Auto drivers are not respected. They are seen as ill-mannered and rash. There have been instances when I’ve taken accident victims to the hospital and have been asked if I ran over them myself.” But Agal earns him respect and the confidence to act without reservations. “That’s what I take back, I don’t expect anything else,” he says.

Auto driver Dharman too says that he volunteers for Agal for the satisfaction he gets when he sees that even a little effort on his part can save a life. “All of us want to do something to help the abandoned.

But we don’t know how to do it. It sometimes makes all the difference to seek the help of someone for the right course of action.”

Ask anyone at Agal and they will tell you that they spend their time and energy to help people because of the aathma thripthi (satisfaction) they get. Says Venkatesh: “This is our involuntary response to a problem.”

http://www.thehindu.com/features/metroplus/society/drive-to-help/article5937264.ece

Depressed callers flood Central Railway helpline

Nitasha Natu

8-Jul-2013

MUMBAI : Helplines run by Central Railway for commuter security have been increasingly receiving calls from citizens with suicidal tendencies or those facing family conflicts. Railway Protection Force (RPF) personnel manning these helplines say they can do little else in such circumstances, but point out to the caller that the helpline is for railway emergencies only alone.

“We operate three helplines and a text messaging system for passenger feedback. Between January and June this year, there have been several calls about family or personal crises. While women have been calling to complain of disputes with their mothers-in-law or discuss marital issues, we also have had calls from people who are depressed and are contemplating ending their lives,” said an RPF officer.

When a woman with suicidal feelings persistently called up the CR helpline, the RPF had to forward her number to the Government Railway Police (GRP), requesting intervention.

Blank calls and missed calls, too, are common.

“Operators are trained to be polite and calm down agitated callers. But the need of the hour is to establish more social helplines,” said Alok Bohra, senior divisional security commissioner, RPF (CR). Also, calls to the helpline pour in from across the country and are not limited to Mumbai.

The railways needs to take a decision as to whether they wish to expand their security helpline and include other value-added services, said social psychiatrist Dr Harish Shetty. “Operators could be trained to find out whether the call is related to distress, disorder or stress. They can screen calls and refer them. A list of mental health and family counselling helplines can also be provided. It is important to talk compassionately to the caller so that emotional first aid can be provided on the phone,” said Dr Shetty.

The railways is a cash-rich organization and should see this as an opportunity to respond to social distress, he said.

“Railways could even establish a liaison with agencies, such as Vandrevala Foundation that runs a mental health helpline, and get their personnel trained,” Dr Shetty suggested.

http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-07-08/mumbai/40442400_1_security-helpline-vandrevala-foundation-mental-health-helpline

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Childline rescues girl

5-Mar-013

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM : “She looked happy and smiled when she was given a new dress,” said S.K.Ratheesh , a staff of Childline, a 24-hour emergency service for children in distress, about two-and-a-half-year-old Annu (name changed).

The rescue team at Childline found her on Monday on the streets at Ottur, near Kallambalam, in the company of seven stray dogs and a mentally challenged grandmother.

The team had received a call on 1098, the 24-hour emergency number for children in distress, on Sunday night. “The caller said he had seen the child in pathetic living conditions, abandoned by the mother during mornings when she goes for work. The only company was a mentally challenged old woman. We reached the spot on Monday morning. She wore no dress, street dogs were playing around her, and the whole place was in a very deplorable condition,” said Mr. Ratheesh.

The team informed the police and with the help of a few local people drove away the dogs and rescued the child.

“The elderly woman, presumed to be the child’s grandmother, did not say a word or react when we took the child. We informed the Child Welfare Committee and as per the order, the child was taken to the childcare centre at the Missionaries of Charity home at Kunnukuzhi,” said the staff.

The child’s mother, who the local people say is working at a pump station near Attingal, has been asked to present herself before the committee hearing on Tuesday. Further actions will be taken after a meeting with the child’s mother, said an official at Childline.

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-kerala/childline-rescues-girl/article4477843.ece