Medical Work

Medical Programs

In India, government-provided medical programs are insufficient to meet the needs of the enormous population, and too often medical care is available only to those who can pay for it. FOCI has helped to meet the need for decent medical care for those in need in the Khammam region.

In Khammam, the Joe Bardenheier Memorial Clinic provides walk-in medical care to the poor, with free screenings and evaluations. Our Free Surgeries Program offers cost-free surgical care to the neediest, through partnership with local hospitals.

Rural Health Clinics

Sign for RHC
RHC doctor
RHC doctor - 2

Since 2007, FOCI has sponsored Rural Health Clinics in four villages in the Khammam area.  These are villages with no conventional medical clinic or doctor, and the population is largely agricultural laborers who work for day wages of about 25 Rupees, which equates to an annual income of approximately $200 per year.  These very poor people rarely seek medical help, even for serious illness, because to do so requires them to travel to another town which not only depletes the little money they have, but also reduces their income for the time they do not work.  The program pays a nurse to live in each of the villages and sends a doctor to conduct a clinic one day each week.  Commonly prescribed medications are taken to the weekly clinic and dispensed at little or no charge based on the doctor’s orders.  Seriously ill patients are referred to specialists or a hospital in larger cities, with financial help from FOCI if necessary.  The live-in nurse is available to monitor medication usage, treat minor injuries, provide assistance and advice for pregnant women, and to telephone the doctor or hospital should there be an emergency situation.  This program is already making a significant inroad on the diagnosis and treatment of diabetes and hypertension, both of which effect large numbers of the population, and which are debilitating if left untreated.

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