Home | Hindi | Kabir | Poetry | Workshop | BoloKids | Writers | Contribute | Search | Contact | Share This Page!                       Gift Shop

Channels
In Focus

Analysis  
Bolography  
Cartoons
Environment   
Opinion 

Columns
 Business
 My Word 
 PlainSpeak 
 Random Thoughts 
Our Heritage

Architecture
Astrology
Ayurveda
Buddhism
Cinema 
Culture
Dances 
Festivals
Hinduism
History  
People  
Places 
Sikhism
Spirituality 
Vastu 
Vithika  

Society & Lifestyle

Family Matters 
Health
Parenting
Perspective 
Recipes
Society
Teens 
Women 

Creative Writings

Book Reviews
Ghalib's Corner
Humor
Individuality
Jagoji
Literary Shelf 
Love Letters  
Memoirs
Musings
Ramblings
Stories
Travelogues

Computing
  General Articles
 
CC++ 
  Flash 
  Internet Security 
 
Java 
 
Linux     
  Networking  

Society   
Sounds, Not Silence
by Surekha Kadapa-Bose

Dr Sandra De Sa Souza, 62, is not only one of the best-known ENT (ear, nose, throat) surgeons in India, she is also the first woman surgeon in the world to have performed a cochlear implant surgery, way back in 1987. Estimates say that for every 10,000 births, there is at least one hearing impaired newborn child. (The Indian Journal of Pediatrics; Ghosh M et al; 2004) It has been Souza's life's work and ambition to reach out to as many hearing impaired persons as she can.

Her abiding passion for her work is evident in this memory she shares: "On the sixth day after my mastectomy (breast tissue removal) surgery, I came down with all the tubes still dangling from my chest and operated upon a patient who had been awaiting surgery for months. How can I say no to someone waiting for to hear for years?"

"Besides birth defects, there are many who lose their hearing to illnesses, like oral infection, mumps or meningitis, post-surgery or old age. Unfortunately, a majority of them cannot afford good treatment. Many also refuse treatment because they do not want others to know of their disability," says Souza, sitting in her room at the De Sa's Hospital in Mumbai.

Souza comes from a family of physicians. Her great-grandfather would ride on horseback, taking his medicines to women in far-flung Goan villages. A painting of him on horseback still hangs in Souza's home. Her grandfather, a gynecologist, shifted to Mumbai and set up the De Sa's Hospital at the footsteps of Malabar Hills. But it was through her father, Dr Joe De Sa, a famous ENT surgeon, that Souza found her calling.

"As a young child, I would watch my father perform ear operations, which I found fascinating. Although I am an ENT surgeon, I am most interested in ailments of the ears. The sweetest experience, I believe, is that of sound," says Souza. She says that, in the late 1980s, the cochlear implant procedure was still being perfected in the US, and there were no women ENT surgeons in the US. Souza had gone there to learn the technique and "unwittingly, I became the first woman cochlear implant surgeon".

The implant is a device consisting of a receiver and electrodes, which is placed inside the ear through surgery. There is also an external processor, which can be worn on the body or behind the ear. The surgery helps restore hearing ability to almost that of a non-impaired person's. The cochlea is a spiral tube in the inner ear resembling a snail shell with nerve endings essential for hearing, and what the surgery does, in essence, is support the damaged inner ear.

Souza says that in India, so far, only about 700 such surgeries have been conducted, of which she alone has performed 200 in Mumbai and other parts of the country. "The procedure costs nearly Rs 700,000 (US$1=Rs 44). The cost of the implant alone is about Rs 650,000, with hospitalization accounting for the remaining cost," explains Souza. Currently, she has 2,000 patients awaiting cochlear implant surgery - a procedure they can hardly afford.

There is, however, little awareness about the surgery, and the expenses put the treatment out of the reach of most people. Souza has been actively working to generate awareness, and lobbying for the need to make the process more affordable. All she can do right now is offer a discount on the drugs, hospitalization and operation charges. Says Souza, "Since the implant is an expensive option, it needs continuous support from the government and corporate houses. Today, I am happy to say that the Government of Maharashtra, the Central government and other state governments, as well as many corporate houses, have taken an active interest in organizing seminars and conferences on the issue for doctors and scientists."

Meanwhile, President APJ Abdul Kalam has urged Indian scientists to work towards manufacturing cochlear implants indigenously. "If the device is manufactured in India, we can bring the cost down and more people will then benefit from it. I am happy to inform you that a prototype cochlear implant is being developed by Dr S K Apparao in Vishakhapatnam. This should be ready by 2007, and will cost approximately Rs 100,000 to 200,000 in addition to hospital and surgery costs. The device will have lower sound quality than the devices currently available, but will be affordable to many more people," says Souza.

Married to Francis Souza, an engineer, Souza recalls her many years of hard work. She would commute some 40 kms everyday to reach Mumbai's Seth AJB Municipal Hospital, where she worked from 1979 to 2000. After her shift at this hospital, she would travel another 10 kms to her father's hospital before setting off for her home in Thane on the outskirts of Mumbai. "I would meet my husband who would be holding our baby and trying to feed him," she recalls.

This mother of three faced her biggest challenge when she lost one of her twin daughters in a car accident. That was in 1995, when Souza herself was detected with breast cancer. In those days, every patient slotted to undergo mastectomy was administered Tamixiphen, a drug that curbs the spread of cancerous cells, which later affects the knee joint. In September 2005, therefore, Souza had to undergo a knee joint replacement surgery and has to undergo another one for the other knee soon.

Hardships, though, did not dim Souza's commitment to her work. "Within 15 days of the knee surgery, I had to fly to Guwahati for a surgery. I travelled in a wheelchair, but it was worth the pains to be able to help a patient get his hearing back. I love that," she says.

Following cochlear implant surgery, the patient has to undergo rehabilitation, including 'listening therapy'. The speech rehabilitation programme at De Sa's Hospital was originally set up by Souza's mother, Nancy De Sa. Now, with patients coming in from all parts of the country, the rehabilitation is undertaken in eight languages - English, Marathi, Gujarati, Hindi, Assamese, Bengali, Telugu and Tamil.

The De Sa's Hospital has also set up several rehabilitation centers outside Mumbai. "Rehabilitation takes about six to nine months, and for those coming from outside Mumbai, it becomes a difficult and expensive affair," says Souza. The winner of many awards - Millennium Achiever Award, International Scientist of the Year 2003, among them - and holder of a record in the Limca Book of Records (first surgeon in India to perform cochlear implant surgery), she says simply: "I want to usher in every hearing impaired child into the world of sounds." 

February 12, 2006

By arrangement with Women's Feature Service

Top | Society   

The Week of February 12, 2006  
Ides of March? Knives are Out for Budget Session by Rajinder Puri
United States - Iran Nuclear Standoff by Dr. Subhash Kapila 
Post Colonial India and its Architecture - II by Ashish Nangia
The Unconscious Foreigner by Aruni Mukherjee  
Fresh Retellings of The Mahabharata by Pradip Bhattacharya 
US History - Lesser Known Facts, Analogies & Surmises Part 1 by Gaurang Bhatt, MD
India centric hydraulic civilization of the old world by Dr. V. Sankaran Nair 
Sanatana Dharma and Hinduism by Dr. RK Lahiri, Ph.D
Awaken the Giant Within by Rajgopal Nidamboor  
True Happiness by Sugandha Indulkar 
The School Going by Soma Guru
Awareness of Oneself by Viraj R. Rai  
Priestly Brahmins by J. Ajithkumar 
Journeys, Dreams and Other Thoughts by Naiya Sivaraj
Mirage by NS Murty 
Browsing by Vikram Karve  
To a Beloved Husband, From a Blessed Wife by Aparna Chatterjee
Fathers Have Feelings Too by Barbara Lewis  
How She Snagged Her Tiger by Neha Girotra
Between the Black and the Red Light by Savad Rahman   
Sounds, Not Silence by Surekha Kadapa-Bose  
Auditing Cities for Safety by Dr. Kalpana Viswanath 
The Trouble with Scarves by Mehru Jaffer  
Gujarat's Heroine A Profile of Latifabano Mohammad Yusuf Getali 
'Command' Marriages by Prakriiti Gupta  
     

 

Recommend This Page!

Analysis | Architecture | Astrology | Ayurveda | Book Reviews | Buddhism | Cartoons | Cinema | Computing | Culture | Dances
Environment | Fables | Family Matters | Festivals | Hinduism | Health | History | Home Remedies | Humor | Individuality | Jagoji
Literary Shelf | Memoirs | Musings | Opinion | Parenting | Perspective | Photo Essays | Places | Ramblings
Random Thoughts | Recipes | Sikhism | Society | Spirituality | Stories | Teens | Travelogues | Vastu | Vithika | Women

Home | Bolography | BoloKids | Columns | Hindi | Kabir | Poetry | Quotes | Workshop | Writers | Contribute | Search | Contact


Boloji.com is owned and managed by Boloji Media Inc
Privacy Policy | Disclaimer
No part of this Internet site may be reproduced without prior written permission of the copyright holder.