Uploaded on Dec 14, 2022
, Ziqitza Healthcare ltd, explains that mobile health services are a response to reaching populations living in distant, challenging places and those communities cut-off from mainstream services due to geography and climatic conditions. The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) has made a large investment in mobile medical units (MMUs) in order to reach these neglected communities.
Ziqitza Healthcare - How Mobile Medical Units Can Improve Access to Quality Healthcare
Ziqitza Healthcare - How Mobile Medical Units Can
Improve Access to Quality Healthcare?
A key goal of service delivery is to provide equitable access to and
coverage of health care, but this goal cannot be fully realised
without a plan in place to reach the communities that are most
underserved and reside in remote locations. Reaching last mile
populations is still a problem despite the remarkable coverage
advances. The absence of services through established service
delivery infrastructure is a problem that needs to be addressed right
now. A crucial service technique to reach such vulnerable people is
the use of mobile medical units (MMUs).
One of India's leading emergency medical service providers, Ziqitza
Healthcare ltd, explains that mobile health services are a response
to reaching populations living in distant, challenging places and
those communities cut-off from mainstream services due to
geography and climatic conditions. The Ministry of Health and Family
Welfare (MoHFW) has made a large investment in mobile medical
units (MMUs) in order to reach these neglected communities.
The National Health Mission (which includes the National
Rural Health Mission (NRHM) and the National Urban
Health Mission (NUHM) as its two Sub-Missions) goal is to
ensure that everyone has access to fair, decent, and
affordable health care. Ziqitza Healthcare elaborates that
the operationalization of Mobile Medical Units (MMUs) to
deliver a variety of health care services for populations
living in remote, inaccessible, un-served, and underserved
areas was one major initiative under the NRHM, with the
main goal being to bring healthcare service delivery to
these populations' doorsteps. The MMUs services are also
meant to give fixed services in places where there is no
infrastructure and serve the urban poor and vulnerable
people with the advent of NUHM.
MMU services are intended to meet the technical and
service quality standards for a Primary Health Centre
by offering a suggested package of services in 12
thematic areas: Maternal Health, Neonatal and Infant
Health, Child and Adolescent Health, Reproductive
Health and Contraceptive Services, Management of
Chronic Communicable Diseases, Management of
Common Communicable Diseases & basic OPD care
(acute simple illnesses), Management of Common
Non-Communicable Diseases MMUs provide these
services for free, in addition to facilitating referrals.
Ziqitza Rajasthan states that in comparison to more conventional
healthcare delivery methods, mobile health clinics offer high-quality
service at a lesser cost. Mobile health clinics assist patients in avoiding
expensive ER visits during crises, saving them money. According to
estimates, each mobile clinic saves 600 emergency room visits annually.
A typical savings of one-fifth of the cost of care results from this.
Additionally, mobile clinics offer affordable preventive treatment
that lowers the lifetime cost of care for a patient. Each mobile
health clinic saves, on average, 65 quality-adjusted life years
annually (a standard metric used by healthcare experts).
Mobile health clinics provide vulnerable populations with
healthcare access at a fraction of the expense of operating a
conventional hospital or care facility.
ZHL Rajasthan further elaborates that healthcare professionals
can customise their services to particular populations because of
the nature of mobile health clinics. Mobile health clinics provide
adaptable, responsive care to populations that have just been
displaced as well as remote and vulnerable groups. Mobile clinics'
flexibility enables doctors to adapt their care to the changing
needs of a population's health.
The first line of defence against sickness for
underprivileged groups can be provided through
mobile health clinics. Ziqitza Limited Rajasthan cites
a long-term study of mobile clinics, which was
published in the International Journal for Equity in
Health, it was discovered in the study that 45 percent
of them provide preventative screenings, 42 percent
provide basic care, and 30 percent provide dental
treatments. These vital services can fill the gap
between the needs of the community's health and
the mechanisms of traditional healthcare delivery.
Mobile Medical Units (MMU) are able to easily and affordably
deliver preventative and curative healthcare in remote and
inhospitable areas, including the nearby rural areas where
there are no healthcare facilities. Ziqitza Health care limited
has expertise managing more than 150 MMUs in Jammu and
Kashmir, Kerala, and Madhya Pradesh, three states with
extremely diverse populations. Our MMUs are staffed with
medical professionals who are equipped to offer free medical
examinations and trained to identify the signs of common
illnesses, perform a basic diagnosis, prescribe medication, and
send patients to specialised clinics in the event of subsequent
medical issues. Raising awareness, ensuring preventive
immunisation, and encouraging regular medical check-ups
among the rural population became possible with the
availability of these vans.
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