Hyderabad: Mosque at Hasan Nagar at Rajendranagar Mandal in the city has opened a clinic and health center to provide free Medicare for an estimated 10,000 people who live in five urban slums after the survey reveals a seasonal high percentage and vector transmitted regions.
This is the fourth mosque in Hyderabad to offer its place to run the clinic to meet the health and health needs of the poor regardless of religion.
The clinic, which was formally opened on Tuesday at the E-Adam Mosque, functions as a primary health care center which is especially for seasonal and transmitted vectors.
The mosque clinic will function from 9.30am to 4pm every day except on Friday when it will still be open from 3pm to 9pm.
The decision to open the clinic in the mosque came after the door survey to the door in the Hasan Nagar division by helping the handation, an NGO, which included 550 households, revealed poor and inadequate public health status there.
About 70% of respondents said that access to primary care in the bastion they need to be improved.
This survey also revealed that every other household has adults and children who have a virus, cold and cough fever.
Overall, 65% said they were forced to go to a private clinic in Basti, which was open especially after 3pm and ran until midnight.
Although this clinic charges Rs 50 to RS 100, most of these clinics prescribe medicines and tests that cost Rs 500 to RS 1,000 per visit, the word HHF manages the safe guardian Mujtaba Hasan.
“Thanks to a strict financial position and losing income, 55% of respondents said they were only able to buy drugs one child and they usually share the same medicine between other brothers if everything fell ill,” Askari said to Ti.
The mosque health center was opened by Mazharuddin Hussai, Executive Director, SSeed, a partner in this initiative.
The unique model of providing free and quality primary health care from the mosque in Hyderabad has so far been useful 1.15 lakh patients this year.
It has also helped poor patients save RS 5.75 Crore from pocket expenditure because the mosque clinic provides free drugs.