Have Covid-19? Worry not, help is at hand

As old Covid-19 patients snap up scarce hospital beds, home isolation appears to be an increasingly viable option for the newly-infected.

Danphe Care, a Dillibazaar, Kathmandu-based healthcare management company, will help them do so. Started a month ago by a team doctors, pharmacists, nurses, and dietitians, it has a nine-member executive team, with another 30-35 medical personnel and experts working as advisors. Kabin Maleku, program coordinator at the center, says his team had anticipated the Covid-19 crisis and had been working on offering Covid-19 services for the past few months.

Maleku says around 80 percent of all Covid-19 patients can be treated in home isolation. “Why burden the healthcare system if you can treat yourself at home, right?” he asks. “If normal patients start occupying beds, those with severe symptoms will have to suffer.”

This realization, coupled with multiplying questions over the safety of isolation and quarantine facilities, are making more and more Covid-19 patients to opt for home isolation. For if a patient is admitted to an unmanaged and crowded isolation center, there is also a chance of their contracting other communicable diseases.

Danphe Care offers a 15-day home isolation package at Rs. 200 a day, offering support and care through virtual assistance and phone conversations as part of the package. Guidance on medical and emotional issues through daily symptoms checkups, regular intervention, medicine prescription, referral to the hospital and coordination with ambulance services when necessary, are the salient features of this package.

“We have a holistic approach to Covid care. Not only physical and mental care, we are also working on spiritual well-being of the patients under our watch,” adds Maleku.

“We categorize our patients and include in the package only those whom we can treat and monitor at their own homes,” says Dr Suyash Timalsina, medical coordinator at the center. 

On the first day, center experts conduct orientation as the patients may be ignorant of the disease and get panicky. After that, the team analyses patient health. Following an in-depth assessment, the patient’s condition is outlined. Only then do regular consultations with patients start. The patients are guided to keep themselves as well as their loved ones safe.

“If our monitoring proves inadequate, we seek help from other experts and specialist doctors,” adds Maleku. Offering diet plans, hygiene tips, yoga and meditation tips, and other practical knowledge are also part of the package.

If a patient needs hospitalization, the doctors who had been regularly following them also help them get admitted to a suitable hospital.

So who can use Dafne services? “Covid-19 patients and those who have come in contact with them,” replies Timalsina. Regular, 24/7, monitoring, he says, helps identify even minor changes in symptoms.

Having successfully monitored home isolation of over 70 patients, the center is planning to scale up to be able to treat 1,000 patients at a time. 

If you need home-isolation monitoring services, contact:

Kabin Maleku

Program Cordinator, Danphe Care

9802314742

60 inmates crammed in a facility for 25

The district jail at Sandhikharka of Arghakhanchi has more than double the number of prisoners it is supposed to house. At present, there are 60 inmates (three women and 57 men) in the facility, informs jailor Krishna Prasad Acharya of the District Jail Office.

The inmates, as a result, are deprived of even minimal facilities. The 60 inmates have been forced to live miserably, locked in a prison with a capacity of 25 inmates.

The problem of overcrowding is the result of lack of budget for prison upgrade, says the management. “The prison management department had built a new building last year,” Chief District Officer Bishnu Poudel informs. “But as the new premises don’t have compound walls yet we have been unable to move prisoners there.”

The new building has the capacity of 80. The main prison, built in 1989, was damaged during the conflict.

Assistant CDO Binod Khanal says that if the budget is made available, the compound wall can be completed and prisoners shifted without any further delay.

Dr KC examining patients even during hunger strike

Dr. Govinda KC, who has been on a fast-unto-death since September 12, has been examining patients from inside the premises of the temple he has been fasting in. KC has been staying inside the premises of the Babira Masto Than (temple) at Ranichaur, Chandannath Municipality-6 of Jumla district, from where he examines patients on an empty stomach.

On his 19th hunger strike for improvement in quality of medical education, KC says, “I am ready to die if my demands are not met, and I will continue to serve the sick till my last breath.” Locals have been visiting Dr KC in the temple premises with their health problems. They have lauded the doctor for his selfless service despite his deteriorating health.

According to Dr KC, his hunger strike had to be continued to stop the government's plunder in health education, and to ensure equal access to free quality education and healthcare for all Nepalis.

During his earlier hunger strike in Jumla, KC had demanded the Medical Education Act be amended as per the agreement with him on 26 July 2008.

He says people’s access to healthcare would greatly increase in remote areas if his demands are met. MBBS and other medical education programs should be conducted at Karnali Institute of Health Sciences and post-graduate level permission given to it immediately, he adds, and teaching at Geta Medical College and Rapti Institute of Health Sciences begin at once. He also urges the government to start the process of establishing government-run medical colleges and hospitals in Province 2 and Gandaki Province, as well as Doti, Dadeldhura, Udaypur, Ilam and Panchthar districts.

Wedding photography in Nepal may not survive the pandemic

The Covid-19 pandemic has devastated economies and destroyed industries all over the world. In Nepal, which went into a lockdown in March this year and is still under restrictions, the pandemic meant an end of thousands of businesses. For some, there might be a chance of a revival but for many others, their doors may have shut forever. Among businesses that do not see any hope of a comeback in the near future, wedding photography—albeit fairly new as an organized industry in Nepal—might soon be a dying art.

When you type ‘Wedding photography in Nepal’ in any search engine or social media, you’ll find a couple of dozen names pop up as suggestions within the first few pages. And then a more thorough search will lead you to at least a 100 or so companies providing wedding photography services, with most of them fully dedicated to clicking weddings.

Such was not the case even a decade ago. It was mostly your local studio photographer covering weddings with a single camera, a photojournalist doing part time-work at weddings, or a family friend with a camera doing the honors. But the concept of having a whole team of photographers dedicated to creating photos and videos of different events within a wedding came only around 10 years ago, say photographers APEX talked to—with companies like Wedding Diary Nepal and Foto Pasal among a few others taking charge. Mixing art and creativity with commerce, the wedding photography companies not only started giving best services to their clients, but also created opportunities for budding photographers and helped them gain financial independence.

Shahnawaz Mohammad, the founder of Wedding Diary Nepal, worked in the Nepali media industry for 12 years before opening his company in 2010.

“First of its kind for photography services in Nepal” is how Wedding Diary Nepal’s introduction reads on its Facebook page, and Mohammad reiterates that the company was indeed one of the frontrunners in wedding photography. With a team of 16 professional photographers, Wedding Diary had built good enough reputation to keep it busy all year, especially during the wedding seasons, before the pandemic took over the world.

“We were looking forward to another busy wedding season this year when the pandemic spoiled all our plans. Everything got cancelled,” Mohammad says. “As we are purely a wedding photography-based company, we have now been out of work for over six months.” Although a pioneer of the business in Nepal, Wedding Diary had already been facing challenges from freelancers, with growing competition in prices, even before the pandemic. The current situation has forced Mohammad to reevaluate the company’s business structure.

“We might now have to start taking small private events and couple shoots as well,” he says. “If that doesn’t work, I am thinking of getting into some other profession. It’s not that I will forfeit this business for good; but this alone may not sustain my livelihood.”

In better days, the 16-member crew of Wedding Diary with their individual gear worth Rs 800,000 to Rs 1 million each were earning enough not only to sustain their lives, but also to make some savings. The savings are still providing for them, Mohammad informs, and the only major loss so far has been having to relocate their office due to rent issues. “We have been fortunate enough to have some savings to tide us over these hard times,” he says. “I think compared to freelancers, it is especially difficult for business owners.”

Pritam Chhetri, owner of Kathmandu Wedding Studio, has not been as fortunate. Originally from Pokhara, Chhetri is a former employee of APEX who quit his photojournalism job in early 2019 to make a full-time career in wedding and event photography. His company, established as a part-time business in March 2018, was barely two-year-old when the pandemic hit Nepal. Starting from ground zero, Chhetri had invested in assets worth millions and created a 14-member team by the start of 2020.

“Now the team has broken up after so many months of being without work. Some have joined other professions or taken up new jobs,” Chhetri says. “Some of my team members even had to sell their equipment to cover their living expenses.”

Kathmandu Wedding Studio was also training a female photographer, a rarity in Nepal, who is now back at her home in Butwal, Chhetri informs.

Chhetri himself had to forfeit his office space and move all equipment to his small rented flat. As the situation gets worse and prospects of getting back to normal appear slim for his business, Chhetri has been trying to extend his portfolio by working in product photography as well as creating presets and plugins for photo-editing softwares.

While many photographers into Events and Wedding photography have started looking for alternatives to the profession, it is not an option for Indian national Param Narain who has been running Wedding Sutra Nepal for three years. Originally from Chandigarh, India, Narain comes from a family of photographers and is the fourth generation in the family to continue the profession. “My family has moved to Mumbai now and my brother and his children are established photographers there,” Narain says.

Narain himself had a successful run in India, also taking professional photos of Bollywood celebrities, before coming to Nepal to start Wedding Sutra. Married to a Nepali, Narain co-owns the company with his local partner Anil Shrestha. Despite the complete disruption in business for over half a year, he is determined not to give up. “Quitting is not an option for me as this is family legacy, and also the only thing I know,” Narain says. “I will wait out the pandemic and I am positive that once it is gone, we will go back to our normal lives.”