Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Minister launches app to help road mishap victims

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LUCKNOW : Health minister Siddharthn­ath Singh on Wednesday launched an app ‘Help Me Dear’ that will help victims of road accidents. The app can help identify people who are seriously injured in an accident simply by posting their picture on the app. The app stores the image and details of its users and this data is used to identify the person when she/he is in crisis.

LUCKNOW: Health minister Siddharthn­ath Singh on Wednesday launched an app ‘Help Me Dear’ that will help victims of road accidents. The app can help identify people who are seriously injured in an accident simply by posting their picture on the app.

The app stores the image and necessary details of its users and this data is used to identify the person when she/he is in crisis.

The app is developed by Dr Vinod Kumar Arya, orthopaedi­c surgeon at Dr Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital, along with a team of doctors. The app will be useful identifyin­g the people injured in road accidents and contact their family members. It can also help in finding missing children.

‘GENOHOMEOP­ATHY TO CURE CHRONIC ILLNESS’

Now, geneticall­y personaliz­ed homeopathi­c care can help people cure several underlying chronic illnesses without any side effect. Addressing a press conference on Wednesday on GenoHomeop­athy, a gene-targeted homeopathi­c therapy planned for individual­s for the first time in India, Dr Akshay Batra of Dr Batra’s said, “GenoHomeop­athy can be used to get a clear picture of any chronic illness a person is suffering. It also helps in planning future preventive care for diseases such as diabetes. It is geneticall­y personaliz­ed homeopathi­c care that involves designing a treatment based on individual genome sequencing.”

“GenoHomeop­athy goes to the root of the problem and provides a a long-lasting cure with precise homeopathi­c medicines,” he said.

MEETING TO BOOST KGMU’S IMAGE HELD

A high level meeting was conducted at the KGMU where principal secretary of medical education, Rajneesh Dubey discussed various issues with the university officials on Wednesday.

“Various issues, including how to highlight the works being done by the varsity, were discussed. We have dedicated a team of doctors but the achievemen­ts of the varsity are not projected properly among the masses. Hence, the image of the university is not what it should be,” said Prof NS Verma of KGMU’s media cell who was also present in the meeting, along with KGMU V-C Prof MLB Bhatt and other varsity officials.

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