Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

42-year-old helps patients find way around JJ hosp A lone warrior

- Sagar Pillai

MUMBAI: One of the oldest and most prominent government hospitals of Mumbai, Sir Jamshedji Jeejeebhoy (JJ) Hospital at Byculla, sees the footfall of thousands on a daily basis. Here, patients and their relatives are seen manoeuvrin­g their way to reach the right counter after approachin­g the wrong one. There are also instances of patients leaving without seeing the doctor for lack of some document.

The hospital is spread over 43 acres and sees a footfall of up to 5,000 outpatient­s and 300 admissions on a daily basis as opposed to its capacity of handling 1,352 patients.

The overburden­ed staff at the state-run hospital, where patients come from all corners of Maharashtr­a, hardly have time to guide the ones who are unable to find their way around the hospital. There have been instances of arguments and fights between patients’ relatives and hospital staffers due to lack of communicat­ion.

In view of this, 42-year-old Abubaker Qadri, whom the hospital staff call a good Samaritan, has been proactivel­y helping underprivi­leged or illiterate walk-in patients over the past decade.

Qadri, who lives in Pydhonie which is a kilometre away from the hospital, is a regular at Sir JJ Hospital and is often seen holding a bunch of documents along with files of several patients, moving from one department to another. He is known for helping underprivi­leged patients deal with hospital management for over 10 years, acting as a mediator, and helping them fill out registrati­on forms, enrolling them in available government health schemes, solving issues between staff and patients, and even pulling appointmen­ts with doctors.

He provides this help free of charge and earns his livelihood through a small side printing business which he runs early in the morning. His wife is a teacher at a private school. The couple collective­ly earn up to ₹50,000 each month. time. “I only help those who come through referral. I attend to 10-15 different cases on a daily basis. My family and my mentor Ali Bhai have been my guiding lights,” he said.

Answering to why he continues to help people despite no payback, he said, “Allah has given me enough and he has given me an opportunit­y to help the ones in need; why should I waste it? I don’t need people’s money; their blessings are my reward.”

Dr TP Lahane, director of state Directorat­e for Medical Education and Research (DMER) and former dean of Sir JJ Hospital, said, “Abu(baker) is a good soul. He has helped with a lot of law-and-order situations in the hospital and is always there for the needy.”

Qadri spends around six to seven hours a day doing this work, and despite the Covid-19 pandemic, he did not stop. Instead, he crowdfunde­d and arranged meals for 600 patients at the hospital on a daily basis for three months since the lockdown was announced.

One of the senior most health officials at the hospital said, “Abu has been a crucial part of our hospital administra­tion. He has arranged food for patients throughout the lockdown and has earned enormous trust of our staff, which is why all issues of his patients are solved immediatel­y.”

Qadri said, “I wish to continue doing this for as long as I can. I think there is a need for more volunteers who are trustworth­y and can help the patients without ill-treating them.”

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Abubaker Qadri.
HT PHOTO Abubaker Qadri.

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