The Health Worker Podcast Por Radio Azim Premji University arte de portada

The Health Worker

The Health Worker

De: Radio Azim Premji University
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The Health Worker brings you stories from India’s frontlines of care, from doctors, public health workers and community organizers who are transforming what health means. Across hospitals, hamlets and homes, the series traces journeys where compassion meets science and where care becomes a collective act of trust.

Hosted by RamG Vallath of the Azim Premji Foundation, the show listens to people who have gone beyond prescriptions and hospital walls to redefine what it means to heal. They work in places where resources are scarce but determination runs deep, where a clinic might also become a classroom, a shelter or a village assembly.

From palliative care in remote communities to mental health outreach for the homeless, from rural doctors rebuilding public systems to the unseen kindness behind eye donation, each episode reminds us that healing is not something delivered but something built together.

Through these voices, The Health Worker offers a rare portrait of care in its truest sense, as relationship, responsibility and quiet courage.

Ciencias Sociales
Episodios
  • Big City Life vs Rural India — Why These Doctors Stayed Back For 30 Years | The Health Worker
    Dec 16 2025

    What makes doctors begin their careers in rural India—and keep going for three decades? Dr. John and Mercy John reveal why they stayed—and how their work transformed healthcare in Bissam Cuttack, Odisha.

    In this episode of The Health Worker, host Ram G. Vallath from the Azim Premji Foundation brings you the story of Dr. John “Johnny” Oommen (MD, CMC Vellore) and Mercy John, who chose to serve the tribal communities of Bissam Cuttack, Odisha, instead of pursuing lucrative careers in India or abroad.

    For three decades, they've tackled challenges most doctors in India never face—infant mortality rates of 200 per 1,000, under-five mortality touching 350 per 1,000, high birth rates & high death rates, zero healthcare infrastructure, and communities where seeing a doctor meant traveling hours.

    What you'll discover:

    - Why these doctors chose rural Odisha over high-paying urban positions

    - How they built a healthcare system from scratch in Bissam Cuttack

    - The real impact of 30 years of commitment to rural medicine

    - What keeps healthcare workers motivated in India's most challenging regions

    - How they built a nursing workforce when faculty was impossible to find

    - How community-led malaria control saved children’s lives

    About the Health Worker Series: Exploring the lives and choices of healthcare professionals serving India's rural communities, where dedication meets extraordinary challenges.

    For more inspiring and informative content on India Public Health, visit us at https://thehealthworker.azimpremjiuniversity.edu.in/

    🎙️ More conversations on democracy, culture & society: Subscribe to Radio Azim Premji University for podcasts exploring India's biggest questions—from education and science to constitutional values and social change.

    #RuralHealthcare, #DoctorsOfIndia, #HealthcareHeroes, #TribalHealth, #CommunityHealth, #PublicHealthIndia, #HealthcareInIndia, #DoctorsWhoServe, #HealthWorker, #HealthcareEquity, #RuralIndia, #HealthcareStories, #FrontlineHealth, #MedicalEthics #odisha #ruralodisha

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    39 m
  • Dr. Regi George: The Valley That Learned to Heal Itself
    Nov 7 2025

    A doctor. A child’s death. A question that changed everything.

    At Gandhigram Hospital near Madurai, Dr. Regi George and Dr. Lalitha Regi began to wonder if medicine alone could change lives. That question took them to the Sittilingi Valley in Tamil Nadu, where they started the Tribal Health Initiative — a small mud-hut clinic that grew into a community movement.

    Today, the valley has zero maternal deaths, thriving organic farms, women’s enterprises, and a panchayat that works for its people.

    This isn’t just a story of doctors.

    It’s the story of how a community learned to heal itself.

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    33 m
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