Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 4/18/2025
Do you have medicines left over for treating Covid-19 symptoms? This doctor couple in Mumbai has created a system to redistribute them to areas in need.

Meds For More
Transcript
00:00Started so small and it just snowballed into something, it's been a roller coaster ride
00:17from the beginning till now.
00:39During the
01:04first wave of the pandemic, I was actually a frontline medical volunteer and I was working
01:11with the BMC in slums in the city where we live which is Mumbai in India and that gave me a very
01:18uphand first-hand experience of the devastation that people are going through both in terms of
01:24their lives and their livelihoods. A few weeks ago, we had a member of our house staff, his son
01:32fell ill with COVID. He was tested positive on the RT-PCR and he called and he said,
01:38sir, can I bring the reports? Can I show it to you? I said, of course, bring it.
01:42And then whilst he was on his way, I was mentioning to Raina that actually,
01:46what can we do to help because medicines are pretty expensive, particularly the antivirals.
01:51So at that moment, I suddenly remembered that actually in the building that we live,
01:55our apartment block, there were three patients that I've been treating
01:59just recently, all of whom had just come out of that COVID isolation phase.
02:03So I put a message on the building group and I said, guys, folks, can you just send me whatever
02:07leftover meds you have and then I'll just see what we have. I'll put it together and if it's
02:12okay, then I'll send it, I'll give it to the person who's coming to see me.
02:16Everyone just resonated with the idea and I think
02:43it was a very small way for people to make a difference. It was something that they felt
02:48they could easily replicate in their own neighborhoods, in their own buildings. It's
02:53been amazing.
03:23Even if work ends at the end of this particular wave,
03:37I think that seed of imagination and creativity, which is now being unleashed
03:43and the recognition that each small act of kindness can lead to this collective wave
03:49of positive impact, then that in itself is a legacy worth remembering.
03:55Absolutely.

Recommended