How Community-Led Healthcare Is Helping People Around the Achanakmar Tiger Reserve

Villagers in Chhattisgarh’s Bilaspur district meet regularly to educate each other on chronic health issues and provide support.

Representative image of a disease-based peer group meeting. Credit: youtube/JSS

Dharamsingh (name changed) from Davanpur, near Achanakmar Tiger Reserve, about 170 km north of Raipur, in rural Chhattisgarh, narrates his experience of starting on anti-hypertensive medications. He talks about how the healthcare worker in his village measured his blood pressure on multiple occasions, and which was always high. While she always advised him to consult a doctor, he never experienced any symptoms and ignored her suggestion.

One unfortunate morning, while working in his cycle shop, Dharamsingh felt weak in one arm and a leg, and his face started to paralyse. He was experiencing a stroke.

The high blood pressure had caused arteries in his brain to burst, spilling blood into the organ. After this incident, he started paying attention to his illness and started proper treatment. Only after regularly taking medicines did Dharamsingh realise that his stroke had been the result of his untreated hypertension. He’s been taking medicines every single day since.

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Now, it’s a known fact that many of us struggle to adhere to these regimens.

Understanding the difficulties in adherence may help us empathise with those diagnosed with chronic conditions, who will continue to live with the medicine-taking ritual for their whole lives – like Dharamsingh.

Chronic diseases are illnesses that affect a person for more than three months at once; they often tend to be lifelong. While infectious diseases like tuberculosis, leprosy and HIV/AIDS require prolonged treatment regimes, most chronic diseases are non-communicable diseases (NCDs), such as hypertension, diabetes, heart diseases, epilepsy and severe mental illnesses.

The incidence of NCDs (25% in rural India for hypertension, for example) has been increasing rising in the country and around the world. Treating them poorly can cause a significant loss in years lives as well as further complications. Thus, once diagnosed, NCDs restrict the rest of a person’s life. All of this increases the burden on the public health system.

Dharamsingh’s story doesn’t stop at taking treatment. He is now a prominent member of a hypertension support group in his village where he attends meetings every month and collects his medicines from a nurse. He says the meetings have helped him take control of his health.

Similar groups have come together to form a federation of hypertension support groups.

In medical sociology, ‘sick role’ theory talks about how an ill individual must perform a ‘sick role’ with few benefits and rights, and with some obligations, too. The role gives a patient the right to be freed of duties and other work but fosters an obligation to attempt to get better by seeking help from an expert (e.g. a doctor). This model of looking at illness is helpful but also inherently flawed; it has been criticised by several people who do not want to be labeled ‘patients’. They also reject the idea of a doctor being ‘in charge’ of their illness since this paternalistic model robs patients of their agency and gives it to a doctor.

When the federation of hypertension support groups met in Bilaspur, it both defied and rejected ‘sick role’ theory. The federation’s members have taken it upon themselves to advocate against salt and tobacco consumption – for their own benefit but also for that of the community at large. The stance of its members has  means that the recipients of care are no longer just that – that they are also ambassadors of social change. They do not see themselves as ‘patients’ waiting to be instructed but as ‘people’ who partner with each – and the doctor – to improve the quality of their and others’ lives.