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9789361138393 6a27f72588dffeef8cee1415 Staying Alive: Dispatches from the Margins https://www.midlandbookshop.com/s/607fe93d7eafcac1f2c73ea4/6a27f67b88dffeef8cedf513/81jxwlur7jl-_sl1500_.jpg

A searing exploration of a hidden national crisis

In the glittering corridors of India’s urban centres, world-class hospitals attract ‘medical tourists’ from across the globe. But in the rural and tribal heartlands, where nearly 65 per cent of the population resides, a starkly different reality unfolds. The National Health Policy of 2017 recommends a government spend of at least 2.5 per cent of GDP on health. However, that figure is currently at just 1.84 per cent – an amount sorely inadequate to meet the government’s stated goals in the various programmes. This shortfall, in combination with manpower deficit, inadequate infrastructure, poor quality of data, poorly motivated staff and policy decisions that are divorced from ground reality, leaves the most vulnerable without access to even basic medical care – a far cry from the belief that rural life is an idyllic, healthy alternative.

Examining entrenched inequity at the intersection of caste, class, gender and geography, the book gives voice to those abandoned by the system: the migrant worker for whom tuberculosis is a death sentence; the farmer who can’t access anti-venom for a snake bite; the rural mother for whom childbirth is a gamble; the tribal child who can’t get a midday meal because of lack of digital connectivity and many others.

Staying Alive challenges us to envision a nation where the right to health is not a luxury for the few but the right of every citizen, regardless of where they live.

About the Author

Ramani Atkuri studied medicine at the Christian Medical College (CMC), Vellore, with a specialization in Community Medicine. Since 1991, she has mostly worked in central India, in the rural and tribal areas of Madhya Pradesh, Odisha and Chhattisgarh, in primary healthcare. She worked with UNICEF for a decade from 1997 before returning to the grassroots in collaboration with not-for-profit organizations. Her work has involved managing patients as well as training field-level workers of various cadres in primary healthcare. She is passionate about improving lay understanding of medicine and tackling inequity and injustice in access to healthcare. For her work in underserved parts of the country, she has been recognized by CMC with the College Motto Award in 2006 and the Paul Harrison Award in 2025. She lives in Bangalore with her husband.
9789361138393
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Staying Alive: Dispatches from the Margins

ISBN: 9789361138393
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Details
  • ISBN: 9789361138393
  • Author: Ramani Atkuri
  • Format: Paperback
  • Publisher: Pan
  • Publication Date: 11 June 2026
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Book Description

A searing exploration of a hidden national crisis

In the glittering corridors of India’s urban centres, world-class hospitals attract ‘medical tourists’ from across the globe. But in the rural and tribal heartlands, where nearly 65 per cent of the population resides, a starkly different reality unfolds. The National Health Policy of 2017 recommends a government spend of at least 2.5 per cent of GDP on health. However, that figure is currently at just 1.84 per cent – an amount sorely inadequate to meet the government’s stated goals in the various programmes. This shortfall, in combination with manpower deficit, inadequate infrastructure, poor quality of data, poorly motivated staff and policy decisions that are divorced from ground reality, leaves the most vulnerable without access to even basic medical care – a far cry from the belief that rural life is an idyllic, healthy alternative.

Examining entrenched inequity at the intersection of caste, class, gender and geography, the book gives voice to those abandoned by the system: the migrant worker for whom tuberculosis is a death sentence; the farmer who can’t access anti-venom for a snake bite; the rural mother for whom childbirth is a gamble; the tribal child who can’t get a midday meal because of lack of digital connectivity and many others.

Staying Alive challenges us to envision a nation where the right to health is not a luxury for the few but the right of every citizen, regardless of where they live.

About the Author

Ramani Atkuri studied medicine at the Christian Medical College (CMC), Vellore, with a specialization in Community Medicine. Since 1991, she has mostly worked in central India, in the rural and tribal areas of Madhya Pradesh, Odisha and Chhattisgarh, in primary healthcare. She worked with UNICEF for a decade from 1997 before returning to the grassroots in collaboration with not-for-profit organizations. Her work has involved managing patients as well as training field-level workers of various cadres in primary healthcare. She is passionate about improving lay understanding of medicine and tackling inequity and injustice in access to healthcare. For her work in underserved parts of the country, she has been recognized by CMC with the College Motto Award in 2006 and the Paul Harrison Award in 2025. She lives in Bangalore with her husband.

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