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New Amrita Hospital is all set to open in Faridabad in August this year; 2,400-bed facility will become Indias biggest private hospital – The…

Amrita Hospitals announced on Thursday that its new 2,400-bed campus will soon be open to the public in Faridabad in August this year. During the press conference on Thursday, hospital management announced that the new Amrita Hospital is spread across 133 acres of land in Faridabad and it will be the biggest private sector hospital in India.

This would be the second large-scale Amrita Hospital in India after the iconic 1,200-bed Amrita Hospital in Kochi, Kerala, which was established 25 years ago by the Mata Amritanandamayi Math.

The new hospital is located at Sector 88, Faridabad and it will have a total built-up area of 1 crore sq. ft., including a 14-floor-high tower that will encompass the key medical facilities and patient areas. During the press conference, Swami Nijamritananda Puri, Head, Mata Amritanandamayi Math, Delhi announced that the 81 specialties at the hospital will include eight centers of excellence, such as oncology, cardiac sciences, neurosciences, gastro-sciences, renal sciences, bone diseases and trauma, transplants, and mother and child.

The hospital will become operational in stages, with 500 beds opening in August this year. In two years, this number will rise to 750 beds, and further to 1,000 beds in five years. When fully operational, the hospital will have a staff of 10,000 people, including over 800 doctors.

On how the new hospital has incorporated the aspects of pandemic-induced demands, Dr. Sanjeev K Singh, Medical Director, Amrita Hospital, Faridabad told Financial Express.com: We have learned a lot from the pandemic. The construction of the hospital began 5-6 years ago and the learnings from the pandemic also got incorporated along the way. For example, any patient who comes in an emergency gets facilitated in a 40-bed setup. In that set-up, we have a decontaminated area in which anyone who needs to shower will be sent there. We have four negative pressure rooms and if we have any suspected cases of covid or covid-like diseases we can send them to concerned specialists. The mechanism of shifting is also planned and implemented. In all critical care units, there are positive pressure isolation rooms.

The massive facility will also include 534 critical care beds which is the highest in India, the hospital management claims. The hospital campus will also include 64 modular operation theaters, most advanced imaging services, fully automated robotic laboratory, high-precision radiation oncology, most updated nuclear medicine, and state-of-the-art 9 cardiac and interventional cath lab for clinical services. Cutting-edge medical research will be a strong thrust area, with a dedicated research block spread across a 7-floor building totaling 3 lakh sq. ft with exclusive Grade A to D GMP lab with focus on identifying newer diagnostic markers, AI, ML, Bioinformatics etc.

Dr. Singh also told Financial Express.com that they want to integrate all aspects of medical science and bridge the gap between clinicians and scientists.

In Kochi, we have established tissue engineering, a nano-medicine-based cardiac stent, bone growth, and lots more. What we are looking at Faridabad campus is developing something new in stem-cell therapies. We want to create techniques like creating human cells on our own in our GMP labs as generally, we rely on international counterparts for such procedures. Recently, we conducted research in which we found that we can use patient pluripetin stem cells in tumours and it will destroy them. For us, oncology is the big thrust area but other areas will be a focus too. The intent of our research facility will be to make the high-end expensive equipment and treatments cost-effective for the common man. We want to integrate medicine, engineering, biotechnology, and other segments altogether, Dr. Singh told Financial Express.com.

Dr. Singh also said that they have already been awarded the Advanced ICMR Clinical Trial Unit and this will enable them to conduct their trials in the new facility.

Mata Amritanandamayi has allocated a certain amount of seed money to initiate research. On the basis of submitted proposals, things will materialise and start, he added.

Dr. Singh also told Financial Express.com that the new hospital will also be empaneled. There is a process of 3-6 months and then after medical facilities will be available under all panels like ECHS, CGHS and other TPAs, he added.

During the press conference, Dr Singh also informed that the hospital will be among the very few facilities in the country to conduct hand transplants, a specialty pioneered by Amrita Hospital in Kochi. We will also do transplants of liver, kidney, trachea, vocal cords, intestine, heart, lung, pancreas, skin, bone, face and bone marrow, he said.

Training of medical students and doctors will be a strong focus area. The hospital will have state-of-the-art robotics, haptic, surgical-medical simulation centre spread across 4 floors and 1.5 lakh sq. ft area, the biggest such learning & development facility for doctors in the country. The facility will also host a medical college and the countrys biggest allied health sciences campus, he stated.

Moreover, the management also informed that ultra-modern Amrita Hospital at Faridabad would be one of Indias largest green-building healthcare projects with a low carbon footprint. It is an end-to-end paperless facility, with zero waste discharge.

There is also a helipad on the campus for swift transport of patients and a 498-room guest house where attendants accompanying the patients can stay, they said.

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New Amrita Hospital is all set to open in Faridabad in August this year; 2,400-bed facility will become Indias biggest private hospital - The...

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Meet some of the notable UWMadison graduates of spring 2022 – University of Wisconsin-Madison

By earning a college degree this weekend, thousands of Badgers will have achieved something impressive. Many have left a lasting impact on campus, and some have already made a mark far beyond UWMadison. Here are just a few of those accomplished graduates consider them a small subset of the excellence of the Class of Spring 2022.

Von Dickens Abero Ulsa Photo by Renzy Mae Baloran

Before he knew he wanted to be a lawyer, Von Dickens Abero Ulsa was already passionate about one thing: art. The Philippines native, who goes simply by Von, immigrated with his family toHawaiiin 2009. Art became one of the ways he expressed himself, and he went on to win state, national and even international honors. His art career came to a brief halt while he finished his triple bachelors degree in American studies, English, and history at the University ofHawaiiat Manoa, but studying these fields only improved his creative methods. Using history and research, Von distorts western artistic traditions through a lens of decolonization and indigenization. His work has been exhibited in Los Angeles, Seattle, and Honolulu, including a headlining gig at the 2017 Coachella Arts & Music Festival. Von will be graduating from UW Law School with a business law concentration. Check out his work on Instagram and his website.

From left, Annika, Claudia and Jenna Strand

The Strand triplets of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, have different majors and different interests, but theyre alike in one important way all three will graduate from UWMadison on May 14. Weve been huge Badger fans for as long as we can remember, says Annika Strand, who isearning a double-major in real estate & urban land economics and finance, investment & banking). Its been fun to go to college together it made the transition much smoother. Claudia is double-majoring in actuarial science and risk management & insurance, while Jenna is studying communication sciences and disorders. Though each of the sisters considered different colleges, they eventually all agreed upon UWMadison for its academic prestige and campus life. Read more about their path to UWMadison here.

Joel Baraka

At the Kyangwali refugee camp in western Uganda where Joel Baraka grew up, not many children get the opportunity to attend school. Baraka, who graduates this semester with a bachelors degree in civil engineering, counts himself among the fortunate, though access to learning resources was still a challenge. To address this, Baraka founded My Home Stars, a Ugandan-based nonprofit with a mission of making education more equitable and accessible to Ugandan refugee children. With his team, Baraka has focused on developing board games that are affordable and help children learn in fun and engaging ways. The nonprofit has raised about $60,000 through grants, donations, and competitions and has supported the learning of more than 5,000 children in Uganda, mostly during the pandemic when schools remained closed. Baraka came to UWMadison through the universitys King-Morgridge Scholars Program. Read more about Barakas good works here.

Christeena Jojo

As captain of the Wisconsin School of Bhangra, Christeena Jojo created and helped plan the first Bhangra competition at UWMadison Madtown Bhangra which drew more than 100 dancers from around the country in 2021 and raised more than $2,000 for charity. Bhangra is a traditional, upbeat folk danceof Northern India, celebrating the culture and heritage of the state of Punjab. JoJo was born in Chicago to immigrant parents from Kerala, India. She is among the first in her family to attend a four-year university and to pursue a career in medicine. She is studying health promotion and health equity and plans to attend medical school.

Dakota Roettger

Student employees help power UWMadison there are nearly 9,000 of them across campus. One of them, Dakota Roettger, has earned recognition far beyond campus. Roettger works part-time at the Office of Student Financial Aid, where he oversees the recruiting, onboarding, and training of other student employees who serve as administrative assistants. Earlier this year, Roettger, of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, was named UWMadisons 2021-22 Student Employee of the Year. He went on to win the Wisconsin title and the 14-state Midwest regional title. Hes featured in a publication of the National Student Employment Association. Roettger is double-majoring in marketing and management & human resources. Upon graduation, he will be joining the marketing team at AlphaSights in New York City.

Tamia Fowlkes

Chances are, youve seen, read, or heard something by Tamia Fowlkes or soon will. The journalism and political science major from Milwaukee already is well-known on campus and beyond for her work. She currently serves as an intern for The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC and News 3 Now in Madison. She is a student representative for The National Association of Black Journalists and has previously written for The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, The Wisconsin State Journal, Isthmus, and The Madison Commons. She co-hosts a podcast called Pod-Cast Your Vote that aims to mobilize and empower youth voters. Fowlkes is a 2021 Truman Scholarship finalist and a 2022 Louise Troxell and Teddy Kulby Award winner. This summer, she will intern at USA Today. In the fall, she will begin a masters degree program at Columbia Journalism School.

Max Bobholz

Max Bobholz was watching a television report 10 years ago about how a Ugandan team at the Little League World Series sometimes lacked shoes and often shared bats and baseballs when he realized he had a bunch of old baseball equipment in his garage. A sixth-grader at the time, he founded Angels at Bat, which collects new and used baseball equipment and distributes it to Kenya, Benin, Nigeria, and South Africa tens of thousands of items to date. Bobholz, of Green Bay, has continued running the charity even while attending UWMadison. With the help of the Law & Entrepreneurship Clinic at UW Law School, he was able to establish Angels at Bat as an official 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. There are now branches of the organization in seven states plus Wisconsin. Bobholz has been featured onCNN Heroes: A Young Wonder Special andCNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute. He is graduating with two bachelors degrees, one in African cultural studies, the other biology. He plans to pursue a Ph.D. in global or public health.

Susan Kay Baker

Susan Kay Baker, a returning student from Madison, is earning a bachelors degree in history following a journey in higher education that began 50 years ago at UWStevens Point. She took some detours, got married, became a mother and grandmother, and retired in 2020 as a senior outpatient procedural coderat UW Hospital & Clinics. I decided the time was right to complete my degree, she says. Fun fact: Baker had wanted to appear on Jeopardy since she was a little girl. When the dream came true in 2016 at age 62, it was everything shed hoped it would be thrilling, terrifying, panic-inducing, exhilarating, she says. It also left her with an immense feeling of accomplishment.Viewers loved her reactionwhen she won. That is what total shock looks like, she says today.

Henry Obeng

Henry Obeng, an MFA candidate in design studies, textile design and papermaking and photography, recently was awarded a prestigious five-week residency beginning this August with the renowned Oak Spring Garden Foundation in Virginia. The competitive award 700 applied recognizes Obengs work with botanical imagery, handmade paper, and photography. Obeng, who was born in Ghana, has explored in his art his experience of being an international student during the COVID-19 lockdown. He received the2022 Graduate Student Creative Arts Awardfrom the UWMadison Division of the Arts.

Nalah McWhorter

Business major Nalah McWhorter is known for getting things done. Case in point: Two years ago, she identified the need for space at the Wisconsin School of Business (WSB) to support students from historically underrepresented backgrounds, particularly students of color. She wrote a petition seeking multicultural spaces, which led the school to create a committee to develop the idea. This spring, two spaces opened in Grainger Hall designed to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion. McWhorter, of Racine, Wisconsin, is part of the first cohort of the Business Emerging Leaders Program at the WSB and served as president of the Wisconsin Black Student Union during the 2020-21 academic year.

Qianyun (Lexi) Luo

Hawra Aljawad

To make it to the finalist stage for a Rhodes Scholarship is a tremendous honor only the most elite students in the world can claim this accomplishment. Two UWMadison students, Qianyun (Lexi) Luo and Hawra Aljawad, did just that last November. Luo, of Bloomington, Illinois, is earning a bachelors degree in biochemistry and statistics. She has conducted cancer research for four years in two labs, earning co-authorship on three publications. Aljawad, of Qatif, Saudi Arabia, is earning a bachelors degree in chemical engineering and biochemistry. She attended UWMadison on a scholarship awarded by King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia to 100 top-tier high school students pursuing their bachelors degrees in the U.S. Beginning her freshman year, Aljawad worked in three labs focused on health research, including ones devoted to understanding Alzheimers disease and the flu virus.

Kyla Vaughan

Kyla Vaughan made news when word got out that shed set a goal for herself in calendar year 2021 of reading a book a day and then surpassed it by reading a total of 392. I guess I did it partly for the bragging rights, but also because I believe that reading about other people is the best way to gain empathy, she says. Vaughan, a double-major in English and history from southwestern Wisconsin, attributes her accomplishment to being a naturally fast reader and making reading a priority. Read more about Vaughans Year of Reading Wildly.

Karma Palzom-Pasha

Karma Palzom-Pashawas born in a refugee camp in Nepal.Her father was part of a group that became known as The Lucky 1,000. The U.S. opened 1,000 spots in 1990 to sponsor Tibetans in refugee camps in India and Nepal for permanent residency in this country. Palzom-Pashas father was among those selected through a lottery. Madison was a major sponsoring area for these refugees. After Palzom-Pashas father secured a job in Madison and earned enough money, he sponsored the rest of the family to come to the United States.Palzom-Pasha stood out in middle school and was selected to be part of UWMadisons Precollege Enrichment Opportunity Program for Learning Excellence, known as PEOPLE. She came to UWMadison, earned a bachelors degree and a masters degree, and is now earning a Ph.D. in U.S. History.With a deep commitment to public service, Palzom-Pasha will be returning to PEOPLE in a leadership role. Shell work on expanding the programs reach and building a bigger pipeline to prepare more first-generation students and students from groups historically underrepresented on this campus to come to UWMadison and succeed here.

Ben Rush

In February 2021, doctoral student BenRush released the first episode of his Deeper Than Data podcast, with the vision of sharing the successes, failures, and journeys of scientists. The podcast explores topics that are common in the human experience but not often discussed in science, including dealing with rejection, combatting imposter syndrome, and feeling isolated, as well as positive aspects, like getting a grant. The podcast has been listened to thousands of times worldwide, and its casual conversations with experts led to the creation of the Badger Talks Podcast. By producing and hosting these podcasts,Rushunintentionally started his entrepreneurial career. He launched Deeper Than Data Media in June 2021. Fellow Badgers Jevin Lortie and Julia Nepper soon joined the team.Rush, of Cincinnati, Ohio, is earning a Ph.D. in nutritional sciences. He hopes to grow the business into a central resource for science podcasting. Read more about Rush here.

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Meet some of the notable UWMadison graduates of spring 2022 - University of Wisconsin-Madison

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