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“Many people say god exists. I don't know if god exists, but Mahadevan sir exists like a god for us,” says Supriya*, a person with HIV.
Supriya is among the thousands of patients who have had their lives touched by Dr K Mahadevan (60), who has spent his life treating patients living with HIV.
What makes Mahadevan truly special, though, is not merely that he treats thousands of patients each year, but that he has been doing it virtually free of cost. At his clinic on Cross Cut Road in Coimbatore, Mahadevan tells all his patients that he does not insist on any fees at all.
Dr Mahadevan narrates that when he first opened his clinic in 1994, he was a Professor at the Government Medical College, Coimbatore in the Department of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, and he would charge patients Rs 20 for a consultation. Then, an encounter with an HIV-positive person named Gowri, let him see the difficult plight of persons living with HIV.
Going beyond that, says Kumar* – a patient who has known Dr Mahadevan for 15 years – the doctor often contributes out of his own pocket to help people in need. “He spends almost all his earnings for other people. He has told us that he has been planning to buy a house for 25 years, but has never managed it,” says Kumar.
Dr Mahadevan has long held a reputation in Coimbatore for not only treating patients almost for free, but also for being one of the first doctors in the district to treat and care for persons living with HIV.
As Meenakshi, President of the HIV Ullor Nala Sangam, an organisation working for the welfare of HIV-positive persons, narrates, Dr Mahadevan’s arrival in Coimbatore in the early 1990s was a highly fortunate occurrence at a time when HIV-positive persons faced widespread ostracism in society, and even in hospitals.
This set the doctor wondering about why many persons diagnosed with HIV took the extreme step. The diseases that afflict an HIV-positive person are no different than those that afflict any other person, he points out.
Not only did Dr Mahadevan spend his career treating HIV-positive patients, but together with “Sneha for Positive Faces” of Nirmala College, he has been conducting medical camps and outreach programmes for hundreds of persons with HIV since 1999.
Beginning with just five persons in its first year, the programme now reaches out to 819 HIV-positive persons, he says. The programme even supports the education of many children of HIV-positive persons.
“Many people asked me, including doctors, ‘These HIV-positive children are going to die. Why are you wasting your money on their well-being?’” reveals Dr Mahadevan. He countered this question by pointing out that he had no guarantees about how long he or anyone else would live either.
Meenakshi narrates that among the many children that Dr Mahadevan helped educate, is a mechanical engineer who now lives in Bengaluru and supports many other HIV-positive children. “Because of Dr Mahadevan, that boy is now in a place in his life where he is able to support other children affected with HIV,” she says.
*Names changed to protect privacy
(This story was originally published in The News Minute)