We will start these services (in future) through your donation.
The service of distributing free thin food to patients with tubes.
Many hospitalized patients are fed by doctors through tubes. These patients often suffer from problems in their throat, mouth, or internal organs, and are unable to eat on their own. Liquid food is crucial for such patients, as it provides strength and sustains life. Sadly, even in large government hospitals, poor patients coming from remote areas lack the resources to prepare their own liquid food.
Coming from impoverished areas, these patients and their relatives often subsist on daily wages. When they come to major city hospitals for treatment, the cost of accommodation, food, and treatment can be exorbitant. In such a situation, preparing meals specifically for intubated patients becomes virtually impossible. In light of this difficulty, a unique and humanitarian initiative will be launched: “Distributing free lean food to intubated patients.”
The purpose of this service is not just to provide food, but to help save the life of a needy person. Lean meals typically include porridge, rice water, semolina haleem, soup, milk, juice, or other liquid foods prepared as directed by a doctor. Lean meals will be prepared daily for patients with intubated systems in the hospital, free of charge. This food will be packaged in clean containers and delivered to the patients to prevent them from contracting any infections.
This initiative will involve setting up a small kitchen to prepare light and nutritious meals in a hygienic manner. These meals will include healthy items such as lentil water, oats, porridge, a light semolina mixture, or milk-based beverages. A few volunteers will work in this kitchen for a salary.
Sometimes, patients’ relatives try to buy lean food from outside, but it’s either not affordable or prohibitively expensive. If there were a free service that could provide food to patients with intubated devices at all times, it would be a huge relief.
This service will ease the burden not only on the patient but also on their relatives. They will have the peace of mind that the right food is arriving at the right time for their loved one. Doctors will also be able to expect such patients to recover sooner, as food is an essential part of treatment.
In conclusion, it can be said that providing free, lean food to a patient with a tube is not just an act of humanity or sympathy, but a duty of humanity. Those who participate in this noble cause not only help a patient but also ignite a new ray of hope in their lives. Such service creates an atmosphere of compassion, love, and humanity in society, and this is the hallmark of true humanity.
