Section: LIFE & LEISURE
Page: D8
Wednesday, November 27, 1996
HELPING HEAL A NATION INTERNET TO LINK SCHOOLS, STUDENTS IN ALBANY AND TULA
NORMAN KURLAND Special to the Times Union
President Boris Yeltsin's heart problems have focused American attention on
the dismal state of Russian health care. While Yeltsin did get his coronary
bypass, with substantial assistance from Americans, thousands of Russians
equally in need die each year because it is not available to them.
In Albany's Russian sister city, Tula, an estimated 400 people right now
should receive coronary bypasses, but hospitals lack the means to offer them.
Unavailability of advanced heart treatment is a dramatic symbol of the
problem, but ordinary day-to-day health care and disease prevention of the
kind that Americans take for granted are lacking in Tula.
Exacerbating the problem is a silent threat to the health of a large
portion of the population -- the radiation that rained down on much of the
former Soviet Union following the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl in 1986.
Chernobyl has scarred the lives of the people of Russia in many ways that
have not yet been assessed. Even after a decade, the radioactive isotope
cesium 137 is found in the soil and air. In some regions, the incidence of
thyroid cancer is many times greater than would otherwise be expected,
children are being born with severe thyroid deficiencies, and there is great
fear that genetic damage will be passed on to future generations.
Because of the lack of sophisticated diagnostic tools and the primitive
health information systems, the full extent of the damage still is not known.
To find a remedy for this situation is the goal of a new project of the
Albany-Tula Alliance.
Last year the head of Tula State University, Edward M. Sokolov, met here
with members of the Alliance and officials at the Albany Medical College to
discuss ways that people here could help.
``We have competent doctors, researchers, and teachers,'' Sokolov noted,
``but they lack access to new medical technologies, to procedures for
evaluating genetic damage, and to the wealth of health care and medical
information that is playing a crucial role in the advancement of American
medical practice. I have asked our American colleagues to help us close that
gap.''
In response to that request, the Alliance asked Dr. James Figge to go to
Tula while he was in Russia at a conference on genetics. Figge is an
endocrinologist at Albany Medical College who has evaluated thyroid cancer
patients in Russia and is studying the genetic basis of these cancers.
``I found that there is a lack of information about the extent of genetic
damage in the present population,'' Figge reported. ``Nor do we know how much
of that damage will cause health problems in the future. Much more research is
needed -- the kind of research that is being done at the Medical College.
``I also found,'' Figge added, ``that medical education in Tula is limited
and lacks access to advanced technologies. So, even if modern tools and
procedures could be made available, there would still be a severe training
problem.''
Sokolov sent Anatoli Kouznetsov and Nicolai Kachurin, specialists in
ecology and environmental engineering, to Albany to learn about the genetic
research and to explore means of gaining help in improving medical education
in Tula.
They have been working since September with Figge, under the auspices of
the Alliance and with support provided by the Special American Business
Internship Training (SABIT) program, mastering procedures for analyzing
genetic material which they expect to be of great value in assessing the
extent of genetic damage in Russia.
In addition to spending many hours in the laboratory, they have visited
academic and public health facilities throughout the Capital Region to explore
possibilities for a Tula-Albany partnership.
``It quickly became evident to us,'' Kouznetsov said, ``that the Internet
offers an exciting and powerful way to link our two communities.''
Kachurin added, ``We cannot afford to send large numbers of our faculty and
students here, but using the Internet we can achieve the benefits of your
medical education at a fraction of the cost of personnel exchanges and,
through the same system, accelerate the adoption of modern medical information
technologies.''
Their mentor and host has been Dr. Robert Chodos, professor of medicine and
radiology at the Medical Center and member of the Alliance. Chodos has made
several trips to Tula to explore solutions to medical and health problems,
including development of a health maintenance organization.
Ruslan Vorontsov and Yevgeny Belyayev, Tula University graduate teaching
fellows also here under Alliance auspices, have participated in the
discussions and assisted as interpreters. (pluggedin@tu, Nov. 6 )
``The Capital Region has advanced distance-learning capabilities and, among
its many health care centers, a rich array of resources that we are eager to
share with the Russians,'' Chodos said. ``The challenge now is to create
mechanisms to facilitate that sharing.''
To meet that challenge, Kouznetsov said, ``We are developing a proposal for
a joint Center for Medical and Information Technologies to be co-located in
Albany and Tula. We hope to have a concrete plan developed before we leave
Albany next month.''
Included in the proposal, Kachurin said, ``will be information about the
many options for distance education which we have learned about in our visits
to RPI, Hudson Valley Community College, the University at Albany, Regents
College, and, of course, Albany Medical College.''
Two key prerequisites for collaboration are access to the Internet and
availability of computers so that Tula faculty, students and health care
workers can connect with it.
At present, Tula -- and most universities outside of Moscow and St.
Petersburg -- lack the infrastructure for direct access to the Internet and
the World Wide Web. The Soros Fund, created by George Soros, a billionaire
Hungarian-American financier and philanthropist, has committed $100 million to
bring the Internet to such institutions. Tula University is to be part of that
effort. Kouznetsov and Kachurin are working on a proposal to receive the
funds.
The alternatives for Internet access are laying fiber optic or coaxial
cable from Moscow to Tula, a distance of some 120 miles, or using satellites
to bypass the need for land links. Funds from the Soros grant would be used in
part to assess the financial and technical factors needed to make a decision,
and in part to draw up detailed technical specifications and a budget for
funding by the government of Russia.
Even as arrangements are being worked on to bring the Internet to Tula,
there is a critical need for computers.
The Alliance is seeking to find a short-term solution to this problem by
asking local businesses, governments and individuals to contribute usable
computers. They must be capable of graphical access to the Net, and be in
working condition, or require minimal work to make them usable. Printers and
modems (minimum 14.4) also are being sought.
``While we need full-scale computers,'' Kouznetsov said, ``we are intrigued
by the possibility that new low-cost devices designed for access to the
Internet, so-called `network computers,' will make it possible for us to
provide Internet access to many more people than if we had to wait until we
could afford regular computers.''
Anyone with computers to offer or wanting more information about the
Alliance may contact Laura Chodos at 371-9243 or send her e-mail at
lbchodos@aol.com.
Said Charlotte Buchanan, chair of the Alliance, ``Our primary consideration
in all of these efforts is that we in the Capital Region can help improve the
quality of education and health care in Tula while benefiting from the warm
interpersonal relationships we have developed through working together.
Furthermore, anything we learn about how to alleviate the after effects of a
disaster like Chernobyl will be of inestimable value should anything like that
occur anywhere in the world.'' Norman Kurland, Ph.D., was founding executive
director of the Capital Region Information Service of New York. He may be
contacted at kurlandn@crisny.org
FACTS:About the Alliance The Albany-Tula Alliance began in 1991 when
communism collapsed and Russia was faced with the transition to free
enterprise and a democratic form of government. At that time, a
humanitarian effort in Albany resulted in collection of more than eight tons
of clothing, food and medical supplies. Transported to Russia by the U.S. Air
Force, the materials were welcome relief for many who were suddenly without
employment. Since then, the alliance has established strong educational,
cultural, medical and business programs between the two cities. Several
delegations of professional and business people from Tula have visited Albany
for meetings with counterparts and 10 businessmen and scientists spent several
months here.
New Search