BioVoice News July 2016 Issue 3 Volume 1 | Page 27

Credits: Wellcome Trust/DBT India Alliance wife, Uma who is from Bangalore and struggles to adjust in the new place and with Ajay’s embitterment; Kamala, a mother, whose baby is admitted in the PHC with untreatable sepsis infection; and Rahul, who doubles up as a seismologist and a budding standup comedian, enjoys cracking microbiology jokes. Their lives intersect and the play slowly brings out the many problems each of the characters is facing deftly touching upon various hard facts of human life, the medical practice in the country, science and medical myths, socioeconomic hues in India, and of course the big villain of this century, AMR. The play keeps reminding the audience about the imminent threat of AMR through lines such as, “money cannot buy you protection from infection”, “earlier, scientists used to say ‘don’t panic’ and now they are saying ‘you are not panicking enough’”. Ajay’s passionate monologue towards the end of the play to an audience of doctors, post the introduction of Chennai Declaration (a roadmap to tackle AMR), alluded to the relevance of the play’s title - the Vaidya’s Oatha Vedic oath taken by the physicians around 15 BC as a commitment towards the profession. If the oath is broken “the knowledge shall bear no fruit” – the failure to tackle antibioticresistant infections will be a failure of medical knowledge and practice with catastrophic consequences in India and worldwide. The play throughout maintained an effortless balance of staying true to the art of theatre and to the scientific and medical facts of the subject at hand. The Vaidya’s Oath is an important demonstration of how the theatre arts can be used effectively to convey science and promote awareness of public health issues in India and has hopefully set the stage for many such theatre-science collaborations in the future. BIOVOICENEWS.COM 27