

And it took a decade of focussed work that allowed her to fulfil her dream. When she started out, with a one-room clinic in Humla's Turpa village, there was no shortage of patients: mostly children with acute respiratory infections and gastric disorders.
In 1994, she set up the Nepal Trust to manage community activities in Humla. Today, there are four Nepal Trust clinics which are run jointly with the district administration. School girls from grade eight to ten volunteer in the clinics and learn early basic health tips. But finding educated girls is difficult in Humla, so the trust made a small compromise-in their Limi clinic, a five-day walk from Simikot, they also train school boys.
"If I'd had somebody to guide me, I would have studied public health," says this mother-of-two of her only regret. Babita is now looking forward to handing over her clinics to the volunteers she has trained. There is one nagging worry: the insurgency has already pushed back the trust's programme of expansion by a year. But she's not deterred. "All you need is a sense of purpose and commitment," she tells us. "The rest will follow."