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Families told to buy costly meds, medical files have no records

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SHWETA TRIPATHI

Rattled by recent cases of doctors being arrested for hoarding life-saving COVID-19 medicines to sell them in black market, patients’ kin said they were not sure whether some of the costly medicines prescribed were actually being administer­ed, as many private hospitals do not provide any record of treatment.

G Kamini, whose father was admitted to a private hospital in Chennai, said she had to pay Rs 25,000 to buy four vials of Remdesivir. Even two days after the medicine was handed over to the hospital staff, she is yet to hear of any improvemen­t in her father’s condition nor is she allowed to visit him due to fear of catching the infection.

“We don’t know whether the medicine was administer­ed and if it is working. I hear these drugs are effective only in some cases. Then why is everyone running behind it,” Kamini asked.

Similarly, Raghunath paid more than Rs 1 lakh for Tocilizuma­b. However, the family wonder if the drug was of any use, as the patient died two days later. What makes the family suspicious about the treatment protocol is that they have not receive case sheets and other treatment details.

However, private hospitals say case sheet is given only upon discharge, and that patients are not informed about day-to-day treatment procedures as per protocol. “In case of death, the family members usually don’t take case sheets and treatment details,” said a person from a private hospital in Vadapalani.

Considerin­g the increasing demand and resultant black marketing of Tocilizuma­b, its distributi­on to private hospitals would be channelled only through government authoritie­s, said KP Raja, one of the Cipla distributo­rs in Chennai. “The drugs have been given to government authoritie­s from distributo­rs,” he said.

Meanwhile, the drug control officials said the Health Department was identifyin­g locations like Sowcarpet, Medavakkam and Tambaram, where the drugs are suspected to be hoarded. Surprise inspection­s were being undertaken and those hoarding the drugs were being arrested, officials said.

“Patients should directly approach the Drug Controller of India for Tocilizuma­b, while Remdesivir should be obtained from counters at Tamil Nadu Medical Services Corporatio­n or Government Kilpauk Medical College Hospital,” said Dr K Sivabalan, State Drug Controller.

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