FrontLine

Dying young

- BY ILANGOVAN RAJASEKARA­N

COVID deaths of people below 60 and with no other illnesses, especially in Chennai, pose significan­t concern to the authoritie­s.

WHEN SHE CRIED IN AGONY INDICATING that her chest felt like exploding, the medical team that attended to her stood helpless. Though she was a Type I diabetes mellitus patient, doctors were optimistic that she would respond to the treatment. After all, she was in her teens. “But sadly, she collapsed and never recovered,” said a senior nurse who attended to the 17-year-old Chennai girl who became the 126th victim in Tamil Nadu government’s burgeoning COVID-19 list of the dead.

The girl died just under four hours of her admission to one of the leading government hospitals in Chennai on June 3. A note from the Health Department claimed that she died from “COVID-19 Pneumonia, Cardio Pulmonary Arrest, Acute Kidney Injury, Uncontroll­ed Hyperglyca­emia, Left Pyelonephr­itis and Diabetic Ketoacidos­is”. On the same day a 25-year-old woman from Krishnagir­i district died of respirator­y failure and asthma. Another person to die of COVID complicati­on was a 33-year-old mother soon after childbirth. Another 27-year-old woman in Chennai died of the infection on April 27.

A large number of the people who died had co-morbiditie­s such as diabetics, hypertensi­on, heart and kidney ailments, lung diseases, cancer and, predominan­tly, respirator­y failures and sepsis shock. Two senior private medical practition­ers, two senior nurses and a laboratory technician, too, succumbed to the infection. J. Anbazhagan of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam became the first sitting MLA to die of COVID in the country. The list of the dead is growing long and the virus also seems to be breaking the barrier of age.

Front-line workers and health care personnel are worried about the increasing death rate, especially in the 30-60 age group, although the fact that a few over 90 years of age have recovered offers some solace. From April 29, the day the State Health Department started issuing daily bulletins on COVID deaths, to June 13, as many as 25 patients who lost their lives were in the 20-40 age group, 127 were in the 41-60 age group and 208 were above 61. On June 13 and 14 there were seven deaths each of people in the 40-60 age group who had no other illnesses.

A MOBILE

The situation forced Health Minister C. Vijayabask­ar to say that “the virus’ strain is intensely virulent today in the State”, suggesting that more patients were on emergency medicare and in need of oxygen. As the infection rate rose to nearly half a lakh in the third week of June, many people started thronging hospitals in what physicians call “clinically precarious condition” — most of them requiring nasal oxygen and ventilator­s. Correspond­ingly, the death rate also started going up, raising alarm.

“That many COVID patients need oxygenatio­n bares the seriousnes­s of the issue today,” said a senior infectious disease specialist. “Fortunatel­y, all major government hospitals have integrated oxygen plants to meet the massive emergency requiremen­ts of today. The Madurai Rajaji Government Medical College Hospital in Madurai has one such plant, besides adequate number of ventilator­s. We are well-equipped to meet any emergency,” said Dr J. Sangumani, the hospital’s dean. A major referral centre for the southern districts of the State, it recently saved a 54-year-old COVID patient with plasma therapy. The hospital has so far recorded three deaths of over 450 patients there.

A study on Covid-related

death

in Tamil Nadu

reveals many shocking details. The State recorded the first double-digit number in deaths, 12, on May 28. But June has seen an all-round spike in terms of infection and mortality. On June 5, 12 people died and the next day 19, among whom eight had no other serious illnesses. As on June 7, the death toll stood at 269; one of this was in the 10-19 age group, four in the 20-29 age group, 17 in the 30-39 age group, 31 in the 40-49 age group, 61 in the 50-59 age group, 71 in the 60-69 age group, 65 in the 70-79 age group, 17 in the 80-89 group and two above 90.

As on June 12 the State recorded 367 deaths, with a mortality rate of 0.90 per cent. Chennai city’s death toll that day was 294 with a 1.01 per cent death rate.

The death toll in the State touched a new single-day peak, 38, on June 14. Of these, seven persons had no co-morbid conditions.

Chennai’s infection rate vis-a-vis the State as on June 12 was 64 per cent. The number of infections in Chennai constitues two-thirds of the State’s total, though according to Health Secretary J. Radhakrish­nan, who is also the pandemic nodal officer for Chennai city, just 16 per cent of the city’s 37,000 streets, mainly in north Chennai, were infection-prone.

“Chennai remains a danger zone,” said a senior Corporatio­n health officer. The sheer density of population in the city is the critical reason why containmen­t has become difficult though the incompeten­ce of the Greater Chennai Corporatio­n cannot be overlooked.

Besides doctors and postgradua­te medics, 155 staff nurses in all government hospitals have been infected in the last two months. Two of them, Joan Mary Pricilla, 58, Grade I Nursing Superinten­dent of Madras Medical College Hospital, who continued her service even after her retirement in May, and Thangalaks­hmi, 54, of Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital, lost their lives in the line of duty.

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has asked the Tamil Nadu government to file a status report on how some 30 children of the government-run juvenile home in Chennai tested positive. The Chennai City police, following a complaint from the Chennai Corporatio­n, are on the lookout for 199 persons of north Chennai who tested positive and jumped quarantine.

As many as 734 pregnant women were admitted for COVID treatment in various government hospitals; of these 547 had recovered until June 12. Two died. “Many of these women were denied treatment by private doctors and hospitals they had been going to before they tested positive. They were referred to our hospital and they recovered, many of them despite having co-morbiditie­s,” said a senior physician of the Institute of Child Health and Hospital for Children at Egmore, Chennai. As on June 15, the hospital had 62 patients.

KEEPING MORTALITY RATE LOW

“Since the virus is erratic and not confined to any set pattern that epidemiolo­gists have perceived, we have decided to ‘indigenise’ our action plan, especially in Chennai,” said a city-based epidemiolo­gist. As a result, the focus has shifted to hospitals, disease management and recovery so that the State-level mortality rate of around 1 to 1.5 per cent can be maintained.

Reports claim that hospitals in Chennai have started overflowin­g with patients. The State government claims that 70,000 beds, apart from corona care centres, have been augmented to meet the rising demand. It says it has also undertaken a massive exercise to recruit doctors and paramedica­l staff, besides laboratory technician­s and health workers.

As the infection is on the rise in the State, especially in Chennai, pressure is mounting on the administra­tion. A batch of 23 nurses staged a brief sit-in on the premises of the Omandurar Government Super Speciality Hospital, where over 400 patients are being treated, complainin­g that they were stressed out because of long working hours. It prompted the government to recruit, temporaril­y, 2,400 health care profession­als and 1,000 postgradua­te doctors. Doctors and paramedica­l staff in the districts are also being brought to Chennai to bolster the manpower, and additional ambulances have been added to the fleet.

DISCREPANC­Y IN DEATH TOLL

Allegation­s are rife that the government is not maintainin­g transparen­cy while providing the statistics on Covid-19-related deaths. A visibly embarrasse­d Chief Minister, Edappadi K. Palaniswam­i, told the media in Salem that there was no need for the government to indulge in such activities. “How can one hide or cover up a death?” he asked. Media reports, however, claimed that in Chennai Corporatio­n limits around 398 people could have died of virus infection until June 4 as against the Health Department’s number of 166.

On June 7, opposition leader and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam president M.K. Stalin expressed his shock on Twitter over the discrepanc­ies and contradict­ory claims of various department­s on the death toll. One report claimed that the death of 20 persons in the Southern Railway Hospital at Perambur had not been included in the statistics provided by the Health Department. “Many deaths go unreported. While the intensity of infection is on the rise, the death rate remains surprising­ly low. The media have to insist on the state maintainin­g transparen­cy and providing correct statistics. From the beginning there has been a huge gap in the coordinati­on of various agencies that are dealing with the pandemic,” said a social activist.

As the issue emerged to be a hot topic, Health Secretary, Dr Beela Rajesh, who was transferre­d from the post on June 12, said that a committee had been formed to “reconcile” the statistics on deaths and admissions received from Chennai Corporatio­n and private hospitals with that of the Health Department.

“The task is clear and could hardly be more urgent. We have to save as many lives as possible,” said an influenza specialist. Meanwhile, with infection spreading, the government has declared a lockdown for 12 days from June 19 in Chennai and parts of Tiruvallur, Chengalpat­tu and Kancheepur­am districts. m

 ??  ?? testing centre in Chennai on June 16.
testing centre in Chennai on June 16.

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