Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Many care centres in capital lying vacant as most patients stay home

- Risha Chitlangia risha.chitlangia@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: At a Delhi government Covid Care Centre in Narela, one of the first such facilities in the Capital, close to 1,200 people are quarantine­d, but none of them are positive for the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19). These are, instead, people who have returned from abroad on flights under the Centre’s Vande Bharat repatriati­on mission.

“We have not got any Covid-19 positive patients since July 10. Till last month, we were getting 150-200 Covid-19 patients daily,” said Dr Ishrat Kafeel, the chief minister’s representa­tive at the 1,370 bed Narela facility.

A similar picture has persisted in some other such facilities across the national capital. Care Centres can house patients with mild symptoms who are unable to isolate in their homes. However, with a large number of patients in home isolation — 6,976 as on Sunday, and the number of new daily cases showing a downward trend, the occupancy at these centres has seen a steady fall. Of the 11,904 active cases (patients still infected with Covid-19) in the city on Sunday, only 853 (around 7%) are in these centres.

This has made the Delhi government rethink its use of these centres. Like Narela, other Covid Care facilities have very few positive cases admitted currently. Of the 18 state-run quarantine centres started by the Delhi government, at least seven have had no patients for weeks now. These include the YMCA Tourist hostel, Badarpur (specify), Birla Mandir Dharamshal­a, DDU Marg facility and PTS Dwarka. Two facilities in southeast Delhi that were turned Covid facilities have been returned to the Railways.

“Some of the facilities were used to keep members of Tablighi Jammat who were evacuated from Nizamuddin Markaz. Then when the number of cases increased, especially in densely populated areas such as Jahangirpu­ri, asymptomat­ic and those with mild symptoms are sent to these centres,” said a senior government official. Additional­ly, with the government opening two major Covid care centres — the 10,000-bed Sardar Patel centre in Chhatarpur and a 500-bed centre in the Commonweal­th Games village, there has been a steady decline in the number of Covid-19 positive cases being sent to these centres.

Admissions to the city’s care centres have been on an upward trend since June 2, when 648 positive patients were admitted to the various facilities, with the total number on that day hitting 1,370. The number peaked at 2,304 on July 17. However, the number has mostly dropped since then, falling to 1,522 as on July 24, then further to 904 the day after that.

Delhi government divisional commission­er Sanjeev Khirwar said, “We are recalibrat­ing our resources, especially at big facilities at Narela and Sultanpuri, for optimal utilisatio­n. We have some large facilities like the Sardar Patel Covid Care Centre, and we are sending new cases to these facilities. Wherever possible, we are shifting patients from other centres to these facilities.”

However, occupancy rates at the two flagship centres are quite low. Delhi director general of prisons Sandeep Goel confirmed that the prison department had written to the state government, requesting the Mandoli police complex be turned into a temporary prison.

 ?? SANCHIT KHANNA/HT PHOTO ?? An empty ward at the Covid-19 care centre in Patparganj, New Delhi, on Sunday.
SANCHIT KHANNA/HT PHOTO An empty ward at the Covid-19 care centre in Patparganj, New Delhi, on Sunday.

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