Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

20 years on, AIIMS trauma centre to get rooftop helipad

- Rhythma Kaul

NEWDELHI: The All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Trauma Centre in New Delhi is in the final stages of getting a rooftop helipad — after a decade-long wait — which will make it the country’s first government hospital to possess a facility to receive accident victims and critically ill patients airlifted to the institutio­n.

The applicatio­n for clearance to get the helipad operationa­l by the start of next year is ready and will be sent to the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), the aviation regulator, within a month for clearance.

“The hospital is working on DGCA clearances for the helipad,” confirmed Dr Aarti Vij, chairperso­n, media and protocol division, AIIMS.

Once the helipad gets operationa­l, critical patients will be airlifted from accident sites on highways and bordering states and hard-to-reach regions, and then, depending on the response, the services will be expanded to within the city. Patients can also be quickly moved to AIIMS through the undergroun­d tunnel beneath Aurobindo Marg that connects AIIMS Trauma Centre to the main campus in East Ansari Nagar. “DGCA in earlier inspection­s had some issues, but now the infrastruc­ture is complete as per DGCA norms. Currently, the final leg of preparatio­ns is being taken care of to go to DGCA for approvals, which is identifyin­g a nodal person with technical knowhow to facilitate patient transfers as per standard operating procedure.”

AIIMS Trauma Centre treats around 150-200 accident and injury cases in a day, of which 10% patients need immediate hospital admission. Till now, the five to six patients who are annually airlifted to or from AIIMS for treatment – for instance, the Unnao rape survivor in July this year – land at Delhi airport, from where they are moved to the hospital in an ambulance.

Private hospitals such as Apollo and Medanta regularly airlift patients, and the cost is approximat­ely ~1 lakh per flying hour. “We bring around 50-55 patients in a month and for domestic patients it can cost anywhere between ~4 lakh to ~6 lakh,” said Dr Yatin Mehta, chairman, institute of critical care & anaesthesi­ology, Medanta. Dr Anupam Sibal, group medical director, says, “We transfer about 100 patients a year, domestic and internatio­nal both. It’s mostly the plane and fuel cost that patients have to bear.”

Completed in 2007, the original AIIMS Trauma Centre blueprint had plans for a helipad at the top of the Ward Tower building.

The process to get the helipad operationa­l began in 2009, but there were several administra­tive hurdles. In 2015, the site for the elevated helipad was moved to the nine-storey Vishram Sadan, a dorm for the patients and their families, after a DGCA site inspection report earlier had said that the helipad needed to be on top of the tallest building.

THE (HELIPAD) SITE WAS RELOCATED TO THE NEWLY CONSTRUCTE­D VISHRAM SADAN THAT ALSO HAS A LIFT WHICH IS ESSENTIAL TO TRANSPORT PATIENTS

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