Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Delay in corona victim’s last rites after confusion over procedure

Woman’s body kept at RML hospital lawns, Nigambodh Ghat for 14 hrs before cremation

- Soumya Pillai soumya.pillai@htlive.com n

NEWDELHI: For more than 14 hours after a 68-year-old woman from Janakpuri succumbed to coronaviru­s (Covid-19) infection, her body was kept at the lawns of the Ram Manohar Lohia (RML) Hospital and then in the premises of the Nigambodh Ghat before it could finally be cremated.

The woman’s family alleged that while hospital authoritie­s had advised “immediate cremation” of the body, after she died on Friday night, the body was only cremated at 12.30pm on Saturday. All this, because hospital authoritie­s, municipal agencies and staff at the crematoriu­m were not prepared to handle a coronaviru­s-infected body.

A senior official in the Delhi government said no standard operating procedure (SOP) has been issued by the Central government to states on how to handle a Covid-19 infected dead body. “The director general of health services (DGHS) has asked us to handle an infected dead body the same way we treat a living Covid-19 patient,” said the official on the condition of anonymity.

“She died at night, and hospital authoritie­s told us they will not keep the body there. Around 1am, her body was shifted from the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) to the ambulance. We were particular­ly asked by the doctors to either avail electric or CNG cremation facilities as the virus will remain active in the body even after death,” a relative of the woman said.

The relative said that from 1am, the ambulance carrying the body of the woman was parked in the lawns of the hospital, and it was quarantine­d using a rope tied around the vehicle to prevent any personal contact from patients and family members visiting the hospital. The ambulance was guarded by two guards wearing protective suits.

Around 10.30am, nearly 25 family members of the victim reached Nigambodh Ghat to cremate the body, which was accompanie­d by two hospital staff. However, they were stopped by crematoriu­m staff.

“They told us that they will not conduct the cremation because it was a government facility and they did not have any order from the government on whether the body of an infected person can be cremated, or how to go about the procedure,” the relative said.

He added, “We were asked to take the body to the Lodi Road facility, but even they refused to take the body.”

The woman’s body was finally cremated after a team from RML Hospital and the health department of the North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n arrived and took over the procedure. The body was handled by a team wearing personal protective equipment.

Ashok Rawat, health officer at the north corporatio­n, said the officials were also taken aback when the body was brought into the crematoriu­m on Saturday.

“Neither hospital authoritie­s nor family members informed us that the dead body was being brought to Nigambodh Ghat. We will send a request letter to RML hospital asking them to inform us in advance if the body of a coronaviru­s-infected person is being brought to our facilities,” Rawat said.

The 68-year-old was the first to die of coronaviru­s infection in Delhi, and the second in India. The woman’s 46-year-old son had tested positive for the virus on Wednesday.

Experts were divided on the possibilit­y of the virus spreading after the death of infected people.

Director, All India Institute of Medical Science (AIIMS), Randeep Guleria said there is no risk in cremating the infected bodies.

“Coronaviru­s cannot spread through dead bodies. It spreads from respirator­y secretion. Coughing is necessary for the spread of this virus,” he said.

Dr Hagai Levine, professor of epidemiolo­gy with expertise in outbreak investigat­ion, at the Hebrew University-hadassah School of Public Health in Jerusalem, also agreed that the risk of transmissi­on is next to nil after death. “The risk for droplet transmissi­on from a dead body is extremely low,” Levine said.

The chief medical officer of Gautam Budh Nagar, Dr Anurag Bhargava, however, said quarantine should be followed even while performing last rites.

(with inputs from Sanjeev K Jha)

 ?? BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT PHOTO ?? Visitors to Lajpat Nagar’s central Market wearing protective masks as a precaution against the spread n of the coronaviru­s disease.
BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT PHOTO Visitors to Lajpat Nagar’s central Market wearing protective masks as a precaution against the spread n of the coronaviru­s disease.

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