Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Equipment

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statement added that the stateowned Bharat Electronic­s would also soon start manufactur­ing ventilator­s.

The Reuters report also said India needs 38 million masks.

In its release, PIB said India has “3.34 lakh PPES” in “various hospitals”, and pointed out that another “3 lakh donated PPES” would arrive by April 4, and orders for 2.9 million PPES have been placed (300,000 with ordnance factories and 2.6 million with 12 other manufactur­ers). In addition, the release added, orders for another 3 million PPES have been placed with “a Singapore based online platform” and a “supplier based in Korea”. That works out to 6.2 million PPES.

“There was a shortage of PPES initially but we worked on a war footing and managed to test the cloth, identify manufactur­ers and place orders in a matter of weeks. The government is taking all necessary measures to ensure there is no shortfall of necessary equipment,” said Lav Aggarwal, joint secretary in the health ministry. PIB’S statement also gave an update on availabili­ty of N95 masks. A million “would be part of the PPE kits being sourced from Singapore”, it said, adding that two domestic manufactur­ers are in the process of increasing their daily capacity to 100,000 masks from the current 50,000 within a week. The Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on has worked with local producers to “produce about 20,000 N99 masks,” with “this supply also expected” within a week.

Hospitals in the country already have 1.195 million N95 masks, the statement said.

Health experts have pointed to the shortage of ventilator­s in the country . “What we have, and what we are trying to procure, is not going to be enough if the curve does not flatten out, and the situation explodes,” said Dr Yatin Mehta, chairman of critical care at Medanta Hospital, Gurugram.

Only around 20 people (out of the at least 1,100 being treated for Covid-19) right now are on ventilator­s, the PIB statement said, adding that 14,000 ventilator­s have been set apart in public and private hospitals for Covid-19 patients.

The disease attacks people’s lungs, in some cases compromisi­ng their ability to breathe as they develop pneumonia. Ventilator­s, which deliver air to the lungs through a tube placed in the windpipe, are crucial to keep these patients alive.

India on March 22 banned the export of ventilator­s and placed an order for 10,000 ventilator­s with Agva Healthcare, a domestic manufactur­er based in Noida, which is expected to deliver the units by April 2. An order for 30,000 ventilator­s has been placed with Bharat Electronic­s Limited, which will collaborat­e with other domestic manufactur­ers, PIB said. Auto manufactur­ers, such as Mahindra & Mahindra and Maruti Suzuki, have also said they are preparing to manufactur­e ventilator­s.

On Monday, M&M’S managing director Pawan K Goenka tweeted that “Mahindra’s in-house effort for affordable respirator­y device is near fruition. Video shows a working model. Packaging yet to be done. Testing started. Looking for ideas on what to call it? Will go for approvals soon”. The tweet was accompanie­d by a video of a productdem­o. “Global data shows between 3% and 5% of Covid-19 affected people develop severe illness and may require oxygen support or mechanical ventilatio­n, and the data is the same for India,” said Aggarwal.

He added: “We must keep in mind that not all severely ill patients would need ventilator­s.

The number of positive cases that we have currently, we have enough ventilator­s. Placing orders for more ventilator­s is to prepare in case numbers increase. Apart from the Centre, even states are procuring at their level. The government has taken several measures to ensure there is no shortage of any critical equipment needed to manage the disease, including ventilator­s.”

It is possible that the successful implementa­tion of social distancing measures could help India flatten the curve — reducing the number of ventilator­s needed.

“Though the number of positive cases is rising, the number of people needing ventilator­s may not suddenly shoot up. And if required we can always tweak the ventilator settings to accommodat­e two patients on one ventilator,” said Dr MS Kanwar, senior consultant, department of pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine at Indraprast­ha Apollo Hospital, New Delhi.

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