Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Capital catching up to handle inevitable spike

Delhi is not testing enough people to have the complete picture of the spread of the disease. But, on the other hand, it is ramping up its hospital infrastruc­ture to treat patients

- Anonna Dutt anonna.dutt@htlive.com

nNEW DELHI: Across ministries in the Delhi government, in hospitals treating Covid-19 patients, and among health experts closely tracking the pandemic and its spread, there is a degree of unanimity — Delhi is about to see a rise in cases.

But if this is the hypothesis, is Delhi ready?

Interviews with five key officials across the city government and in hospitals presents a mixed picture.

Delhi is not testing enough people to have a full sense of the spread of the disease. It is also suffering from a shortage of personal protective equipment (PPES), which has put health care workers in the line of danger.

But it is ramping up its hospital infrastruc­ture to treat Covid-19 patients, putting in place isolation facilities, and maintainin­g a reserve of ventilator­s for severe cases. This means, experts advising the government suggest, that if there are 100 new cases every day, Delhi will be able to handle it.

THE NUMBERS

As of Thursday evening, 219 people have tested positive in the city and four have died.

Of the 219, 108 cases are among people from the Nizamuddin Markaz. The numbers are likely to rise further, with reports of most of the 536 people in hospital isolation yet to come back.

The number of infected cases could also rise because all those who have flown in from internatio­nal destinatio­ns are not yet out of the danger zone. It could rise because of the huge congregati­ons of migrant workers Delhi saw in the aftermath of the announceme­nt of the lockdown. It could rise because those who are at the forefront of battling the disease — the health workers — themselves are getting infected. It could rise because one person — any one person — may emerge as a “super spreader”. Or it could rise just because India may be at the stage of community transmissi­on — where the source of the infection cannot be located — despite the government emphasisin­g that this is not yet the case.

The government believes it is ready to deal with this spike — but up to a point.

S K Sarin, director of the Institute of Liberty and Biliary Science, is the head of a medical committee which is advising chief minister Arvind Kejriwal on Covid-19. In its report, the committee has said that Delhi is prepared to deal with 100 cases daily.

“The committee will prepare a blueprint of what we have and what is needed in the next three to four days.,” said Sarin.

THE PPE CHALLENGE

At the moment, Delhi’s biggest challenge is a shortage of PPES, which are essential to prevent infection among the medical staff who interact with Covid-19 patients. Eight doctors in the city have already got infected with the virus, and there are reports of medical staff in hospitals contemplat­ing resignatio­ns.

When cases surge, the shortage will create a deeper crisis. “We are ensuring that the PPE get used rationally — everybody who enters the ward, including the sanitation staff, has to put on the protective gear. We have enough at the moment, but there can be a scarcity in the future ,” said a doctor from AIIMS.

The Delhi CM on Wednesday appealed to the Centre to ensure the availabili­ty of more PPES, which are in short supply.

“I want to assure the doctors that the government is with you. I am personally pursuing the supply of sufficient PPE for the doctors. I am in touch with suppliers, manufactur­ers. I have also requested industrial­ists to donate PPES for the doctors, instead of the donation in the CM relief fund,” Kejriwal said.

Sarin — the head of the medical committee — suggested that people with businesses overseas should donate PPE kits to manage the disease. “Many people are donating food to the poor, but the government is already making arrangemen­ts for that. What we really need are PPE kits and I would suggest all those who have businesses overseas buy the kits there and ship it to government here,” said Sarin.

HOSPITAL INFRA

On the positive side of planning, however, the government has ramped up its health infrastruc­ture dedicated to Covid-19 cases.

It has declared five of its tertiary care hospitals — Lok Nayak hospital, Rajiv Gandhi Superspeci­ality hospital, Baba Saheb Ambedkar hospital, Deen Dayal Upadhyay hospital, and Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital — as dedicated Covid-19 facilities. This will earmark at least 5,850 beds for the management of Covid-19 patients. These hospitals are working on moving their noncovid-19 patients to secluded building or other facilities. The AIIMS trauma centre, with 250 beds and 100 ventilator­s, has also been dedicated for the treatment of Covid patients. All the trauma cases are now being redirected to the main AIIMS campus.

The Rajiv Gandhi Super Speciality hospital in Tahirpur already has 400 beds for Covid-19 patients and is adding another 100 in the next few days. There are 25 ventilator­s in the hospital. “We had stopped our elective procedure and started dischargin­g people who were getting better. Now, we have very few non-covid-19 cases in the hospital and they will be discharged soon too,” said an official.

The Lok Nayak hospital has shifted its out-patient clinics to a separate orthopaedi­cs block, the medical emergency facilities to a separate new emergency block, and surgical emergency facilities to its Sushruta Trauma Centre in Civil Lines.

“The hospital has dedicated 35 ventilator­s for Covid-19 patients currently; we need ventilator­s for our emergency cases too. There are about 88 ventilator­s at GB Pant hospital that can also be used later on when the numbers go up,” said Dr JC Passey, medical director of the Lok Nayak campus.

Countries across the world, where cases have spiked, have struggled with providing ventilator­s for those with severe symptoms. But the medical committee advising the government believes that there are enough ventilator­s in the city for now.

TESTING CAPABILITY

But even if the infrastruc­ture for a limited number of cases is slowly being put in place, there remains uncertaint­y over how many people in the city actually have the infection — and that is because of the low rates of testing.

Kejriwal has requested the Centre for more test kits.

There is also a lag of two to three days in receiving reports.

“Right now we are testing about 4,000 to 5,000 people a day across the country. This is a very small number. My feeling is that Delhi alone should test about 3,000 people a day. Now that we have kits that can be manufactur­ed indigenous­ly, we should be more liberal,” said Sarin.

He added, somewhat ominously, “I think, by nature’s design, community transmissi­on must have started — I would be very surprised if it hasn’t.”

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 ?? AMAL KS/HT PHOTO ?? A security guard checks the temperatur­e of a customer in front of a n store in Saket on Thursday . The city has so far witnessed 219 Covid-19 positive cases and four deaths.
AMAL KS/HT PHOTO A security guard checks the temperatur­e of a customer in front of a n store in Saket on Thursday . The city has so far witnessed 219 Covid-19 positive cases and four deaths.

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