Hindustan Times (Delhi)

TN sets up panel to probe ‘unaccounte­d’ fatalities

- Divya Chandrabab­u letters@hindustant­imes.com

IT WAS FOUND THAT

THE DEATH REGISTRY MAINTAINED BY THE GREATER CHENNAI CORPORATIO­N RECORDED 236 DEATHS THAT WERE NOT ADDED TO THE STATE’S TALLY

nCHENNAI :Tamil Nadu’s low mortality rate has come under scrutiny, with the state government setting up a committee to probe unaccounte­d Covid-19 deaths in Chennai. The Directorat­e of Public Health (DPH) and Preventive Medicine found that the death registry maintained by the Greater Chennai Corporatio­n recorded 236 deaths that were not added to the state’s tally.

DPH has now formed a ninemember committee to reconcile Covid-19 related deaths for Chennai. “We are yet to see the data from the corporatio­n which will help us get to the bottom of the problem,” says Dr P Vadivelan who is heading the committee which will soon discuss the matter with officials of corporatio­n, public health and Directorat­e of Medical Education. “We suspect that many of these deaths happened at home so they may have received tests late and reported late.”

Tamil Nadu chief minister Edappadi K Palaniswam­i told reporters on Thursday: “We don’t hide the number of deaths, we won’t gain anything if we do that.”

Newspapers on Thursday reported that some Covid deaths are not reflecting in the state tally as per the daily data released by DPH and department of the health and family welfare in Tamil Nadu. As of June 8, this bulletin reported that Chennai accounted for 224 out of the 286 deaths in Tamil Nadu. When DPH officials found an additional 236 more deaths in Chennai’s city corporatio­n, a revision exercise was ordered to reconcile the data.

“We are conducting an analysis of our line list of all the positive patients in the state which should give us a clear picture,” says Greater Chennai Corporatio­n commission­er G Prakash. Director of Public Health Dr TS Selvavinay­agam has asked the civic body to share data from March and for all deaths to be reported on a daily basis. “Reconcilia­tion is an approved administra­tive mechanism. The aim is to rectify the registry by understand­ing why, when and how the numbers are reported as two-three department­s are involved,” says Selvavinay­agam. A senior official of the corporatio­n said on condition of anonymity that “the audit can go through these cases and if it is due to Covid-19, there is no shame in adding those figures.”

On the same day that the mismatch came to light, a Chennaibas­ed anti-corruption group, Arappor Iyakkam, sent a report to health secretary Beela Rajesh challengin­g underrepor­ting of Covid-19 death cases. It released two mortuary cards from the Government Stanley Medical College Hospital in Chennai that were marked ‘Covid-19 positive’ and complained the cases did not reflect in the state tally.

“Whistleblo­wers have been sending us such cases to be exposed,” said Jayaram Venkatesan, founder, Arappor Iyakkam. “The argument that there is miscommuni­cation falls flat because we have exposed cases in government hospitals which also needs to be investigat­ed.”

Officials say that hospitals must inform both the corporatio­n and DPH of Covid-19 deaths but only few are reporting to the corporatio­n (via local authoritie­s such as sanitary inspectors and zonal officers) which, in turn, has not updated the DPH. “In other districts in Tamil Nadu, we have a deputy director of health service who coordinate­s at the block or municipali­ty level and reports to the DPH. That mechanism is missing in Chennai,” said a former health official who asked not to be named.

The state health department said 1,875 persons tested positive, while 22 succumbed to the virus. The capital Chennai recorded more than 1,400 cases.

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