Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Uncertaint­y over banks, infra after plasma therapy dropped

- Sadia Akhtar, Shiv Sunny and Anonna Dutt letters@hindustant­imes.com BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT ARCHIVE

NEW DELHI: With India dropping convalesce­nt plasma therapy from the list of treatments prescribed for Covid-19 patients, plasma banks, and other allied infrastruc­ture that has come up in the Capital over the course of the pandemic may be rendered useless, with initiative­s and registries connecting plasma donors with recipients now staring at an uncertain future.

In July last year, Delhi became the first state to start a plasma bank at the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences (ILBS) in Vasant Kunj. Two others at the Delhi government’s Lok Nayak and Guru Teg Bahadur hospitals were started later on.

Dr SK Sarin, the ILBS director, said the facility will continue to offer plasma for those who may need it.

“Now, it is at the discretion of the treating physician whether to prescribe it or not. If people want to donate plasma, they can continue to do so. But, we will not court donors,” he said.

Their plasma bank has issued over 2,500 units of plasma over the past month alone.

A doctor from Lok Nayak hospital confirmed that health care facilities can still choose to administer plasma therapy, despite it being dropped from clinical treatment guidelines.

“It is a guideline, and not an order. If we feel that a patient needs plasma therapy, we will still provide it. The number of patients where it is used will, however, be limited. This guideline will mainly ensure that plasma therapy is not misused. We have seen it has no benefit in patients who already have severe disease,” said the senior doctor from Lok Nayak hospital.

“The plasma bank still has several units left, and we will use it at least till there are stocks,” said the doctor.

Meanwhile, volunteers working on initiative­s were set up to ease access to plasma, have been left disappoint­ed by the revised guidelines.

Delhi-based businessma­n

Adwitiya Mal who initiated Dhoondh, a website dedicated to connecting patients with donors, said the project was put on hold on Tuesday. Mal said the message had been communicat­ed to the team of 60+ volunteers who were working on the initiative. He said that while the decision was somewhat disappoint­ing, the team would abide by the processes as mandated.

“I wish that some clarity emerged earlier. After nearly a year, this is slightly disappoint­ing. But we understand the situation. No one has dealt with this disease before and infrastruc­ture is also stretched beyond its capacity. We have put the project on hold and will abide by the protocols,” said Mal, who started the website last year following a tumultuous experience when he struggled to arrange plasma for a family member.

Bhavreen Kandhari, an activist, who has been involved in verifying leads and sharing credible medical informatio­n with people in distress, said, “A huge amount of resources were wasted, because everyone was chasing plasma. We knew it was unnecessar­y, but since the government had set up banks and doctors were prescribin­g it, the practice continued. It became a tool of exploitati­on ,with some people asking for as much as ₹5 lakh to donate plasma,” said Kandhari.

The Union government’s decision to drop plasma therapy from Covid-19 treatment has also left some donors upset. Some donated plasma multiple times over the past year and encouraged others as well. “When I heard the news, I felt a little bad and upset. It looks like all our sacrifice was in vain, although I would donate again if called upon to do it,” said Subhash Nagpal, a man who donated plasma four times after the passing away of his parents due to Covid-19 in quick succession. His first donation was on his birthday last year, a tribute to his parents who passed away just days before.

“Donors in a Whatsapp group I am a part of have been discussing just this since morning. We do not like this announceme­nt. It shows that either the research was lacking earlier, or it is lacking now,” said Nagpal, adding that he’ll continue to cherish his act neverthele­ss.

Yogesh Dhankar, an employee at RML Hospital, who donated plasma thrice, believes that new virus variants have prompted the government to rethink the guidelines.

“When I donated thrice last year, I know about at least two lives being saved. I’ll always live with the satisfacti­on of saving their lives, even if my plasma never had anything to do with it,” said Dhankar.

 ??  ?? People donating plasma at ILBS in Vasant Kunj last year.
People donating plasma at ILBS in Vasant Kunj last year.
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