Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Show zero tolerance for deaths in State hospitals

To avoid another Gorakhpurl­ike tragedy, Yogi Adityanath must ask for regular data collection and medical audits

- SHAILAJA CHANDRA Shailaja Chandra is former chief secretary, Delhi The views expressed are personal

The deaths of more than threescore children at the BRD Medical College Hospital in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh has horrified people across India. Not because other tragedies are less disturbing — but because children’s vulnerabil­ity calls for the highest standards of protection. Within that healthcare tops the list.

The BRD hospital is a tertiary level public health facility. It is said to be the only facility with wherewitha­l to treat encephalit­is within a 300 km stretch. Given all this one would have expected the highest levels of emergency preparedne­ss and response. Instead, so many defenceles­s children had to die. Why?

Because a concern about healthcare does not bring active public endorsemen­t, the way investment in infrastruc­ture does. If a handful of hospital deaths are treated as normal, the administra­tion becomes careless.

No chief minister or health minister, least of all in a state the size of UP, can possibly keep track of trends, warning signals, shortages of manpower, equipment; which is why they must administer by exception. This calls for data management to take stock of warning signals and to respond to those.

The emergency services at BRD were une- quipped to handle the crises. If they succumbed because of mismanagem­ent of oxygen supply, it was atrocious; and, if it was because of delayed payments, it cannot be dismissed by holding one or two responsibl­e.

Why weren’t there checklists for oxygen supply as a top commodity in a hospital’s inventory? A medical college hospital should have performed better — not worse.

Indeed it is paradoxica­l that the prices of tomatoes or onions can bring government­s to their knees but not so the deaths of defenceles­s children. A lesson will only be learnt if the chief minister shows zero tolerance for needless mortality in government hospitals. He must direct district hospitals and medical colleges to publish monthly data on in-patient admissions and look at monthly reports of mortality trends by hospital-related causes and share this data publicly. Only systemic changes will work; but for that continuous data collection and medical audits are a must.

This Independen­ce Day one would like to hear the PM and all CM’s commit themselves to giving top priority to public health and hospital management. Through a commitment that hospital data of mortality would be declared by all district hospitals and uploaded every month along with the outcome of reviews conducted by third party peer review committees. If the CM shows no lenience towards medical or administra­tive apathy by simply glancing through the exception reports and peer reviews of hospital deaths, things could still change dramatical­ly.

 ?? AP ?? Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath with Union health minister JP Nadda in Gorakhpur, August 13
AP Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath with Union health minister JP Nadda in Gorakhpur, August 13
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