Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Drop in BRD deaths this year: Govt data

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LUCKNOW: Data on deaths of children compiled by the Uttar Pradesh government show a sharp drop in casualty figures in the BRD Medical College in Gorakhpur this year compared to those in the last three years.

According to the data compiled by the UP health department, made available to PTI, 1,317 children had died in the state-run facility so far this year.

The number of deaths stood at 5,850 in 2014, 6,917 in 2015 and 6,121 in 2016, the department data said.

The data showed the average daily deaths translatin­g to 16 in 2014, 19 in 2015 and 17 in 2016 -- as against 5.3 a day till August this year.

“This (death figure) is much lower than that in the previous years,” health minister Sidharth Nath Singh said.

Congress spokespers­on Ashok Singh had charged the Uttar Pradesh government with failing to check the deaths in the BRD medical college.

“The toll is alarmingly high and the government has failed to check the casualties,” he had said.

Countering him, the health minister said “good work” was being done by the Yogi Adityanath government in the state.

“The reason (for the fall in death figures) is the good work done in the last five months. We have strengthen­ed encephalit­is treatment centres and taken various effective measures to check the dreaded disease so that more patients are treated at community health centre levels and do not just rush to the BRD medical college,” Singh told PTI.

According to BRD medical college records, 152 children died in January this year, 122 in February, 159 in March, 123 in April, 139 in May, 137 in June, 128 in July and 325 in August.

Taking into account 32 deaths in the first two days of September, the total came to 1,317.

The numbers of deaths of children in August in 2016, 2015 and 2014 were 587, 668 and 567 respective­ly, as against 324 last month, according to the data.

A total of 51,018 children were admitted to the hospital in 2014, 61,295 in 2015 and 60,891 in 2016, according to the data put together by the department and its partner, PATH Foundation, a nonprofit organisati­on. There were no admission figures for this year.

Health department sources said till August 31, admissions in district hospitals and encephalit­is treatment centres had gone up to 62 per cent as compared to BRD hospital.

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