Hindustan Times (Patiala)

With declining bed availabili­ty, fear looms over J&K hospitals

- Umar Sofi letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

ANANTNAG : As states across India witness a surge in Covid cases, the Jammu and Kashmir administra­tion has maintained that there is enough oxygen available in case of a potential health emergency in the Union Territory.

“No one shall die of oxygen unavailabi­lity here and there is absolutely no need for people to panic,” Rajan Prakash Thakur, the principal secretary, industries and commerce, said on April 20. However, on the ground, even records of the J&K government don’t seem to agree with the not-to-panic message.

With incrementa­l increase in Covid patient admissions to Jammu and Kashmir hospitals, the healthcare infrastruc­ture of the erstwhile state is still the same as it was six months earlier when the country was struggling with the first wave.

While the J&K government’s daily media bulletin claims to have 244 ICU beds available, a five-month-old similar media bulletin of November 21, 2020, shows 284 ICU beds being available, which is 40 more than what is available at present.

All this depicts that there has not been much of an addition in making more ICU beds available in the UT.

Rising cases, declining bed availabili­ty

Following the trend of the country, there has been a daily exponentia­l rise of cases from 991 on April 12 to 1,965 on April 22.

The rise in cases is, therefore, showing an impact on the limited bed availabili­ty and an analysis of the data provided by the government is alarming. A look at the inflow and bed occupancy at J&K hospitals shows a rapidly declining figure of bed availabili­ty in Kashmir. On April 17, the total available beds were 1,979 out of 2,620 Covid-dedicated beds, which means 75% of the beds were unoccupied. On April 22, this availabili­ty figure receded to 1,592. This time, the bed availabili­ty fell to 62.8%, meaning a 12.2% decrease in just five days. So, with a total of 387 beds getting occupied over five days, meaning more than 70 beds a day, at such continuing trend it would not take more than 20 to 23 days for the UT to run out of beds.

Increase beds on a war-footing

The president of the doctor’s associatio­n in Kashmir, Dr Suhail Naik, says. “We are still left with more than 60% beds but considerin­g the number of patients getting hospitalis­ed, the situation is critical. We got a boost in healthcare infrastruc­ture last year and it’s because of that alone that we are surviving such a rush. Considerin­g the situation today, it’s imperative for the UT administra­tion to increase beds. We are heading towards a catastroph­e and people are unaware of it,” Naik said, advocating an increase in oxygen bed availabili­ty on a warfooting. “Oxygen is the only drug of choice that Covid demands,” he said, adding that the administra­tion was lax on enforcing the protocol. “When the country was gasping for oxygen, the administra­tion was busy conducting tourist events instead of imposing the protocol,” he added.

 ??  ?? IAF airlifting machinery, including bio-safety cabinets, centrifuge­s and stabiliser­s, from Jammu for setting up additional testing facilities in the Union Territory of Ladakh.
IAF airlifting machinery, including bio-safety cabinets, centrifuge­s and stabiliser­s, from Jammu for setting up additional testing facilities in the Union Territory of Ladakh.

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