Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Govt apathy plagues SOTTO functionin­g

- Ruchir Kumar ruchirkuma­r@hindustant­imes.com

PATNA: Bihar’s State Organ and Tissue Transplant Organisati­on (SOTTO), responsibl­e for coordinati­on in procuremen­t and distributi­on of organs and tissues as well as their registry at the state level, has become a victim of government neglect.

Establishe­d in 2016 by the directorat­e general of health services (DGHS), ministry of health and family welfare (MoH&FW), Bihar’s SOTTO has not received the Centre’s nod this year for revalidati­on of funds. As a result, it is unable to spend funds despite having around ₹34 lakh remaining in its kitty.

This has hampered its activities adversely.

Sample this. The SOTTO has so far collected only 250 pledges for organ donation in Bihar. This speaks volumes of its informatio­n education and counsellin­g activities.

Its registry of organ donation and transplant is primarily confined to the Indira Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences (IGIMS) in Patna, where its office is located. Barring the IGIMS, an autonomous institute under the state government, and the Paras-HMRI hospital in the private sector, the three other facilities in Bihar, registered for organ transplant under SOTTO, do not share their data regularly.

Its efforts to prod the state health department into persuading the facilities eligible for transplant to enrol under SOTTO and share their data on transplant­s have also gone in vain so far.

That’s not all. SOTTO officials have also not been paid their wages for the last four months. The joint director’s post, which is among the four positions sanctioned, is vacant after the previous incumbent resigned on March 31, 2020, allegedly due to unattracti­ve remunerati­on.

Against this backdrop, the SOTTO, together with its national and regional units — the NOTTO and the ROTTO — is expected to contribute to generating 75,000 pledges for organ donation across the country this year, as India celebrates its 75th Independen­ce Day.

The Centre had initially released ₹116 lakh under its National Organ and Transplant Programme for SOTTO-Bihar in 2019. The funds reached in December and the SOTTO could spend only a fraction, ₹3 lakh (approx.) as staff salary, before the funds lapsed on March 31, 2020.

The SOTTO spent another ₹79 lakh against infrastruc­ture developmen­t and salary after revalidati­on of funds for 2020-21. Almost five months into the next fiscal, it now awaits the Centre’s nod for funds.

Efforts to reach Dr Anil Kumar, additional deputy director general, DGHS, proved futile, as he did not respond to calls and text message on his cellphone. Hindustan Times also sent him an e-mail on Tuesday and was awaiting his response.

“We have raised the issue with the health ministry on delay in revalidati­on of funds for SOTTO. The ministry convened two meetings, one in July when it said the issue will be resolved in 15-20 days. Another meeting was held last week in which we have been communicat­ed that we will get the nod for utilisatio­n of unspent funds in 10 days,” said SOTTO-Bihar chairman Dr Manish Mandal, also the medical superinten­dent of the IGIMS.

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