Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - HT Navi Mumbai Live

3rd city doctor dies of Covid; wife says took 5 hrs to get bed ›

- Rupsa Chakrabort­y rupsa.chakrabort­y@htlive.com

MUMBAI:A general physician (GP) from Chembur died of Covid-19 on Thursday. He is the third doctor to die of the infection in the city and the second from the M ward, which is one of the red zones in the city. The case has highlighte­d the urgent need for a policy that ensures the safety of doctors practising in containmen­t zones. His wife, who is also a doctor, said that when the GP was in serious need of hospitalis­ation, the couple received no help from the helpline run by the Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC).

On May 11, the GP, who ran a clinic in Chembur, developed a mild fever. He immediatel­y shut down his clinic. After a blood test indicated the presence of the virus that causes Covid-19, he sent his swab samples to test for Covid-19 on May 14.

By the afternoon of May 15, the results hadn’t come in, but the GP had developed weakness and his oxygen saturation was below 88%. Other doctor friends recommende­d hospitalis­ation. According to his wife, the couple struggled from 3pm to 8pm to get him admitted. The BMC-run helpline (1916) was of no help. “First, they said there was one bed in Nair Hospital. When I agreed to admit him there, another attendant informed us there was no bed. They couldn’t give us any bed in Mumbai,” said his wife.

The couple also inquired with private hospitals, but to no avail. Ultimately, another doctor arranged for a bed in SRV Hospital.

The next obstacle was finding an ambulance, which wasn’t immediatel­y available. “It was a horrible experience. Despite being a doctor, I never thought that I would face this situation. I had read about unavailabi­lity of beds in hospitals but until you experience it, you don’t understand that it is real,” said his wife.

When they were finally able to admit the GP on May 15, he was rushed to the intensive care unit. He succumbed to the infection on Thursday, at around 7.30pm.

His wife remembered how he had insisted on keeping his clinic open as long as it was safe to do so. “He would say, ‘It is our duty...we can’t increase the burden on the corporatio­n,” said his wife. “I would often tease him saying that because of him, I would get infected but never did I know that the same virus would kill my husband,” she said. He is survived by his wife and his mother, who have quarantine­d themselves at home, and a son who lives in the United States of America.

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