Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Hosps have no beds, allege Chembur and Govandi residents

- Sagar Pillai Sagar.pillai@hindustant­imes.com

Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n’s (BMC) claims of setting up thousands of beds in its facilities, the situation on the ground highlights a cruel reality.

Many patients have been turned away by civic hospitals and some have even lost lives during their struggle to find a bed.

A family from Chembur said they visited five hospitals to get their kin admitted as she had clear symptoms of Covid-19, but no hospital agreed to admit her. Later, she succumbed to the infection. “I never felt so helpless. I was ready to put in all my money from savings, but no hospital was willing to admit her,” said Shyam Alhat, a resident of Gaikwad Nagar, Chembur.

He said, “My 62-year-old mother had a recurring fever since May 1 and we visited three municipal hospitals and two private hospitals. I stood in the queues for four to five hours in every hospital with my ailing mother and all of them just gave medicines and sent us home. She died at home after four days. She could have been saved,”

Meanwhile, BMC’S data states that the city has over 35,000 bed in its Covid Care Centre -2 (CCC-2) facilities and over 24,000 bed capacity in its CCC-1 facilities. While a CCC-2 is meant for quarantini­ng mild symptomati­c and asymptomat­ic Covid-19 positive patients, CCC1 is for high-risk contacts and those awaiting test results.

Apart from this, there are 475 ICU beds and nearly 4200 beds in dedicated Covid hospitals.

In another similar incident, a 38-year-old patient from Govandi could not find a bed for four days and was turned away from every BMC hospital he approached.

Deepak Parchapa, brother of the deceased, said, “My elder brother suddenly developed Covid symptoms and we rushed him to Rajawadi Hospital on May 3. The medical staff informed us that there were no beds. We went to Sion Hospital and then to Kasturba. There they asked us to visit Sir JJ Hospital. We moved from one hospital to the other for two days while my brother’s health condition worsened.”

Mayor Kishori Pednekar said, “Majority of the beds of Covid patients are full. However, we are continuous­ly scaling up the bed capacity. Mumbai Metropolit­an Region Developmen­t Authority (MMRDA) today handed over 1,200 bed facility set up at BKC. Also, an online dashboard for bed availabili­ty for public is being discussed and a proper management of beds will be executed in the coming days.”

Even as BMC claims to have set up various facilities and scaled up the total bed capacity, local representa­tives say that there is a lack of management in place to accommodat­e these patients in the hospital.

Abhijeet Samant, BJP corporator from Andheri, said, “Almost every day we come across cases where citizens are unable to find a bed for days. Unless we make calls to the ward office or hospital’s medical staff, the patient is not admitted.”

Samant added that the helpline where people can enquire for beds does not work at all.

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