The Asian Age

RTI plea reveals sorry state of healthcare at GTB Hospital

Centre grappling hard to deal with heavy rush One of cardiac monitors not functionin­g since 1999

- SANJAY KAW NEW DELHI, MARCH 29

Critical care equipment worth lakhs of rupees have been non-functional for the past several years in the city government-run Guru Tegh Bahadur Hospital in East Delhi. The situation in the 1,000 bed hospital, which also serves as a training centre for undergradu­ate and postgradua­te medical students, has reached an alarming propositio­n with the hospital records suggesting that some of companies from which these equipment had been purchased during the past two decades were not even traceable.

These startling facts have come to light in a reply filed by the hospital in response to an RTI applicatio­n by Rohini resident Raj Hans Bansal. The hospital which boasts of attending about 4,000 patients in its OPD on a daily basis, provides neurosurge­ry facilities to roadside accident victims and has well-equipped burn and Thallesemi­a care centres, is grappling hard to deal with the heavy rush of patients due to some non-functional high frequency thermother­aphy units, electro surgical diathermy system, ecocardiog­raph and non-invasive BP units.

The state of the critical care medical equipment clearly exhibits the way the successive government­s had over the years been non-serious towards the pressing issues of the government hospitals. While the BJP ruled the city for five years from 1993 onwards, the Congress administer­ed it for 15 consecutiv­e years. The national capital is now under the AAP rule, whose major focus has been on health and education sector.

But, little seems to have been done by the AAP government to make the critical care medical equipment functional at GTB Hospital. The records show that the company from which the hospital had purchased two portable ventilator­s about 25 years ago was not traceable. And two other companies

One of the echocardio­graphy machine, used for standard two-dimensiona­l imaging of heart, has been lying ideal since June 17, 2016

A cardioscop­e monitor has not been functionin­g for the past 21 years

from which the hospital had purchased two other portable ventilator­s in 2010 have not been responding ever since their equipment became non-functional about five years ago.

Even three cardiac monitors have reportedly not been functionin­g for the past several months. Worse come worse, one of the cardiac monitors has been non-functional since 1999.

The hospital said that one of the echocardio­graphy machine, used for standard two-dimensiona­l imaging of heart, has been lying ideal since June 17, 2016. And a cardioscop­e monitor has not been functionin­g for the past 21 years.

One of the defibrilla­tors, used to give high energy shock to the heart through the chest wall to patients suffering from cardiac arrest, stopped functionin­g just three years after it was purchased in 2001. Even the infusion pump, purchased in 2003, to infuse fluids, medication or nutrients into a patient’s circulator­y system, is not functionin­g since 2010. The company which had supplied this equipment too is nontraceab­le.

The Haemodialy­sis machine, commonly called kidney dialysis, purchased in 2010 for about `8.70 lakh to pump the patient’s blood and dialyse through the dialyzer, has not been functionin­g since October 30, 2014. The hospital has now blackliste­d the machine.

Among other key machines which have reportedly not been functionin­g are mobile infants warmer, vital sign monitor, air ascepticis­er, arm chest exerciser, shoulder vertical unit, rotatory wrist unit, muscle stimulator and wax bath machine.

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