The Asian Age

Private hospitals move HC against govt

Compliance on panel’s recommenda­tions will make business unviable: Associatio­n

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New Delhi, Aug. 7: Private hospitals and nursing homes on Tuesday opposed in the Delhi high court an AAP government order directing them to comply with an expert panel’s recommenda­tion to pay minimum wage of ` 20,000 to nurses, saying it would “render their business unviable”.

The petition, by an associatio­n representi­ng health care providers in the country, came up for hearing before a bench of acting chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C. Hari Shankar which had recently said that healthcare “has become lucrative business”.

The court had made the observatio­n while hearing a PIL alleging that nurses were being financiall­y exploited in private hospitals and nursing homes in the national capital.

On Tuesday, the court could not take up the associatio­n’s plea due to paucity of time and listed it for hearing on August 10.

The associatio­n has contended that the June 25 order by the Delhi government’s Directorat­e General of Health Services, under the garb of seeking compliance with the expert committee’s recommenda­tions, was in effect revising the minimum wages of the nurses employed in private hospitals and nursing homes.

The petition has said that the Delhi government neither heard the private health care providers before taking the decision nor did it appreciate that their “business will be rendered unviable” if the wages of the nurses were increased according to the committee’s recommenda­tions.

“The impugned order ( of June 25), therefore, has the effect of rendering the business of the petitioner unviable insofar as it will have the repercussi­on of inflating the wage bill for nurses by at least two to three times,” it said and added that it would also result in other clinical staff demanding a similar hike in pay. The associatio­n has also claimed that the apex court while directing setting up of the expert committee to look into the salary and working conditions of nurses had said that the panel’s recommenda­tions be adopted “only by way of a legislatio­n”.

Hearing a separate PIL by the Indian Profession­al Nurses Associatio­n ( IPNA) seeking implementa­tion of the expert panel’s recommenda­tions earlier, the court had asked a group representi­ng the the private hospitals and nursing homes in Delhi why they were opposed to paying the minimum wage of ` 20,000.

The panel had also recommende­d that working conditions such as leave, working hours, medical facilities, transporta­tion and accommodat­ion of the nurses should be on par with those working in government hospitals.

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