The Asian Age

SC sets up 12-member Task Force to manage O2, Covid

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New Delhi, May 8: The Supreme Court has constitute­d a 12-member National Task Force of top medical experts to formulate a methodolog­y for allocation of oxygen to states and Union Territorie­s for saving lives of Covid-19 patients and to facilitate a public health response to the pandemic.

The top court named a sub-group for carrying out the audit exercise for Delhi’s health infrastruc­ture and allocation of oxygen and said that it shall consists of Dr Randeep Guleria of AIIMS, Dr Sandeep Budhiraja of Max Healthcare and two IAS officers not below the rank of joint secretary —one each from the Centre and the Delhi government.

A bench of Justices D.Y. Chandrachu­d and M.R. Shah said that the Union

◗ The establishm­ent of the Task Force will provide the Union government with inputs and strategies for meeting the challenges of the pandemic on a transparen­t and profession­al basis, in the present and in future, says SC

cabinet secretary will be the convenor of the National Task Force and may nominate an officer not below the rank of additional secretary to depute for him, when necessary.

The top court said in its order passed on May 6 uploaded on Saturday that the secretary of the Union ministry of health and family welfare will be exofficio member of the task force.

The bench said that other members of the task force will include Bhabatosh Biswas, former vice-chancellor, West Bengal University of Health Sciences, Kolkata; Devender Singh Rana, chairperso­n of Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, Delhi; Devi Prasad Shetty, chairperso­n and executive director, Narayana Healthcare, Bengaluru; Dr Gagandeep Kang, professor, Christian Medical College, Vellore, Tamil Nadu; and J.V.

Peter, director, Christian Medical College, Vellore, Tamil Nadu.

The remaining five members are Dr Naresh Trehan, chairperso­n and MD, Medanta Hospital and Heart Institute, Gurugram; Rahul Pandit, director, critical care medicine and ICU, Fortis Hospital, Mulund (Mumbai, Maharashtr­a) and Kalyan (Maharashtr­a); and Dr

Saumitra Rawat, chairman & head, department of surgical gastroente­rology and liver transplant, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, Delhi; Shiv Kumar Sarin of Institute of Liver and Biliary Science (ILBS), Delhi; and Zarir F Udwadia of Hinduja Hospital, Breach Candy Hospital Mumbai.

The top court said, “We expect that the leading experts in the country shall associate with the work of the Task Force both as members and resource persons as this will facilitate a meeting of minds and the formulatio­n of scientific strategies to deal with an unpreceden­ted human crisis.”

“The establishm­ent of this Task Force will enable the decision makers to have inputs which go beyond finding ad-hoc solutions to the present problems. The likely future course of the pandemic must be taken into contemplat­ion at the present time,” the bench said. It added that this will ensure that projected future requiremen­ts can be scientific­ally mapped in the present and may be modulated in the light of experience­s gained.

“The establishm­ent of the Task Force will provide the Union government with inputs and strategies for meeting the challenges of the pandemic on a transparen­t and profession­al basis, in the present and in future,” the bench said.

The top court made 12point terms of reference which include assessing and making recommenda­tions for the entire country based on the need for, availabili­ty and distributi­on of medical oxygen and to facilitate auditing by subgroups within each state and UT.

It said that the sub-groups will do audit to determine whether the supplies allocated by the Centre reach the concerned state/UT, the efficacy of the distributi­on networks in distributi­ng supplies meant for hospitals, health care institutio­ns and others and whether the available stocks are being distribute­d on the basis of an effective, transparen­t and profession­al mechanism.

The top court said that the Task Force will constitute sub-groups/committees of each state/UT for auditing and it will comprise of an officer of the State/UT Government not below the rank of secretary to the state government, an officer of the Centre not below the rank of additional/joint secretary and two medical doctors in the state/UT concerned including at least one with administra­tive experience of managing the medical facilities of a hospital and a representa­tive from the Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisati­on (PESO).

The bench clarified that the purpose of the audit is not to scrutinise the decisions made in good faith by doctors while treating their patients but to ensure accountabi­lity in respect of the supplies of oxygen provided to every state/UT.

The purpose is to ensure that the supplies which have been allocated are reaching their destinatio­n; that they are being made available through the distributi­on network to the hospitals or, as the case may be, the end users efficientl­y and on a transparen­t basis; and to identify bottleneck­s or issues in regard to the utilisatio­n of oxygen, the bench said on audit by sub-groups.

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 ?? Dr Devi Prasad Shetty Dr Gagandeep Kang ??
Dr Devi Prasad Shetty Dr Gagandeep Kang
 ?? Dr Devender Singh Rana ??
Dr Devender Singh Rana
 ?? Dr Naresh Trehan ??
Dr Naresh Trehan

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