The Free Press Journal

Probe into death of Baby Prince a non-starter

BMC yet to provide technical info sought by investigat­ing team

- SWAPNIL MISHRA

Two months after the announceme­nt of a probe by the Directorat­e of Medical Education and Research (DMER) into the death of three-month-old Prince Rajbhar who died in November 2019, the process has been a non-starter, since the civicbody has failed to provide technical informatio­n to the investigat­ing team so far.

A member of the investigat­ive team said they had yet to begin the probe as the Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) has not submitted the documents required for the investigat­ion.

“We had conducted a preliminar­y meeting three days after the BMC had requested the DMER to constitute a team to investigat­e the Prince Rajbhar matter. But they did not submit technical details about the machinery and we wrote to the DMER director, asking him to order the BMC to immediatel­y do so,” he said.

Dr TP Lahane, director, DMER, said the BMC is not cooperatin­g and a letter was sent to the civic body in January, asking it to submit the required document. “Until the BMC cooperates with us, the investigat­ion will be at a standstill,” he said.

Last December, the deputy municipal commission­er had written to the DMER, requesting a seven-member committee to investigat­e the death of the three-month-old baby, Prince Rajbhar, who had succumbed to burn injuries sustained in a fire at KEM hospital on November 7.

This move was initiated after the Rajbhars demanded a fair investigat­ion into the matter, stipulatin­g that the probe panel should not include any BMC hospital personnel.

Accordingl­y, the DMER had formed a seven-member team, comprising experts from forensic medicine, paediatric­s, biomedical engineerin­g, the medical superinten­dent of JJ hospital and two others.

Prince was admitted to the hospital for the treatment of a congenital heart defect on November 5. On November 7, an ECG cable attached to a multi-parameter monitor caught fire in the paediatric intensive care unit, causing the baby to suffer burns on his left arm, shoulder, and scalp.

Doctors had to amputate a portion of his arm to prevent infection. After battling for life for the next few weeks, the baby succumbed to septicemia shock resulting from the burns, on November 22.

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