The Borneo Post

Six dead after dialysis treatment in Vietnam

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HANOI: Six people are dead and 12 others have been sent for treatment after undergoing kidney dialysis at a hospital in Vietnam on Monday, health officials said.

The victims were suspected to have suffered anaphylact­ic shock, state media reported, as officials launched an investigat­ion into the incident.

All 18 patients were being treated for kidney failure at the state- run Hoa Binh Province General Hospital, when after 45 minutes on dialysis some reported nausea, abdominal pain and shortness of breath.

“The hospital and police have sealed off all the machines, equipment and medicine in the nephrology department,” a statement from the health ministry said.

The department has also stopped receiving new patients, and the families of the deceased will be given US$ 660 as compensati­on.

The ministry has sent a team to the area, 80 kilometres southwest of Hanoi, to investigat­e the incident.

“Individual­s or groups who violated ( regulation­s) will be strictly handled,” the statement said.

Most hospitals in Vietnam are state- run, though private facilities are increasing­ly common in the communist country.

Standards of care at private hospitals tend to be better than at their government- run counterpar­ts, but they are generally seen as safe and medical malpractic­e deaths are relatively rare in Vietnam. — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows relatives (right) at the bedside of a patient undergoing kidney dialysis in an intensive care unit at hospital in the northern city of Hoa Binh. — AFP photo
Photo shows relatives (right) at the bedside of a patient undergoing kidney dialysis in an intensive care unit at hospital in the northern city of Hoa Binh. — AFP photo

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