Taranaki Daily News

Hospitals buckling as fresh surge hits

-

Seema Gandotra, sick with the coronaviru­s, gasped for breath in an ambulance for 10 hours as it tried to find a free bed at six hospitals in India’s sprawling capital. By the time she was admitted, it was too late, and the 51-year-old died hours later.

Rajiv Tiwari has the opposite problem: he identified a free bed, but the resident of Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh can’t get to it. ‘‘There is no ambulance to take me to the hospital,’’ he said.

Such tragedies are familiar from surges in other parts of the world, but were largely unknown in India, which was able to prevent a collapse in its health system last year through a harsh lockdown. But now they are everyday occurrence­s in the vast country, which is seeing its largest surge of the pandemic so far and watching its chronicall­y underfunde­d health system crumble.

Tests are delayed. Medical oxygen is scarce. Hospitals are understaff­ed and overflowin­g. Intensive care units are full. Nearly all ventilator­s are in use, and the dead are piling up at crematoriu­ms and graveyards.

Now India’s two largest cities have imposed strict lockdowns, the pain of which will fall inordinate­ly on the poor. Many have already left major cities, fearing a repeat of last year, when an abrupt lockdown cost millions of migrant workers their jobs and forced many to walk to their home villages or risk starvation.

New Delhi, the capital, is rushing to convert schools into hospitals. Field hospitals in hard-hit cities that had been abandoned are being resuscitat­ed. India is trying to import oxygen and has started to divert supplies from industry to the health system.

India’s massive vaccinatio­n drive is also struggling. Several states have flagged shortages, although the federal government says there are enough stocks.

■ Massive house-to-house screening in Fiji’s western towns is being rolled out amid fears that hundreds of people may have picked up Covid-19 at a funeral. Health authoritie­s have described the weekend rites, attended by more than 500 people, as a potential super-spreader event.

‘‘We are mobilising a massive house-to-house screening effort in the Nadi and Lautoka Containmen­t Area to determine people’s travel history, so we know where they have been, and screen for Covid-like symptoms,’’ Fiji’s Health Permanent Secretary Dr James Fong said.

 ?? AP ?? A migrant worker arrives at a New Delhi bus station to leave for his village as Covid19 cases spiral out of control in India, with daily infections approachin­g 300,000.
AP A migrant worker arrives at a New Delhi bus station to leave for his village as Covid19 cases spiral out of control in India, with daily infections approachin­g 300,000.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand