Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Plasma bank

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“But it cannot save patients with multi-organ failures, those in extremely severe conditions,” he added.

The plasma bank will operate largely like a blood bank and will be set up at the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences (ILBS) Hospital in south Delhi. Patients in government and private hospitals in Delhi can approach it with a recommenda­tion from a doctor, the CM said.

“This will probably be the first plasma bank of the country. Any Covid-19-cured individual would be able to donate plasma and active Covid-19 patients admitted in both private and government hospitals would be able to avail it. But only a doctor can recommend plasma therapy and it cannot be randomly sought by any Covid-19 patient. After recommenda­tion, the concerned hospital has to inform ILBS for plasma,” he said.

Tracing its roots to the early 20th century, plasma therapy works on a simple premise: blood from a patient who has beaten Covid-19 is transfused into someone still struggling with the infection. This effectivel­y amounts to rushing a reinforcem­ent of virus antibodies.

The first indication of plasma therapy being effective against Covid-19 came in a scientific paper published on April 6 by Chinese experts who discovered rapid recovery among 10 patients in their trial. Within 1-3 days of being given plasma, these people were free of symptoms of the disease .

According to Kejriwal, plasma therapy trials in Delhi have helped improve health condition of 34 out of 35 Covid-19 patients in government hospitals and 46 out of 49 patients in private hospitals.

The chief minister said that the government is working on the modalities of the plasma bank, which will be finalised in another two days. “This will streamline the plasma therapy system in the city. The arrangemen­t is in ILBS Hospital because it is not a Covid-19 hospital. The donors are safe and they will not be infected again. The government will also be paying for their conveyance,” said Kejriwal, urging more Covid-19 recovered patients to donate blood in coming days.

Blood and plasma donations require specific matching of blood groups, which often makes sourcing of plasma difficult, especially at short notice.

“Availabili­ty of plasma is a big issue. So far, both private and government hospitals that got approval for plasma therapy have maintained their own plasma banks. A centralise­d system will streamline the process and enable better monitoring, better data management and grievance redressal,” said Jugal Kishore, head of community medicine at Safdarjung Hospital.

“However, having one such bank for the whole city can put excessive stress on the concerned hospital. The government, in the coming days, should create a network of plasma banks by setting up more facilities in accordance with locations of Covid-19-dedicated hospitals in the city,” he added.

Kejriwal said the government will soon set up a helpline through which potential plasma donors can come forward and health officials can begin reaching out to recovered people.

Last week, the chief minister said that plasma therapy in Lok Nayak Hospital helped reduce the death rate among Covid-19 patients by around 50%.

Data shared by the government on Sunday showed that the government hospital recorded 51 deaths in the week between ending June 26, compared to 100 deaths between June 6 and 12. Last week, the Delhi government got the Centre’s approval for 200 more plasma therapy trials, following which it also started them at the Rajiv Gandhi Super Speciality Hospital.

On Monday evening, several Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) functionar­ies who are recovering from Covid-19, including Delhi health minister Satyendra Jain, pledged to become plasma donors.

The chief minister, in the video briefing, also announced a compensati­on of ~1 crore for the family of Dr Asheem Gupta, a doctor in the Lok Nayak Hospital who died of Covid-19 on Sunday.

What a sight. So full of flowers. Thousands and thousands of them. These two bougainvil­laea trees in central Delhi’s Lodhi Garden make one of the city’s most stunning spectacles, though usually during a particular time of the year. Most Delhi connoisseu­rs would argue that an aesthetic experience of the city demands a visit to its great monuments, but a satisfying experience of the Capital necessitat­es a pilgrimage to this pair of trees during their prime bloom. Delhi has lush bougainvil­laea sights in other places too—including Buddha Garden, the roundabout near the Italian embassy, Chelmsford Road, etc., etc.—but no place compares to the show put up by these two trees.

As a matter of fact, the glorious duo has already been celebrated in these pages two years ago.

But this time it's different.

The familiar pink on them might be... lockdown bougainvil­laeas.

To be sure, bougainvil­laeas bloom throughout the year and are very friendly with high temperatur­e. These two exceptiona­l bougainvil­lea trees, however, are most amply loaded with their bloom in peak summer— from March to May. This fateful year their great blossom must have come and gone away unseen, with the park regulars stranded in their homes due to the coronaviru­s-triggered lockdown. By late June every year, the trees look like any other drab scrap of vegetation.

But. It’s late June right now and the two trees are in full-fledged blossoming. It’s rare, a gardener confirms.

Are the considerat­e trees trying to give us a second chance to appreciate their splendour? One theory of their quick re-flush is offered by PK Tripathi, a member of the executive committee of the Delhi-based Bougainvil­lea Society of India. Talking on phone, Mr Tripathi repeats that while bougainvil­laeas blossom throughout the year, the profuse flowering occurs only in the harsh summer season. “The reason behind the current spectacula­r show the city you should see

DELHI HEALTH MINISTER SATYENDRA JAIN, WHO IS RECOVERING FROM COVID-19, HAS ALSO PLEDGED TO BECOME A PLASMA DONOR

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