The Jerusalem Post

Indian state orders probe into deaths of 60 child patients

Hospital head suspended, says requests for funding went unanswered

- • By RAJESH KUMAR SINGH

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – The head of an Indian hospital where dozens of children died in recent days has been suspended, as officials traded blame over cash shortfalls that led to supplies of medical oxygen being cut.

The government of Uttar Pradesh state, run by India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, suspended the head of the state-run Baba Raghav Das Medical College, Rajeev Misra, late on Saturday and ordered an investigat­ion.

Indian media has said the deaths of 60 children, 34 infants among them, were caused in part by oxygen shortages after a private supplier cut the supply over unpaid bills.

Hospital officials deny lack of oxygen caused the deaths, saying alternativ­e supplies were found, and blamed many of the deaths instead on encephalit­is and unspecifie­d issues related to delivery of the infants.

On Sunday, Health Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda, visited the hospital in the town of Gorakhpur, 800 km. east of New Delhi, accompanie­d by the country’s Chief Minister, Yogi Adityanath.

After the visit, the chief minister urged patience until the investigat­ion was complete.

“We will know – whether it was because of an oxygen shortage or due to a lack of proper treatment,” Adityanath told reporters. “Those found guilty will not be spared.”

Nadda said a team of doctors from New Delhi was working with the local authoritie­s and the federal government was ready to send more assistance. He said Modi was also monitoring the developmen­ts.

The issue of the unpaid bills for oxygen supply has become a flashpoint in relations between the hospital and the state government, after the suspended hospital chief on Saturday accused state officials of not answering his requests for money.

“I wrote at least three letters,” Misra told television reporters on Saturday, adding that he’d flagged the issue in video conference discussion­s.

Reuters was unable to contact Misra for comment.

Adityanath, who had visited the hospital on August 9, said no issue of unpaid bills was brought to his attention and all requests for funds were met promptly.

Opposition parties have stepped up the pressure on the state government, demanding the resignatio­ns of Adityanath and the state health minister.

“This government is a murderer,” said Raj Babbar, head of the opposition Congress party in Uttar Pradesh.

Uttar Pradesh is India’s most densely populated and politicall­y-prized state, where the Bharatiya Janata Party’s thumping victory has strengthen­ed Modi’s claim to a second term in 2019.

Gorakhpur, a down-at-heel town near the border with Nepal, is Adityanath’s political base, which elected him to parliament five times before Modi asked him to lead Uttar Pradesh, after a landslide Bharatiya Janata Party election victory in March.

A study of government data by nonprofit body Brookings India showing the district has a 26% shortage of primary health centers.

Encephalit­is outbreaks kill hundreds in India every year, especially during the monsoon season.

India’s expenditur­e on public health is about 1% of the GDP, which is among the world’s lowest. In recent years, Modi’s government has increased health spending and vowed to make healthcare more affordable.

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