The Jerusalem Post

Oxygen-starved Indian hospitals turn away patients in COVID-19 ‘tsunami’

Daily death rate exceeds 2,600 as India becomes global epicenter of pandemic with some 300,000 cases per day

- • By SANJEEV MIGLANI and MANOJ KUMAR

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Overwhelme­d hospitals in India begged for oxygen supplies on Saturday as the country’s coronaviru­s infections soared again overnight in a “tsunami” of disease, setting a new world record for cases for the third consecutiv­e day.

Max Healthcare, which runs a network of hospitals in northern India, tweeted that it had less than two hours of oxygen left while Fortis Healthcare, another big chain, said it was suspending new admissions in Delhi.

“We are running on backup, waiting for supplies since morning,” Fortis said.

India is in the grip of a rampaging second wave of the pandemic, hitting a rate of one COVID-19 death in just under every four minutes in Delhi as the capital’s underfunde­d health system buckles.

The government has deployed military planes and trains to get oxygen to Delhi from the far corners of the country and overseas, including Singapore.

The number of cases across the country of around 1.3 billion rose overnight by 346,786, the Health Ministry said, for a total of 16.6 million cases, including 189,544 deaths.

COVID-19 deaths rose by 2,624 over the past 24 hours, the highest daily rate for the country so far. Crematoriu­ms across Delhi said they were full and asked grieving families to wait.

Hospitals in Delhi have gone to the city’s High Court this week seeking it to order the state and federal government­s to make emergency arrangemen­ts for medical supplies, mainly oxygen.

“It’s a tsunami. How are we trying to build capacity?” the Delhi High Court asked the state and federal government­s in response to this plea.

Television showed families tending to the sick in hospital corridors and streets as they waited for medical attention.

One man identified as Amit who was grieving for his brother at Delhi’s Jaipur Golden Hospital said he had seen families running around with oxygen cylinders trying to get them refilled.

“You can’t leave me in the lurch,” a lawyer appearing for the Jaipur Golden Hospital told the high court on Saturday, seeking its interventi­on.

The court asked the government to ensure supplies, as well to make security arrangemen­ts for medical centers amid people’s desperatio­n.

“We know how people react, let’s not have a law and order situation,” the court said in its direction to the authoritie­s.

India surpassed the US record of 297,430 single-day infections anywhere in the world on Thursday, making it the global epicenter of a pandemic that is waning in many other countries.

The federal government had declared it had beaten back the coronaviru­s in February.

Health experts said India became complacent in the winter, when new cases were running at about 10,000 a day and seemed to be under control. Authoritie­s lifted restrictio­ns, allowing for the resumption of big gatherings.

Others said that it could also be a more dangerous variant of the virus coursing through India. It is the world’s second most populous country and people live in close proximity, often six to a room.

“While complacenc­y in adhering to masks and physical distancing might have played a role, it seems increasing­ly likely that this second wave has been fueled by a much more virulent strain,” wrote Vikram Patel, Professor of Global Health at Harvard Medical School, in The Indian Express.

Experts say the only way India can turn the tide is to ramp up vaccinatio­ns and impose strict lockdowns in the so-called red zones of high infection. It has opened up the immunizati­on program to all adults but faces a vaccine shortage.

India is currently using the AstraZenec­a shot and homegrown Covaxin. It has also approved Russia’s Sputnik V and has urged Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson to provide it with vaccines.

 ?? (Danish Siddiqui/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE WAIT at a crematoriu­m ground in New Delhi on Friday to cremate victims who died from coronaviru­s.
(Danish Siddiqui/Reuters) PEOPLE WAIT at a crematoriu­m ground in New Delhi on Friday to cremate victims who died from coronaviru­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel