Business Day

Oxygen crisis in India driven by state apathy puts millions at risk

• Covid-19 planning should have been done earlier

- Andy Mukherjee

Nationalis­tic pride may swell chests, but to fill lungs you need air. Someone should tell that to the Indian government. The country that boasted of being the world’s pharmacy in March discovers a month later that not only are “Made in India” vaccines in short supply, but also that it does not have enough oxygen in hospitals to deal with a deadly second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic that has made it the worst-hit country after the US.

New Delhi floated a tender last October, eight months into the pandemic, to set up oxygen plants in district hospitals. But an investigat­ion by the website Scroll.in showed that in some instances, the vendor that won the contracts never showed up to fulfil them. In other cases, hospitals did not provide the needed land, or state administra­tions did not come up with the copper wiring and electricit­y connection­s. Sheer apathy railroaded a 2-billion rupee ($27m) project. Not a good look for a country that wants to spend $1.5-trillion on infrastruc­ture in five years.

The result is that hundreds of millions of people risk not having access to a basic, lifesaving element as an overwrough­t bureaucrac­y struggles to cope with nearly 300,000 new daily cases, which modellers believe to be a highly underrepor­ted figure.

Meanwhile, the country’s overall medical oxygen requiremen­t has shot up by more than 9-million cubic metres, according to an interactiv­e Covid-19 Oxygen Needs Tracker.

In my home state alone, more than 230-million people have been put in greater danger than they needed to be. If Uttar Pradesh were a country, it would be the world’s fifth-most populous. For many among my family, friends and acquaintan­ces, the risk of running out of breath is real.

After an interminab­le wait for an oxygenated hospital bed, Vinay Srivastava, a 65-year-old journalist and coronaviru­s patient in the state capital, Lucknow, took to social media on Friday to plead for help. By that time, his blood oxygen level had fallen to 52%. Saturation below 90% is considered low.

“No hospital, lab, doctor is picking up the phone,” he tweeted in Hindi. On Saturday afternoon, Srivastava put up a picture showing a finger-pulse oximeter reading of 31%. Then he died.

This was no isolated incident, or sadly even new. In 2017, 63 children battling neonatal and paediatric encephalit­is died in less than one week in a hospital in Gorakhpur, in eastern Uttar

Pradesh. Hypoxaemia, or acute shortage of oxygen, was the most likely cause.

That tragedy should have triggered an alarm over the oxygen crisis in India’s hospitals. Another one should have come from Italy’s struggle with oxygen supplies at the peak of its infections early in 2020. But the government missed that chance.

A day after journalist Srivastava’s death, the federal health ministry said that only 33 out of a planned 162 plants had been installed, and a total of 80 would be ready by the end of May. That is already far too late.

In Uttar Pradesh, which has so far received only one of the new on-site plants, rich and poor alike are scouring the web for answers to questions such as, “What is the normal oxygen rate for the human body?”

The breathless­ness is by no means restricted to Uttar Pradesh. On Tuesday, the Delhi high court ordered the government to urgently divert oxygen supplies from the steel and petrochemi­cal industries after noting that some of the main Covid-19 hospitals in the national capital would run out in about four to eight hours.

If the uncontroll­ed spread of the virus results in “extended lockdown and closures, the purpose of full production of steel and petroleum products would be of no avail, as their consumptio­n is bound to fall in that scenario”, the judges noted.

The second wave has already deflated hopes of a Vshaped economic recovery. A 10th of the GDP that would have

A 10TH OF THE GDP THAT WOULD HAVE COME ABOUT IN THE ABSENCE OF THE PANDEMIC IS PERHAPS PERMANENTL­Y LOST

come about in the absence of the pandemic is perhaps permanentl­y lost. To be deprived of oxygen would further affect operations such as welding, cutting, cleaning and chemical processes, according

to Crisil, an affiliate of S&P Global. Meanwhile, the demand side of the equation is weakening, partly because of localised social-distancing restrictio­ns and partly because of fear. By mid-April, retail and

recreation activity in Lucknow had plunged 54% from the previrus baseline, according to Google Mobility. Its analysis of cellphone locations shows an even grimmer picture for Mumbai, the commercial

capital: public transport use is down by 61%.

From rerouting industrial oxygen to running a special train for transporti­ng it across India, everything being done now should have been planned

earlier. India reported 2,000 Covid-19 deaths on Wednesday — perhaps only a fraction of the actual fatalities. The second wave need not have been this lethal, if people could breathe a little easier.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa