Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

‘No place for you’: Indian hospitals buckle from a surge

- By Aniruddha Ghosal and Neha Mehrotra

NEW DELHI » Seema Gandotra, sick with the coronaviru­s, gasped for breath in an ambulance for 10 hours as it tried unsuccessf­ully to find an open 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, whose oxygen levels began falling after he tested positive for the virus, has the opposite problem: He identified an open 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. India recorded over 250,000 new infections and over 1,700 deaths in the past 24 hours alone, and the U.K. announced a travel ban on most visitors from the country this week. Overall, India has reported more than 15 million cases and some 180,000 deaths — and experts say these numbers are likely undercount­ed.

“The surge in infections has come like a storm and a big battle lies ahead,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said.

India’s wave of cases is contributi­ng to a worldwide rise in infections as many places experience deepening crises, such as Brazil and France, spurred in part by new, more contagious variants, including one first detected in India. More than a year into the pandemic, global deaths have passed 3 million and are climbing again, running at nearly 12,000 per day on average. At the same time, vaccinatio­n campaigns have seen setbacks in many places — and India’s surge has only exacerbate­d that.

Bhramar Mukherjee, a biostatist­ician at the University of Michigan who has been tracking India’s pandemic, said India failed to learn from surges elsewhere.

Kamla Devi, a 71-yearold diabetic, was rushed to a hospital in New Delhi when her blood sugar levels fell last week. On returning home, her levels plummeted again but this time, there were no beds. She died before she could be tested for the virus. “If you have corona(virus) or if you don’t, it doesn’t matter. The hospitals have no place for you,” said Dharmendra Kumar, her son.

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