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As Bihar approaches its state assembly elections in the aftermath of devastating floods and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, it is important to examine the state of healthcare in the state. After all, the functioning of state-run government hospitals has always been marred by controversy.
My visit to Darbhanga Medical College and Hospital (DMCH) in north Bihar is a case in point. The DMCH is one among many government hospitals with poor infrastructure that the government is turning a blind eye to.
The state run hospital stands as a symbol of neglect, where the emergency ward is an ill-equipped place with minimal workforce in dire need of surgical instruments as well as oxygen facilities, giving the pandemic. Presently, there are no surgeries happening.
Doors of Burn Unit were found shut with a rusted lock hanging on it. I was told the unit has not been functioning for almost a decade, as the hospital lacks resources to treat burn victims. The DMCH website however, states there are 12 specialists for Burn and Plastic surgery. Amid the coronavirus crisis, rooms have temporarily turned into storage.
Similarly, the DMCH surgical department building is rusted beyond repair, putting hundreds of lives in jeopardy. With 10 operation theatres and a 72-bed surgical ward, it was appalling to see the DMCH administration having no objection to running daily affairs in an eroded building with cracked beams and pillars.
The surgical ward has fragmented walls and ceilings. According to nursing staff, treating patients during winter season turns into a painstaking job when bone chilling cold wind seeps into the room due to broken window panes.
Referring to a report printed in The Telegraph, a medical staffer reiterated that the renovation of the damaged building is a priority for neither the hospital management nor the district administration and state government. Long treatments, back-to-back surgeries, daily check-ups, all are happening without an iota of restriction from the hospital authorities.
Only three dead bodies can be accommodated in the deep freezer of the postmortem ward in the Forensic Medicine Department, and even this freezer has been out of operation for a long time.
The COVID-19 pandemic and DMCH’s dilapidated building feels like a choice between the devil and the deep blue sea.
A government record mentions the expansion of the DMCH in terms of Academic Block, Hospital Block, Class IV Accommodation, Surgical Block and Students Hostel. Bihar Medical Services & Infrastructure Corporation (BMSICL) in 2016, but the debilitated structure tells a different story.
A junior doctor placed in the hospital said hygiene and sanitation have taken a back seat. Indeed, pigs lounge in garbage piles at the entrance of the hospital, and the stinking odour of leaking sewage water obstructs movement into the premises.
Rakhi Devi (59), who was at the hospital for the treatment of her son, had to fetch water from a leaky tap surrounded by sewage water. “We are habituated to such conditions despite knowing it’s a health risk”, she said. An elderly man who was at the hospital also highlighted the risk of water spillage that has made the brick floor slippery to walk.
Ramnaresh (38), a rickshaw puller who was ferrying people visiting to DMCH, said,
(Repeated calls by the author and The Quint to the DMCH Superintendent Dr Raj Ranjan Prasad and Darbhanga District Magistrate went unanswered. The Quint has also reached out via email. The story will be updated is there is a response.)
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