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A citizens’ initiative in Shopian in South Kashmir has come forward to save the crumbling District Hospital from government apathy.
The campaign to save Shopian District Hospital (SDH) has been undertaken by Shopian Health Aid, a group comprising mainly of local youth who first came together during the 2014 Kashmir floods to facilitate relief work in nearby affected areas.
The group now comprises of representatives from the Shopian
Fruit Growers’ Association, the Shopian Bar Association and the Students’ Association
among others.
Established in 1977 as a sub-district hospital, the facility was upgraded as a District Hospital in 2008 when Shopian was carved out of Pulwama as a separate district.
At present, the hospital, which caters to a population of over 2.5 lakh, has just 30 beds – way below the minimum standard of 100 as per the revised guidelines issued in 2012 by the Indian Public Health Standards.
It also falls short of having enough doctors and paramedic staff. The guidelines require each district hospital to have two specialists each in medicine, surgery, obstetrics and gynaecology, paediatrics and anaesthesia; one specialist each in ophthalmology, orthopaedics, radiology, pathology, ENT and dental and 11 medical officers apart from at least 76 paramedic staff including 45 staff nurses.
Shopian District Hospital, however, has only one doctor each available in the gynaecology, anaesthetics, surgery, medicine and paediatrics department. There are two dental surgeons, seven medical officers and only six nurses.
Residents also claimed that basic necessary equipments were
either not available at the hospital or were not being utilised optimally.
In an RTI response, the hospital has stated that it possesses one set of Boyle’s Apparatus machine used for giving general anaesthesia in surgeries.
The RTI response does not list CT scan machines or basic
cardiac monitors as available in the hospital.
Echoing Iqbal, a government doctor from Shopian, who worked at the District Hospital some time ago but is now posted outside the district, said that “ideally”, it is mandatory for all district hospitals to possess such equipment.
Owing to the lack of Boyle’s Apparatus in the hospital, the doctor said no major surgeries have been taking place in the hospital for the last thee to four months.
They are performing only minor procedures using local anaesthesia or referring cases to other hospitals. There is only one operating table and the theatre lights are not working, which is a matter of serious concern.
The RTI response further revealed that the hospital did not have any digital x-ray machines or biochemical analysers. All samples including blood and urine were tested manually.
Since Shopian is located on the busy Mughal Road, cases of accidents and trauma are reportedly quite high.
In the last three years, Shopian District Hospital has referred 1734 cases to other hospitals – most of them to Srinagar, 1.5 hours away. Iqbal, who had filed the RTI on behalf of the citizens’ group, asked why the hospital did not specify the reasons for the referrals even though the questions clearly sought a response.
“They haven’t answered that because it nails them. It shows either they are not having the necessary equipment or it is in dilapidated condition.”
When Iqbal’s 65-year old mother, a bipolar disorder patient,
had to be rushed to hospital and undergo abdominal flushing following a drug
overdose, Shopian District Hospital referred her to a Srinagar hospital for
observation, only because they did not have even basic cardiac monitors
available, he explained.
The doctor also expressed concern for the babies ward. In the RTI, hospital authorities had claimed they possessed 12 Baby Warmer machines. “But where are these machines? Baby warmers are gathering dust in stores,” he stated. 594 babies were managed in the neonatal ward of the hospital in 2015 alone.
Similarly, the hospital claimed to have five oxygen concentrators which both Iqbal and the doctor claimed were “never visible” or used for patients. They also alleged that the blood bank at the hospital was non-functional.
The citizen’s body is now planning to file a public interest litigation in the matter. The court, Iqbal explained, is expected to order an inspection of the hospital to “bring the truth out” behind the claims made by the hospital in the RTI.
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