[The state’s health minister and hospital officials have denied charges that the deaths were caused by the oxygen bill dispute. An estimated 60 children have died at the hospital since Aug. 7 from a variety of causes, officials said.]
By
Annie Gowen
At
least 30 children have died in 48 hours in a government hospital in India's
northern
Gorakhpur district
due to lack of oxygen, said district magistrate
Rajeev Rautela on Aug. 11.
(Reuters)
|
NEW
DELHI — One by one, the
infants and children slipped away Thursday night, their parents watching
helplessly as oxygen supplies at the government hospital ran dangerously low.
At least 30 children died Thursday and into
Friday at a hospital in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh after its
supply of liquid oxygen was disrupted over an unpaid bill, officials said. A
Home Ministry spokesman told the Press Trust of India, citing police reports,
that 21 of the deaths were directly linked to a shortage of oxygen.
Witnesses described a chaotic scene between
11 p.m. and 2 a.m. as medical practitioners and relatives — the tanks running
dry — handed out manual resuscitator bags to families in a desperate attempt to
save the young patients.
“We saw children dying around us,” said the
father of one victim, who gave his name only as Vijay. “Obviously, it’s the
hospital’s fault. So many children have died because of them. My son was fine
until nighttime, then something wrong happened.”
Two more children died Saturday at the Baba
Raghav Das Medical College hospital in Gorakhpur, an impoverished area in the
eastern part of the state, as authorities scrambled to firm up supplementary
supplies and investigate the tragedy. The government suspended the medical
college principal Saturday.
The state’s health minister and hospital
officials have denied charges that the deaths were caused by the oxygen bill
dispute. An estimated 60 children have died at the hospital since Aug. 7 from a
variety of causes, officials said.
In a news conference Saturday, the state’s
chief minister, Yogi Adityanath, called the tragedy despicable and said the
state had set up a committee to investigate the role of the oxygen vendor.
“The guilty will not be spared,” Adityanath
said.
Parents of the victims described feelings of
anger and bewilderment over the incident, saying they were struggling with
guilt over not being able to save their children.
“The idea is devastating — that she had to
suffer while trying to breathe,” said Manger Rajbhar, the father of a 5-day-old
girl who died in the chaos.
The deaths provoked widespread outrage and
condemnation across the political spectrum and on social media, where a
political cartoon spread that showed the babies as little angels hovering in
the sky as an Indian government official tries to reach them.
“30 kids died in hospital without oxygen.
This is not a tragedy. It’s a massacre,” Indian Nobel Peace Prize winner
Kailash Satyarthi, a child advocate, said in a tweet. “Is this what 70 years of
freedom means for our children?” (The country is set to celebrate the 70th
anniversary of its independence from Britain on Tuesday.)
The hospital owed $89,750 to a Lucknow-based
medical supply company called Pushpa Sales Private Limited, documents obtained
by The Washington Post show, and the firm had written letters to the hospital
and district magistrate for the past six months demanding payment. The company
asserted that the hospital was violating the terms of its contract by running a
balance of more than $15,625. The agreement expired July 31, and Pushpa
discontinued the oxygen supply Aug. 4.
On Thursday, employees who handled the
storage plant that pipes the oxygen wrote to the hospital’s chief medical
officer to warn him that supplies were low and would last only until Thursday
evening, according to a letter obtained by the news channel NDTV. The oxygen
supply then dipped to a critical level, the channel said.
State officials claimed they had obtained
sufficient backup supplies from nearby nursing homes.
The hospital is in Adityanath’s parliamentary
constituency. The controversial monk, who was tapped by the governing Bharatiya
Janata Party to head Uttar Pradesh earlier this year, is the longtime head of a
large temple there.
Adityanath had visited the hospital this week
to inaugurate a new critical-care unit. Many of the young patients were
suffering from encephalitis, a potentially deadly illness that causes acute
swelling of the brain. The disease is often spread by mosquitoes, and
infections rise during the monsoon season.
Zahid Ali, the father of a 5-year-old girl
suffering from encephalitis, said he and other family members were still in
shock after the death of his daughter Khushi on Friday night.
Ali said Khushi, who was running a high
fever, had been admitted to the hospital’s encephalitis ward Thursday. She was
responding to treatment while on oxygen, he said, but her condition
deteriorated as the cylinders ran dry that night.
Hospital staff gave the parents a manual
resuscitator and asked them to pump it themselves, he said, and he watched in
horror as his daughter first became breathless, then turned “stiff and cold.”
“At that time, I understood that my daughter
was gone, but doctors kept on telling me that she is still alive,” he said. She
was pronounced dead several hours later.
Arjumand Bano in Gorakhpur and Farheen Fatima
in New Delhi contributed to this report.
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