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Dengue patients overwhelm govt hospitals in Dhaka; Patients suffer amid bed, staff shortage

As the dengue cases surge, government hospitals in the capital are facing shortage of beds and staff to provide adequate care for patients.

Visiting various hospitals in the city, the UNB correspondent found that hospitals including Mugda Medical College Hospital, Dhaka Medical College Hospital, Sir Salimullah Medical College Hospital, Matuail Institute of Child and Mother Health, and Bangladesh Children’s Hospital and Institute are treating patients on the floor, as all the beds in their respective wards have been filled with patients infected by the mosquito-borne disease.

Doctors at the hospitals said the hospitals are under tremendous pressure as a result of the growing number of dengue patients due to the lack of adequate doctors and other health staff.

There are patients in every nook and cranny of these hospitals. Not only the floors of the hospitals, but the hospitals’ balconies are now full of patients.

Mugda Hospital, which handles the highest number of patients among the government hospitals in Dhaka, has witnessed doubling of patients recently.

The acting director of Mugda Medical College Hospital, Niatuzzaman, said, “We are now admitting patients based on condition that we will not provide them with any bed. With only five doctors available, we do not have the manpower necessary to treat dengue patients”.

Niatuzzaman also highlighted the strain on the hospital’s pathology department as the number of tests has increased significantly.

Currently, the hospitals are admitting two types of dengue patients: those with ‘classic dengue syndrome’ and those with ‘complicated dengue syndrome’, he said. The latter group, comprising patients who have had dengue multiple times, constitutes a considerable portion of the hospitalized cases.

As the dengue outbreak continues to worsen, the Directorate General of Health Services has designated the capital’s Mohakhali DNCC hospital as a Dengue-dedicated hospital, which has led to an increase in the number of patients there.

Mitford Hospital, which has a dedicated dengue unit, is witnessing a significant increase in dengue patients, forcing patients to stay on the floor for treatment.

Brigadier General Kazi Md. Rashid-Un-Nabi, the Director of Sir Salimullah Medical College Hospital, said, “Patients are experiencing difficulties as the hospital caters to patients with various medical conditions.”

Dhaka Medical College Hospital’s (DMH) new building houses two dengue units, both of which are three times over capacity. Despite the mounting pressure, no separate unit or ward has been established yet for the dengue patients, and they are being treated alongside other patients.

Matuail Institute of Child and Mother Health has limited its surgical ward to treating dengue patients exclusively by transferring beds from other wards.

The situation is not any better outside Dhaka, as many district and upazila hospitals are unable to test patients due to a lack of dengue test kits. The shortage of doctors and beds is leading many hospitals to turn away patients seeking dengue treatment.

The country is experiencing a deadly outbreak of dengue this year with 215 deaths recorded by the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) so far. Besides, it has recorded 40, 341 dengue cases, 31, 937 recoveries as of July 26 .

The country logged 281 dengue deaths in 2022 – the highest on record after 179 deaths recorded in 2019. Also, it recorded 62,423 dengue cases and 61,971 recoveries last year.

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