Indian authorities scrambled on Saturday to supply oxygen to Indian hospitals where COVID-19 patients were suffocating amid low supplies as the country is crippled with the world’s worst coronavirus surge..
The 3,46,786 infections over the past day brought India’s total infections past 16 million, only behind the United States.
The Health Ministry also reported another 2,624 deaths in the past 24 hours, pushing India’s COVID-19 fatalities to 189,544.
Hospitals in the capital and some of the worst-hit states like Maharashtra reported being critically short of ICU/ beds and oxygen. Families were waiting for days to cremate their dear ones at overburdened crematoriums, with many turning to makeshift facilities for last rites.
”Every hospital is running out of oxygen gradually. We are running out,” Dr. Sudhanshu Bankata, Executive Director of Batra Hospital told New Delhi Television channel.
At least 20 COVID-19 patients at the critical care unit of New Delhi’s Jaipur Golden Hospital died overnight due to low oxygen supply, the Indian Express newspaper reported.
”Our supply was delayed by seven-eight hours on Friday night and the stock we received last night is only 40% of the required supply,” the newspaper quoted the hospital’s medical superintendent, Dr. D.K. Baluja, as saying.
The government ramped up its efforts to get medical oxygen to hospitals using special Oxygen Express trains, air force planes, and trucks to transport tankers.
But the crisis in the country of nearly 1.4 billion people was deepening, amid criticism of the government’s response and allegations that the scarce supplies of oxygen had been diverted by local officials to hospitals in their areas. The Supreme Court told Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government last week that it wanted a national plan for the supply of oxygen and essential drugs for the treatment of coronavirus patients.
The court acted as India’s fragile and underfunded health system was tattering, just months after leaders in the world’s second-most populous country thought they had weathered the worst of the pandemic.
Now, hospital officials are using social media to plead with authorities to replenish their oxygen supplies. Early Saturday, Bankata’s Batra hospital reported a severe shortage of oxygen for its 190 admitted patients.
When the news anchor asked Bankata what happens when a hospital issues an SOS call as his had done, Bankata replied: ”Nothing. It’s over. It’s over.”
Hours later, the hospital received supplies to run for few hours.
As the oxygen scarcity deepened, local officials in several states disrupted the movement of tankers and diverted supplies to their areas.
The PressTrust of India news agency on Friday reported that a tanker truck carrying oxygen supplies in Delhi’s neighboring state of Haryana went missing. Days before, the news agency reported, a minister in Haryana blamed Delhi authorities for looting an oxygen tanker when it was crossing their territory.
”Unfortunately, many such incidents have occurred and have a dire effect on hospitals in need of oxygen supplies,” said Saket Tiku, president of the All India Industrial Gases Manufacturers Association.
Meanwhile, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Biden administration’s top medical adviser on the pandemic, said the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is working with its counterpart agency in India to provide technical support and assistance.