
On a gloomy Saturday afternoon, the staff at the Saroj Super Specialty Hospital in Delhi broke down and started praying anxiously as lives of more 100 patients hung by a thread amid rapidly depleting oxygen supply.
An oxygen tanker had reached the hospital after the staff spent hours running around in search of supplies and making frantic calls to the government and police.
But it could not enter the area where the hospital's oxygen tank is. The problem: its larger-than-normal size. The solution: an excavator, which broke down a portion of a ramp.
The hospital ran out of oxygen in the afternoon and the supply from the vendor never came.
The situation was tense amid fears of a repeat of the tragedy at the Jaipur Golden Hospital, where 20 patients died amid shortage of oxygen.
"We really didn't know what to do," Pankaj Chawla, the owner of the hospital, said.
"This was the time we started discharging patients. We told families that we don't have oxygen and they can take their patients to some other healthcare facilities," Chawla said.
The hospital, run by a trust, discharged 34 patients during this time. Since the rest were on ventilators, their families were asked to arrange oxygen cylinders.
"Most of the patients said, 'we will stay... it's the same situation everywhere. Let's see what happens'. Thirty-four were medically okay to go," Chawla said.
The hospital went to the high court to get an order for urgent relief, but help still did not come immediately. It borrowed oxygen cylinders from various healthcare facilities, while some Delhi government officials worked in the background.
Later, the city government allotted a tanker to it on a sharing basis.
"The tanker came to the hospital, but it was so big that it couldn't get into the area where our LMO (liquid medical oxygen) tank is," Chawla said. "We started breaking down a wall and a ramp with electronic hammers and whatever we had, but it was taking time and the tanker had to go to the Tirath Ram Shah Hospital."
Government officials told the hospital that the tanker would come back after an hour.
"That is the time everybody thought nothing can save us. All of us, my doctors, my staff started crying. We were running out of luck, too," Chawla recalled.
The hospital staff and some police personnel rushed to get some cylinders filled.
Twenty cylinders were brought to the hospital in a Delhi bus. Those cylinders lasted 40 minutes and actually saved the day, he said.
"In the meanwhile, we called the mayor, fire department... brought in a JCB (excavator), which broke a portion of the wall and the ramp," Chawla said.
The police brought the tanker back after delivering oxygen at the Tirath Ram Shah Hospital.
At present, there are over 100 patients at the hospital, majority of them on oxygen support.
"It could've been another Jaipur Golden tragedy, perhaps, of a bigger size... All this time, the families were there, helping us," Chawla said.
An oxygen tanker had reached the hospital after the staff spent hours running around in search of supplies and making frantic calls to the government and police.
But it could not enter the area where the hospital's oxygen tank is. The problem: its larger-than-normal size. The solution: an excavator, which broke down a portion of a ramp.
The hospital ran out of oxygen in the afternoon and the supply from the vendor never came.
The situation was tense amid fears of a repeat of the tragedy at the Jaipur Golden Hospital, where 20 patients died amid shortage of oxygen.
"We really didn't know what to do," Pankaj Chawla, the owner of the hospital, said.
"This was the time we started discharging patients. We told families that we don't have oxygen and they can take their patients to some other healthcare facilities," Chawla said.
The hospital, run by a trust, discharged 34 patients during this time. Since the rest were on ventilators, their families were asked to arrange oxygen cylinders.
"Most of the patients said, 'we will stay... it's the same situation everywhere. Let's see what happens'. Thirty-four were medically okay to go," Chawla said.
The hospital went to the high court to get an order for urgent relief, but help still did not come immediately. It borrowed oxygen cylinders from various healthcare facilities, while some Delhi government officials worked in the background.
Later, the city government allotted a tanker to it on a sharing basis.
"The tanker came to the hospital, but it was so big that it couldn't get into the area where our LMO (liquid medical oxygen) tank is," Chawla said. "We started breaking down a wall and a ramp with electronic hammers and whatever we had, but it was taking time and the tanker had to go to the Tirath Ram Shah Hospital."
Government officials told the hospital that the tanker would come back after an hour.
"That is the time everybody thought nothing can save us. All of us, my doctors, my staff started crying. We were running out of luck, too," Chawla recalled.
The hospital staff and some police personnel rushed to get some cylinders filled.
Twenty cylinders were brought to the hospital in a Delhi bus. Those cylinders lasted 40 minutes and actually saved the day, he said.
"In the meanwhile, we called the mayor, fire department... brought in a JCB (excavator), which broke a portion of the wall and the ramp," Chawla said.
The police brought the tanker back after delivering oxygen at the Tirath Ram Shah Hospital.
At present, there are over 100 patients at the hospital, majority of them on oxygen support.
"It could've been another Jaipur Golden tragedy, perhaps, of a bigger size... All this time, the families were there, helping us," Chawla said.
( Originally published on Apr 25, 2021 )
Read More News on
Download The Economic Times News App to get Daily Market Updates & Live Business News.
3 Comments on this Story
ARA13 hours ago One Ankur has started a political dibate instead of stating facts. I find that M'shtra, where, no Kumbh or, no elections were held there tops; Punjab refuses to ack. the fact that a worthless agitation is costing it too much by way of lost income to exchequer, health-problems, a real propagation of infection by those sitting there - turn by turn- to boost nos; then CH'garh, that small State for no reason is showing hiked-up figures; UP, yes- it is the largest STATE, as big as Mexico Plus Canada Plus Argentina etc combined- but, no one will act on troublesome size of it; Lastly DELHI! I again put reason of situation to the past , when one late Ms. Shiela Dixit was CM of then, UT of Delhi ( for 15 Years) which became a kichedi of sorts- neither here nor there kind of a State, ( neither fully governed by LG fully nor by STATE assmbly?) and to top it all- that un-working concept of NCR! Can you believe? It bridges H'yana, UP and also R'sthan- with lots of crisscrossing via Delhi- Should we continue with such set-ups ( a big UP and unworkable NCR) to only complicate admin.? No one has courage to call-off limping NCR to be back to 1980's which is right ruling setup for our Capital.( As UT, fully under Centre). = Else, problems galore in Delhi? | |
Ankur Badhwar16 hours ago Nero was busy in flute when rome was burning. Here modi was busy in elections and kumbh mela when Lakhs Indians were dying. Shameless character PM India ever had. Head bow in shame | |
jagat mohanty17 hours ago Real help is self help taking social responsibilities as our own at this juncture. Bravo, kudos to the officials and staff at the hospital! |