A COVID care centre with 500 oxygen-supported beds run by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) began functioning from April 26 in Delhi with the admission of at least 25 patients within the first few hours.
The facility, named Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel COVID Care Centre (SPCCC), has been opened in view of Delhi registering a sharp rise in coronavirus cases. It is located on the Radha Soami Beas campus in the Chhattarpur area of south Delhi.
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Here's everything you need to know about Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel COVID Care Centre in Delhi:
> The border guarding force, ITBP, has been designated by the Union Home Ministry as the nodal agency to run the facility,
> ITBP has said there would be no walk-in admissions to the centre. Admission at this centre will be made after approval by district surveillance officers in Delhi.
> A team of 50 ITBP and other organisations' doctors, about 80 paramedics and nursing staff, security personnel of the border guarding force and other administrative staff have been tasked to run the centre that is expected to add more beds in the coming days.
> ITBP has said that treatment at this centre will be free of cost. "The SPCCC has started functioning on Monday. About 25 patients have arrived till about 11 am and more are expected," ITBP spokesperson Vivek Kumar Pandey said.
> Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal visited the facility and thanked the Union government for providing doctors and medical staff at the centre. He said 200 ICU beds will also be arranged at the facility.
> The helpline numbers of SPCCC are: 011-26655547/48/49 and 011-26655949/69.
> Patient's details like age, address, contact number, oxygen level, pulse and comorbid conditions will be obtained and after assessment by a team of doctors, those eligible to get admitted will be communicated through their contact number.
> DSOs will also be empowered to recommend patients to the SPCCC.
> The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) had declared on April 22 that the SPCCC, which was made operational in July last year and shut in February this year as coronavirus infections declined in the national capital, was being restarted on the Delhi government's request as the cases are rising rapidly once again.
> A total of 11,657 COVID-19 patients were treated at this centre between July and February.
> Delhi is currently facing an acute shortage of oxygen beds for serious COVID-19 patients and has almost run out of ICU facilities amid soaring infections. It recorded 350 COVID-19 deaths and 22,933 cases with a positivity rate of 30.21 percent on April 25.
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