Probes blame shortage of oxygen after infants die in Indian hospital
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["other","India"]
A state-run hospital in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh is being investigated after 30 infants died.
In less than a month, the second case has surfaced in which shortage of oxygen supplies have been the blame for the dozen of children’s death.
Now under the spotlight, after more than 60 children died last August, the underfunded and poorly managed public health system amid accusations that oxygen supplies ran out because of unpaid bills.
Police launched an investigation on Sunday in the latest case after a government report blamed the chief medical officer and doctors at another institution in the northern state, Ram Manohar Lohia hospital, for the deaths of 30 children.
The infants died of “perinatal asphyxia” at the newborn care unit of the hospital in the state’s Farrukhabad district between July 21 and Aug. 20, police said.
“The probe officer was told by mothers that the hospital did not insert oxygen pipes (into infants’ windpipes) after birth, and proper medication was also not given,” police said in the complaint, quoting the government report.
Indian medical staff attends to a child admitted in the Encephalitis ward at the Baba Raghav Das Hospital in Gorakhpur, in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, August 12, 2017.  AFP/ Photo

Indian medical staff attends to a child admitted in the Encephalitis ward at the Baba Raghav Das Hospital in Gorakhpur, in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, August 12, 2017.  AFP/ Photo

The investigation suggested that 30 of a total of 49 children died of perinatal asphyxia, police added in the complaint, seen by Reuters.
This condition is caused by a reduced level of oxygen in infants just before, during or after delivery, depriving them of the ability to breathe freely.
A district magistrate on Wednesday ordered the inquiry into the deaths of the infants after media reports linked some deaths to oxygen shortages. He also ordered action against all the doctors involved in the deaths.
The district’s chief medical superintendent, Dr. Akhilesh Agarwal, denied there had been any lack of oxygen.
The hospital saved 121 of the 145 infants admitted in critical condition following their birth elsewhere, he added.
“The rest died since their conditions were critical,” he told Reuters.
Nineteen more babies were born dead in the government hospital, and the six remaining, from the tally of 49 in the government report, died of unspecified causes, he added, without elaborating.
India spends about one percent of its GDP on public health, among the lowest in the world.
Successive governments have faced criticism for not reforming the overburdened public health system which is still plagued with a shortage of doctors and dilapidated infrastructure.
In recent years, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has increased health spending and vowed to make health care more affordable.
Source(s): Reuters