Expressing serious concern over the recent incident, the rights panel has said it is "painful" to know that a person who was taken to a nearby hospital well in time was "not attended to by doctors even in the national capital".
"Instead, he was referred to the other hospital, every time. The Rajiv Gandhi hospital is a super-specialty hospital of Delhi. It is not understandable that doctors were not available at such a well-equipped hospital," it said.
According to the June 17 report, the 22-year-old man, suffering from breathlessness and chest pain, was "not provided treatment by the doctors at different government hospitals in Delhi".
The content of the news report, the NHRC said, are "indicative of lack of sensitivity towards saving a human life on the part of doctors of government-run hospitals, which were not able to provide life-saving medical treatment to the patient. They only referred the patient to the other hospital".
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An ambulance was called by the family and he was taken to the Hedgewar Hospital where he was administered glucose and then referred to the Guru Teg Bahadur (GTB) Hospital, the NHRC said, citing the report.
Both these hospitals are run by the Delhi government.
"At the GTB Hospital, the patient was kept in the emergency ward for three hours but no medical treatment was provided to him. The brother of the patient called the police, and he was then admitted to the hospital but after sometime, he was referred to the Rajiv Gandhi hospital at Tahirpur.
The family members of the victim have alleged that they took the patient to the hospital well in time, but the doctors "instead of providing treatment, kept on referring him from one hospital to another".
They have claimed that had the treatment been provided timely by the doctors, the "life of the victim could have been saved".
"Therefore, if the content of the news report are true, this is a case of sheer negligence by doctors, amounting to violation of right to life and medical care," the NHRC observed.