Tuesday, March 04, 2025 | 07:20 AM ISTहिंदी में पढें
Business Standard
Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

Six patients die at Amritsar hospital allegedly due to oxygen shortage

Lapse prompts the Punjab authorities to order a probe into the incident

Family members of COVID-19 patients wait outside an oxygen-filling center to refill their empty cylinders, as demand for the gas rises due to spike in coronavirus cases, at Mayapuri in New Delhi (Photo: PTI)

Family members of COVID-19 patients wait outside an oxygen-filling center to refill their empty cylinders, as demand for the gas rises due to spike in coronavirus cases (Photo: PTI)

Press Trust of India Amritsar

Six patients died at a private hospital here on Saturday allegedly due to a shortage of oxygen, prompting the Punjab authorities to order a probe into the incident.

Five of the six patients were infected with COVID-19, the hospital said.

"Despite the district administration being repeatedly asked to extend help, no one turned up to do the needful," Sunil Devgan, chairman and managing director of Neelkant hospital where the deaths occurred, alleged.

"Six patients, including two women, died due to the shortage of oxygen," he claimed.

However, Medical Education Minister O P Soni refuted the charge and claimed that no proper information was given by the hospital about any shortage of oxygen.

 

A mere simple message was dropped in a WhatsApp group to the administration," he said.

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh ordered the Amritsar Deputy Commissioner (DC) to initiate a thorough probe into the incident.

Singh also said the hospital prima facie seemed to have flouted orders given to all private hospitals facing oxygen shortage to shift their patients to government medical colleges.

The incident comes amid a deepening crisis over the scarcity of oxygen, vital to save critically ill COVID patients, with similar tragedies unfolding in hospitals in other parts of the country over the last few days.

Devgan claimed that after the death of patients, only five oxygen cylinders were supplied to the hospital.

The hospital chairman claimed that three main oxygen suppliers have said that government hospitals are being prioritised.

"Heavy police force has been deployed outside the oxygen units to prevent oxygen supply to private hospitals," Devgan alleged.

Of the six patients who died at the hospital on Saturday, two were from Gurdaspur, one from Tarn Taran district and the remaining three were from Amritsar.

The DC has set up a two-member committee, comprising a PCS officer, Dr Rajat Oberoi, who is also in-charge of the death analysis committee, and a civil surgeon from Amritsar, to probe the matter, an official spokesperson said.

The DC told reporters that oxygen was being supplied to private hospitals without any prejudice and that the government hospital here was also running short of oxygen supply on Friday night.

The DC said private hospitals had been told not to admit patients if they do not have oxygen and they should refer patients to Guru Nanak Dev Hospital.

Meanwhile, the opposition party SAD, while expressing shock at the incident, demanded from the Congress-led state government to fix responsibility for the tragedy.

In a statement, Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) leader Bikram Singh Majithia condemned the state government for allegedly leading the state into doom and despair.

Majithia demanded that the CM tell people why he has not been able to set his house in order despite advance warnings of the second wave of COVID and the need for more oxygen facilities, ventilators and ICUs.

It is clear that the chief minister has failed to lead from the front. He is content to shut himself in his farm house as the state burns, he alleged.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Apr 24 2021 | 10:17 PM IST

Explore News