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Rain water inundated Covid-19 ward in OGH

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Hyderabad’s public health crisis, compounded by the COVID-19 outbreak, is likely to worsen during the oncoming monsoon months. The heavy downpour that hit Hyderabad since two days has resulted in the flooding of state-run Osmania General Hospital (OGH).

Heavy rain, beginning in the early hours of Sunday, inundated the first floor of the building, with the water reaching ankle-height. Rain waters inundated ground floor wards at the OGH on Tuesday and forced employees to start relocating Covid-19 patients. Thick blankets of water entered the entire ground floor of the heritage block in OGH. The OGH has been prone to flooding during the monsoon. Despite this the state government had miserably failed to take precautionary measures to avert the situation, leaving anxious patients and their attendants worried about health as well as their lives.

Continuous heavy showers that lashed the state over the past 24 hours aggravated the overcrowding situation at the hospital. Corona virus patients were being forced to share isolation wards with the dead at the OGH. Six wards, including an ICU, all of which are on the ground floor, were flooded, forcing patients to take refuge on their beds. There are reports that 15-20 patients were forced to share space with two bodies for over seven hours in one of the wards in the OGH. Hospital management admitted that the building was not the ideal place to deal with an infectious disease, especially not one that spreads as easily as COVID-19. Videos went viral that showed how neglect has exposed the Covid-19 patients to misery within the aging walls of OGH. Patients were shifted to upper floors while some machinery and equipment was left on the ground floor.

The iconic century-old heritage building had been a picture of neglect. OGH, once the biggest government hospital, had been a victim of successive government’s apathy to restore it. Years of neglect is visible for any visitor with creaking walls and patches of plaster falling off from the buildings roofs and walls. The OGH housed in a 25-acre sprawling campus has five buildings, one for nursing and the other for patient care.

“The state government is busy in the demolition of the Secretariat building but has a little concern towards Covid-19 patients in the Osmania General Hospital,” State BJP president Bandi Sanjay Kumar lashed out. The situation in the hospital is likely to worsen. Efforts were being made to drain out the water from the wards but the whole hospital is surrounded with chest-deep water. With the onset of monsoon, it is unlikely that the government’s efforts will pave off.

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Hyderabad’s Osmania Hospital medicos on strike over attack

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Junior doctors at the government-run Osmania General Hospital (OGH) here went on strike after relatives of a patient attacked their colleagues.

Nearly 250 junior doctors and house surgeons have been boycotting their duties except emergency services since Sunday night, demanding security for them and action against those involved in the attack.

The strike by medicos hit services at OGH, one of the oldest hospitals in the country and the biggest government-run facility in Telangana.

Patients coming from different parts of the city and other districts and neighbouring states faced hardships.

Four attendants of a woman patient, who died during the treatment, assaulted two female junior doctors and a duty doctor on Sunday night.

The 70-year-old patient, who was in critical condition, died at Intensive Care Unit.

Alleging that she died due to negligence by doctors, four of her relatives barged into the ICU and attacked them.

The junior doctors lodged a complaint with Afzalgunj Hospital. They demanded the arrest of the accused under non-bailable sections.

The Telangana Junior Doctors’ Association called for a strike to protest against the rising number of attacks on medicos. It said this was the fourth incident at OGH in one month.

OGH Superintendent G.V.S. Moorthy tried to persuade them to call off the strike. He set up a committee to look into their demands and asked for a report within three days.

Following similar incidents at OGH and Gandhi Hospital in the past, authorities had taken some measures to provide security to medicos.

The association demanded that security personnel be deployed and CCTV cameras installed in all wards of the hospitals.

Telugu360 is always open for the best and bright journalists. If you are interested in full-time or freelance, email us at Krishna@telugu360.com.

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