Hospital fire kills 18 virus patients as India steps up jabs

A fire in a COVID-19 hospital ward in western India killed 18 patients early Saturday, as the country grappling with the worst outbreak yet steps up a vaccination drive for all its adults even though some states say they don’t have enough jabs.
India on Saturday set yet another
daily global record with 401,993 new cases, taking its tally to more than 19.1
million. Another 3,523 people died in the past 24 hours, raising the overall
fatalities to 211,853, according to the Health Ministry. Experts believe both
figures are an undercount.
The fire broke out in a COVID-19
ward on the ground floor of the Welfare Hospital in Bharuch, a town in Gujarat
state, and was extinguished within an hour, police said. The cause is being
investigated.
Thirty-one other patients were
rescued by hospital workers and firefighters and their condition was stable,
said police officer B.M Parmar. The eighteen patients died in the blaze and
smoke before rescuers could reach them, Parmar said.
On April 23, a fire in an
intensive care unit killed 13 COVID-19 patients in the Virar area on the
outskirts of Mumbai.
India’s government on Saturday
shifted its faltering vaccination campaign into high gear by saying all adults
18 and over would get shots. Since January, nearly 10% of Indians have received
one dose, but only around 1.5% have received both, although India is one of the
world’s biggest producers of vaccines.
Some states already said they
don’t have enough doses for everyone. Even the ongoing effort to inoculate
people above 45 is stuttering.
The state of Maharashtra has said
it won’t be able to start on Saturday, and Satyender Jain, the health minister
in New Delhi, said earlier this week that the city doesn’t have enough doses to
vaccinate people between 18 and 44.
Separately, eight COVID-19
patients, including a doctor, died Saturday at a hospital in the capital of New
Delhi after it ran short of oxygen supplies, the Press Trust of India news
agency reported. There was no confirmation by hospital officials.
The New Delhi television news
channel also said an attorney for the Batra hospital told a New Delhi court
that the hospital ran out of oxygen supply for 80 minutes before the tank was
replenished.
Hospitals in the Indian capital
have been complaining of emergencies caused by irregular oxygen supplies by
manufacturers due to the sudden rise in demand caused by the massive spike in
virus infections.
Faced with an unprecedented surge
in cases that has filled hospitals and crematoriums, Prime Minister Narendra
Modi’s government described the pandemic as a “once-in-a-century crisis.” Modi
held a Cabinet meeting Friday that discussed steps to save the country’s
crumbling health system by adding hospital beds, resolving issues in
production, storage and transport of oxygen and tackling the shortage of
essential medicines.
Television images showed a woman
gasping for breath in her car while her family looked for a hospital bed on the
outskirts of New Delhi.
The 33-year-old woman couldn’t
find room at three hospitals and died in the car on Friday, The Times of India
newspaper reported.
The U.S. meanwhile joined a
growing list of countries restricting travel from India, the White House said,
citing the devastating rise in COVID-19 cases and the emergence of potentially
dangerous variants of the coronavirus.
President Joe Biden spoke Monday
with Modi about the growing health crisis and pledged to immediately send
assistance. This week, the U.S. began delivering therapeutics, rapid virus
tests and oxygen to India, along with some materials needed for India to boost
its domestic production of COVID-19 vaccines.
Additionally, a CDC team of public
health experts was expected to be on the ground soon to help Indian health
officials move to slow the spread of the virus.
Other nations have also sent
assistance, and the Indian air force airlifted oxygen containers from
Singapore, Dubai and Bangkok.
A German military aircraft with
120 ventilators for India departed Saturday morning from Cologne, and plans
were being made for other flights with more supplies. Also on board was a team
of 13 that will help prepare to set up a mobile oxygen production unit that
will be flown to India next week, German news agency dpa said.