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Covid-19 in India: Patients struggle reception as hospitals choke

 Covid-19 in India: Patients struggle reception as hospitals choke

On Monday, India recorded a replacement global high for daily coronavirus cases for a fifth straight day at 352, 991.

Covid-19 in India: Patients struggle reception as hospitals choke

Anshu Priya couldn't get a single bed in Delhi or its suburb of Noida for her father-in-law and as his condition continued to deteriorate. She spent most of Sunday trying to find an oxygen cylinder but her search was futile.

Labs are overrun and it's taking over to 3 days for test results to return back. this is often making it harder for treating doctors to assess the progression of the disease. CT scans also are employed by doctors to asses the condition of the patient but it's taking days to urge a meeting .

Doctors say that these delays are putting many patients in danger . RT-PCR tests also are taking days. i do know several sick patients who found a bed but couldn't get admitted as they did not have a positive Covid report.

Anuj Tiwari hired a nurse to help within the treatment of his brother reception after he was refused admission in many hospitals.

Also Read:  India Covid crisis: Hospitals yield record surge

Remdesivir is in such short supply that families of the patients who are being treated reception are rushing to acquire it. they need to possess the drug just in case the patient is required to travel to hospital and should need the drug.

But several promises of adequate supply from the govt have did not show any result on the bottom . Epidemiologist Dr Lalit Kant says the choice to build up production was taken too late and therefore the government should are prepared for the second wave.


Cheating

Fake remdesivir has also appeared within the black market. When the BBC questioned a dealer that the drug he was offering seemed fake because the firm manufacturing it wasn't on the list of the businesses licensed to supply it in India, he replied that it had been "100% original".

The packaging was also filled with spelling errors. But he shrugged and asked me to urge it tested in any laboratory. The firm also has no presence on the web .

But such is that the desperation that folks are willing to shop for even questionable drugs. and a few are cheated also . People are constantly sharing phone numbers of suppliers who can provide anything from oxygen to medicines. But not all of those numbers are verified.

An IT worker, who didn't want to be named, said that he desperately needed to shop for an oxygen cylinder and remdesivir, and he got a lead from Twitter. When he contacted the person, he was told to deposit 10,000 rupees as advance payment.

"The moment I sent the cash , the person blocked my number," he said.

Desperation is driving people to trust anything within the hour of need which seems to be fuelling the black market. Several state governments have promised to clamp down on black marketing of remdesivir and a few arrests have also been made. But the black market seems unfazed.

Mr Tiwari says people like him do not have any choice but to pay more.

It seems you cannot get treated in hospitals, and now you cannot save your loved ones even reception 

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