The poor state of india's government run health services for people is our daily experience. Even as they do a great service for all in need, especially the poor, they are plauged with lack of infrastructure and staff. Witness this news where several district level government hospitals in uttarakhand now dont even admit people in the summer as they do not have enough water supply !
April 2022 news : Every day, the district hospital in Champawat needs at
least 67,500 litres of water to function. But as water becomes
increasingly scarce across the north Indian state of Uttarakhand, the
hospital in the Kumaon Himalayas is routinely left without the quantity
of water it needs to safely provide healthcare for the local community.
“In peak summers, our villagers are refused admission as there is no
water at the hospitals,” said Bhuwan Singh, the head of Ruiyan, a small
Himalayan village in Champawat district. He said that during the peak summer months, three or four people out of
Ruiyan’s population of 330 adults are refused entry to hospital. “Every year [during the summer], it gets really difficult to receive
treatment at any of the nearby government health centres or even the
district hospital,” he said.
More than 300,000 people in Champawat district rely on the hospital; its average daily footfall is 250-300 people.
Parmanand Punetha, an engineer at the Uttarakhand water department,
said: “Water reservoirs are drying each year, and it gets very difficult
to maintain a continuous supply to the three major hospitals in
Champawat, Lohaghat and Paati on a regular basis.
The Bureau of Indian Standards, the authority that sets standards for
all products in the country, stipulates that hospitals with more than
100 beds should have a round-the-clock piped supply of up to 450 litres of water per bed per day. This excludes water required for air conditioning and firefighting.
Champawat district hospital has 150 beds, and needs at least three
tankers of water (10,500 litres) to function, Airy said. This means the
average allocation is less than 50 litres per bed per day.
Yet Airy told The Third Pole that during the summer, the hospital
receives only half the required quantity of water. On most days in the
driest period it gets only two tankers (7,000 litres), and sometimes
just one.
“When we order four tanks, we only get two and we are the main hospital
in this district so I can imagine that the primary [or community] health
centres would face even tougher situations.”
Tripti Bahuguna, director-general of State Health Services for
Uttarakhand, said that healthcare provision is most affected in the
Kumaon region (which encompasses Champawat district) and Pauri Garhwal
district.
And witness here the ABC rules which stipulate AC operation theatres for dog sterilization !
In Jun 2023, Kerala State Minister for Local Self-Governments said that it was difficult to set up and run Animal Birth Control centres as per the
central norms as the rules stipulate that sterilisation should be done
in an AC operation theatre, the dog should be treated there for four
days and be released only after the wound is healed.