Ghaziabad: More than 100 oxygen cylinders are lost from the joint district hospital, L2 facility, during the second covid wave in April-May.
The problem was revealed after the internal investigation was carried out last month.
The prepared report and hospital management approached the local police station with a list of 535 patients who were hospitalized during the period.
Secrets have been submitted in this case.
It is feared that many patient officers took the oxygen cylinder from the 100 covid bed facilities.
The hospital medical supervisor, Dr.
Sanjay Teotia, told Ti that half of the lost cylinders had been traced to a private vendor who supplied oxygen to the facility during the period.
In April-May, there was a wide crisis of hospital beds.
And the supply of oxygen and waiter some covid patients must set their own cylindrical.
There is an instance when a nervous relative has clashed with hospital staff during arguments due to lack of critical care.
On several occasions, Dr.
Teotia was also released at the hospital.
CuplicCTV has revealed that while no officers are permitted in the Covid ward, some relatives of covid patients enter the hospital have lived in place, sometimes for days.
“During the second covid wave, there were more patients in hospitals than 100 beds and the number of servants even more.
They did not listen to the staff on duty and stay inside even though they were asked not.
No police attended the hospital,” Team Report The investigation has stated.
According to officials, although this problem has been taken with a senior police supervisor, no power provided.
A police team was deployed around the second week of May, they added.
Kusum Chopra, a nursing supervisor assistant at the hospital, told the official on July 8 that the D-Type D type oxygen cylinder and 22 cylinder type B were missing from the facility.
On the basis of written complaints from Chopra, a team of five members, including a senior doctor of the hospital and Matron, was formed by Dr.
Teotia to conduct an investigation and submit a report.
The investigation team handed over its report on August 12 and the findings said the oxygen supplier of the hospital and the patient’s servant was responsible for the lost cylinder.
It also questioned the role of hospital staff who managed the ward during that time and accused negligence on their part.
“While FIR has been put forward in this matter, the department’s actions have been recommended against hospital staff,” said Dr.
Teotia.