Fri. Nov 18th, 2022

Goa has the highest positivity rate in the country – 48.1 per cent as of Thursday evening
Goa: Seventy-four patients have died at the Goa Medical College and Hospital – the biggest Covid facility in the state – in the past four days, all reportedly due to a lack of medical oxygen.
Thirteen people died in the “critical dark hours” between 1 am and 6 am on Friday, according to former Deputy Chief Minister Vijai Sardesai, whose Goa Forward Party quit the ruling BJP-led National Democratic Alliance last month over its “anti-Goan policies”.
Around the same time on Thursday morning, 15 deaths were recorded. The day before – Wednesday – 20 people died, and on Tuesday, also between 2 and 6 am, 26 people lost their lives.
Goa Chief Minister Pramod Sawant, who visited the hospital this week, said the gap between the “availability of medical oxygen and its supply might have caused some issues”.
However, he also stressed that there is no scarcity of oxygen supply in the state.
Goemkars are devastated & heartbroken as inspite of a truce between @DrPramodPSawant & @visrane brokered by Centre, 13 have reportedly died last night due to logistical issues’ @GoaGmc during the critical dark hours’ (1-6AM)!We need action not just another committee of enquiry
Vijai Sardesai (@VijaiSardesai) May 14, 2021
Goa Health Minister Vishwajit Rane, however, told reporters of a shortfall in supply as of Monday.
Mr Rane sought a probe by the High Court, which is already hearing petitions on management of the pandemic, and asked it “prepare a white paper on oxygen supply… would help set the things right”.
The Chief Minister’s assertion contradicts a Tuesday letter from Goa’s Principal Secretary, PK Goel, to the central government. According to news agency PTI, in the letter, he said that between May 1 and 10, the state received only 66.74 metric tonnes of the allocated 110 from Maharashtra’s Kolhapur
Kolhapur supplies around 40 per cent of all medical oxygen to Goa in this crisis.
“It is an earnest request we should be given 22 MT per day, in place of 11 MT, for at least a week to make up for the shortfall,” the BJP government in the state wrote to the centre.
Meanwhile, the Goa Medical College and Hospital is full. There is no place for new patients, and the final few who managed admission have to be content with a spot on the floor.
“We waited eight hours just to get a wheelchair… the next day his oxygen levels were 50-60 and we needed a ventilator, which was not available. Forget that, they don’t even have beds. They put him on the floor,” a family member of a patient, who did not wish to be named, told NDTV.
The Bombay High Court’s Goa bench is hearing several petitions on the handling of the pandemic and, on Thursday, said Covid patients could not be allowed to die because of logistics.
That was after the state said delay in replenishing oxygen supplies was due to problems like a lack of people to drive the tankers and tractors that transport the gas.
The court has directed hospital and state authorities to file a status report by 7 pm today; this is to include reports on the supply of oxygen and the availability of tanks, concentrators and drivers.
Goa has the highest positivity rate in the country – 48.1 per cent as of Thursday evening. This means every second COVID-19 test is returning a positive result.
On Friday morning, the state reported 2,491 new cases and 62 deaths in 24 hours, to take its active caseload to nearly 33,000 and total number of deaths to nearly 2,000.
With input from ANI, PTI