
Kathmandu . Authorities say there is uneven distribution of oxygen and they needed to step in to address shortage in a coordinated way. Police have also stepped in. There is a widespread scramble for bottled oxygen across the country.
With surging cases of Covid-19, hospitals are facing oxygen shortage, prompting many to declare that they will take no more Covid-19 patients without increased oxygen supply. Authorities have stepped in but that has not been widely welcomed. Blaming the current crisis on mismanagement in oxygen distribution, the Ministry of Health and Population on Saturday issued a circular in the name of 10 oxygen manufacturers, most of them based in Kathmandu Valley, instructing them not to supply oxygen to hospitals whether they are public, private or community-run without its recommendation letter.
Private hospitals have condemned the government’s decision, saying that the decision would be harsh on private and community hospitals and that it adds bureaucratic hassles just to get the life-saving gas. “At a time when the country needs a unified response from the government, private sector and all other sectors in the current Covid-19 crisis, the government’s unilateral decision is aimed at harassing hospitals run by communities and the private sector,” the Association of Private Health Institution of Nepal, a grouping of private hospitals, said in a statement.
Kathmandu-based oxygen plants produce around 8,000 cylinders a day but manufacturers say the current demand far exceeds their capacity. But oxygen manufactures are following the directive.
“From Sunday, we have stopped supplying oxygen to anyone without a recommendation from the ministry,” said Gaurav Sharda, president of Oxygen Industries Association. Private hospitals have also criticised the manufacturers’ decision. They say that oxygen manufacturers have failed to fulfil their contractual obligation of supplying oxygen to private hospitals after the government’s ‘unwanted’ intervention.
“The government hospitals are without beds. The private hospitals, where beds are available, have not been able to provide services due to the lack of oxygen due to the government’s decision,” the association said. Kumar Thapa, senior vice-president of the association of private hospitals, said they were forced to make rounds of the government authorities when oxygen should be made available urgently.
“We have been queuing at oxygen plants till now. With the government’s decision, we have been forced to queue up at the ministry for the recommendation letter,” said Thapa, who is also a promoter at Alka Hospital.
But the government has argued that the Health Ministry’s recommendation was made mandatory to address the shortage of oxygen in a coordinated way. “Who knows how many patients are there in every hospital, how many are in ICUs, on ventilators and wards?” asked Jageshwar Gautam, indicating that only the government has such data. “Therefore, oxygen should also be distributed as per the number and condition of the patients in each hospital. For this, the government got involved to ensure that oxygen is distributed properly.”
Despite Gautam’s claims, the government every day publishes data on the number of Covid-19 patients in hospitals. However, the data is not complete. For example, there were 50 Covid-19 patients at Kist Hospital on Saturday, according to the hospital but the situation report for Saturday does not show Kist Hospital as having any Covid-19 patients.
The hospital ran out of oxygen on Saturday afternoon and was able to get it from a government hospital to save the lives of its patients on oxygen. Also, according to Gautam, the move on the need for recommendations to avail of oxygen is also aimed at discouraging distribution of oxygen to individual households amid shortage of oxygen at hospitals.
Oxygen manufacturers say they have been distributing oxygen to individuals too as per the prescription of hospitals or doctors. Public health experts too have questioned whether the government’s decision would be practical.
“Hospitals that are overwhelmed by Covid-19 patients might require oxygen even at midnight,” Dr Baburam Marasini, a former director of the Epidemiology and Disease Control Division, told the Post, adding, “Will the ministry prepare a recommendation letter at midnight?”
Authorities, however, say that the process of seeking recommendation letters would not hamper hospitals’ ability to receive oxygen in time. “The hospital management remains aware of its oxygen stock and they should not wait to get a recommendation letter until the hospital is about to run out of oxygen,” said spokesperson Gautam.
