Many patients have been admitted to a hospital in New Delhi by sharing beds. In the devastated cities of India, people are either looking for beds to take their loved ones to hospital or gathering at crematoriums for cremation. So most of the crowds are going to be noticed in hospitals and crematoriums. In cities like Delhi and Mumbai where the hospitals are equipped with all the latest equipment, the most significant thing is that with the increase in the infection of Kovid-19, the health care in these hospitals has also completely collapsed.
“The flow of Covid-19 patients is so high that we have to treat in wheelchairs, sometimes in ambulances,” said Jalil Parker, a lung specialist and consultant at Mumbai’s Lilavati Hospital. This incident will remain in our memory as one of the worst incidents in the field of emergency public health care as an example of the seriousness of the shortage of oxygen and medicines for the treatment of patients in hospitals.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has termed the second attack of Kovid-19 in India as a “storm”. We are taking steps to resolve it very quickly. ” For those families who are already mourning for their dead relatives, it is too late. Damodar Sindh, a resident of Ahmedabad, said, “I brought my wife here at night and she was fine and talking to me. At about two in the morning, he informed me that he was no longer receiving oxygen and that the hospital was no longer providing him. ” Authorities have been criticized in recent weeks for allowing large Hindu religious festivals and political rallies led by top leaders. Experts say that more contagious species of Kovid-19 are responsible for the increase in this deadly infection.
Gautam Menon, a professor of biology and physics at Ashoka University, said: “Everyone knows that in the case of Kovid-19, the new species is more contagious, can spread more easily to humans and in some cases is able to avoid the immune response.” The second outbreak of the Kavid epidemic has quickly made India the epicenter of a global epidemic. “At a time when the number of cases of Covid-19 is increasing rapidly, our immunization program has slowed down a bit, which proves that the next few weeks will not be good for India,” he said.
India’s public healthcare system has collapsed on all fronts in the face of Covid-19, so it could face even bigger problems in the coming days. “I think we are devastated and exhausted,” said Jalil Parker, a lung specialist and consultant. We do not know how we will recover from this condition. Let’s all get vaccinated, let’s try to save lives. We provide more beds for patients in hospitals, more oxygen for treatment. ”
People are now wailing over the question of why the authorities did not prepare adequately to protect the people from the second attack of Kovid-19.