City
Epaper

IMA warns Kerala CM against engaging police in contact tracing

By IANS | Updated: August 4, 2020 16:00 IST

Thiruvananthapuram, Aug 4 The Kerala unit of the Indian Medical Association (IMA) on Tuesday wrote to Chief Minister ...

Open in App

Thiruvananthapuram, Aug 4 The Kerala unit of the Indian Medical Association (IMA) on Tuesday wrote to Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan asking him not to entrust the job of contact tracing of Covid patients to the police. It said this job should be done by experts in the field of medicine.

The IMA was responding to Vijayan's statement on Monday that the police has been given more powers and authority which includes contact tracing.

President of the IMA, Joseph Chacko in his letter to Vijayan said the police should be given the job of enforcing proper quarantine measures and other such things.

"The job of contact tracing has to be done by medical professionals and not by others and if such a thing does not happen, it could lead to serious issues. We are also apprehensive of the proposed reverse quarantine centres that are being proposed. A few countries tried this and it turned out to be a big disaster and hence we are of the opinion that more serious thought should be given before a decision is taken," said Chacko.

The IMA also pointed out that with many key government hospitals turning into Covid centres, the need of the hour was to set up a hospital in every district as non-Covid treatment centres.

"Those private hospitals which are presently closed should be infused with the proper infrastructure so that they are turned into treatment centres for Covid. Moreover, we are also concerned that with many Covid First Line Treatment Centres being opened, those centres do not have adequate staff and hence instead of appointing staff from other medical centres, temporary appointments in all the categories should take place at these new centres," said Chacko.

The IMA while welcoming the decision of keeping asymptomatic Covid positive patients at their homes asked that certain basic instruments like pulse oximeter, digital thermometer and digital BP apparatus should be provided to all such patients.

"Everyday such patients should be monitored by the medical professionals and if there is any change in any parameters, such patients should be moved in an ambulance to the nearby hospitals," added Chacko.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Joseph ChackoPinarayi VijayanIndian Medical Association
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiBomb Threat at Bombay Stock Exchange: BSE Gets Threatening Email Saying 4RDX IED In Mumbai Office

NationalWatch: PM Narendra Modi Attacks INDIA Bloc in Presence of Congress Leader Shashi Tharoor and Kerala CM

HealthDr.Sahajanand Prasad Singh: A Passionate And Service Oriented Doctor

NationalKerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan Launches ‘Swami Chatbot’ Logo to Aid Sabarimala Pilgrims with Smartphone Access

NationalKolkata Doctor-Rape Case: IMA Writes to Mamata Banerjee, Says ‘Safe Working Environment Is Not Luxury but a Prerequisite’

Health Realted Stories

HealthOver Rs 10 cr spent for prevention of zoonotic diseases in FY 25: Govt

HealthPhase III clinical trial for India’s 1st dengue vaccine hits 70pc enrolment mark: Minister

Health1,704 dialysis centres operational in 751 districts: Prataprao Jadhav

HealthIndia's export loss due to higher US tariffs limited to 0.3 to 0.4 pc of GDP: Report

HealthSickle Cell Anaemia: Over 6 cr screened, 2.16 lakh identified as diseased, says Nadda