City
Epaper

Jharkhand HC seeks report within 10 days on facilities at RIMS, team to conduct inspection

By IANS | Updated: November 20, 2025 16:05 IST

Ranchi, Nov 20 The Jharkhand High Court on Thursday heard a public interest litigation (PIL) highlighting poor treatment ...

Open in App

Ranchi, Nov 20 The Jharkhand High Court on Thursday heard a public interest litigation (PIL) highlighting poor treatment facilities and inadequate infrastructure at the Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences (RIMS), Ranchi -- the state’s largest government hospital and medical college.

The court directed the Jharkhand State Legal Services Authority (JHALSA) to constitute a committee and carry out a comprehensive on-site inspection of RIMS. The committee has been asked to submit a detailed report within 10 days.

According to the court’s directions, the JHALSA team will examine the ground reality of essential services at the hospital, including the availability of medicines, functioning of pathology units, the condition of the trauma centre, drinking water supply, sanitation, cleanliness, building maintenance, and other basic patient amenities.

The petitioner has been instructed to scrutinise, point-by-point, the affidavits filed by RIMS and the state government in response to the High Court’s earlier order dated October 10, 2025.

The court said the petitioner must present a comparative response in the form of a tabular chart, showing whether the improvements claimed in the affidavits have actually been implemented.

The division bench of Chief Justice Tarlok Singh Chauhan and Justice Sujit Narayan Prasad, after hearing submissions, posted the matter for further hearing on December 3.

The High Court has repeatedly expressed serious concern over the deteriorating condition of RIMS. Despite being the state’s premier multispeciality healthcare institution, the hospital continues to struggle with chronic staff shortages, outdated or insufficient medical equipment, neglected infrastructure, and frequent allegations of mismanagement and administrative apathy.

Patient complaints and media reports have frequently highlighted issues ranging from long waiting times and lack of sanitation to dysfunctional machines and overcrowding.

Alongside the suo motu case initiated by the court, a separate PIL filed by social activist Jyoti Sharma has also drawn attention to systemic issues at RIMS.

The petition seeks urgent corrective measures, including the appointment of more doctors, nurses, technicians, and Group D employees; procurement of essential machinery; and significant upgrades to overall healthcare services.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalAfter seven failed attempts, US Senate passes resolution to limit President Trump's war powers in Iran

NationalJ-K: Excessive heat in May affects hybrid flowers in Udhampur's Jakhani Park

NationalSuvendu Adhikari PA murder case: CBI arrests fifth accused in UP's Varanasi

CricketI know I can hit three boundaries or sixes anytime: Vaibhav Sooryavanshi

EntertainmentDragon glimpse out: Jr NTR goes on a killing spree in land of villains of Prashanth Neel's directorial

Health Realted Stories

HealthKerala launches statewide dental network for early oral cancer detection

HealthIndia pitches digital health revolution at World Health Assembly

HealthHidden sugar patterns on human cells can help in early cancer detection: Study

HealthTN govt assures uninterrupted medicine supply amid chemists’ strike

HealthJan Aushadhi Kendras to stay open during nationwide pharmacists' strike tomorrow; assure uninterrupted medicine supply