City
Epaper

More than one COVID patient seen sharing bed in Nagpur hospital

By ANI | Updated: April 5, 2021 06:45 IST

In a viral video, more than one Covid-19 patient was seen sharing beds at Nagpur's GMC Hospital.

Open in App

In a viral video, more than one Covid-19 patient was seen sharing beds at Nagpur's GMC Hospital.

When asked about the video that is circulating on the Internet, Dr Avinash V Gawande, Medical Superintendent said: "This does not happen here but if it has then because patients come not just from urban and rural districts here, but also from Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh."

Explaining further he said, "...we can not keep patients waiting, it will affect their oxygen level. It happens when there is a rush but it is not a routine thing. They have to wait for 15 minutes to half an hour, because we first provide them with oxygen then they are shifted to hospital wards."

"If 40 patients come at a time then it is difficult to shift them to the wards at the same time, so it takes a bit of time. We provide oxygen support first and then shift the patient to the wards," he said.

Nagpur district recorded 62 deaths and 4,110 new patients on Sunday.

( With inputs from ANI )

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

Tags: Thumbay Hospital
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalJ-K hospital asks patients to report back after doctor treating them test positive for COVID-19

Maharashtra Realted Stories

MaharashtraMaharashtra: Minor Dies of Electric Shock After Touching AC Wire in Nallasopara Society

ThaneThane Hit And Run Accident: Constable Dies After Being Hit by Dumper Near Cadbury Junction, Accused Arrested

MaharashtraMHADA Konkan Board Lottery 2025: Apply Online for 5,285 Flats and 77 Plots Across Thane, Vasai & Sindhudurg From July 14 – Check Application Dates Here

Maharashtra"Marathi Is Our Identity, But...": Ujjwal Nikam on Ongoing Language Row in Maharashtra (Watch Video)

NashikNashik Dengue Surge: City Records 29 Dengue Cases in First Week of July