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Sunday, July 19, 2020

Bengaluru man protests outside CM’s office after his baby dies without medical care

Death
Venkatesh alleged that he had approached about a dozen hospitals in Bengaluru and all of them refused to provide his one-month-old daughter any medical care.
A man, whose one-month-old girl died due to lack of adequate medical care, protested in front of Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa's residence on Saturday.  Venkatesh sat with the baby's photograph in front of the Chief Minister's house in Bengaluru, saying the girl developed health issues on July 11 and when he rushed her to a hospital, they were turned away.  According to the Bengaluru police, Venkatesh said that he had approached about a dozen hospitals and all of them refused to provide the baby with any medical care. Eventually, the baby died on the evening of July 13. This forced Venkatesh to hold a protest to draw the Chief Minister's attention to the issue, the police said. The demonstration drew public attention and a few people joined him in the protest, they said. Later, he was taken away from the spot by the police. The Times of India reported that Venkatesh’s one-month-old girl was suffering from cardiac complications, and that lack of timely intervention from doctors due to denial of admission led to her death.  He demanded that the state government take action against the hospitals that allegedly denied treatment to the infant.  The report also said that he had later gone to protest by sitting in front of the CM’s home-office Krishna. He withdrew his protest after police and staff from the CM’s office consoled him and told him to write a letter, which they will handover to the CM. According to reports, Venkatesh and his wife had travelled for 36 hours in the city between last Sunday and Monday for over 200 km but was denied admission for their child in at least 10 hospitals.  It may be recalled how guards posted at the CM’s residence arranged an ambulance for a family of four after their efforts to arrange for one failed. (With PTI inputs)
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Video: Wife, sons take Karnataka man’s body on pushcart after kin refuse over COVID-19 fear

Coronavirus
According to reports, the 55-year-old man from Belagavi tested negative for the novel coronavirus.
A heart-wrenching video of a woman and two young men pushing the dead body of a man, wrapped in a white sheet, on a pushcart, had gone viral on social media on Saturday. It was later found that the incident took place in Athani taluk of Belagavi district in Karnataka, and was shot on July 17. According to reports, the woman was taking her husband’s body, and the two other men in the video are her two sons. Speaking to the media, the woman said that they were allegedly forced to use the pushcart as none of their relatives helped them over fears of contracting COVID-19.  The deceased has been identified as a 55-year-old cobbler, who died on Wednesday night, due to heart ailments, reports said.  India Today reported that the man’s family members found him dead in their house and had to break open the door as he failed to respond to their calls.  ANI reported that the man was posthumously tested for the novel coronavirus, and his results returned negative.   A woman in Belgaum used a push cart to move her husband's dead body , no one helped as they feared the husband to have died due to #Covid19 pic.twitter.com/fdcfGPAhYE — Nagarjun Dwarakanath (@nagarjund) July 18, 2020   But even his immediate family members could not get help from their relatives for the man’s last rites and so they were compelled to take his body on the pushcart to the crematorium. Due to financial constraints, they allegedly could not make alternative arrangements either. This incident comes after a recent video, where the body of a COVID-19 patient was carried in an autorickshaw in Hyderabad. Incidentally, the Nizamabad Government General Hospital superintendent, Nageshwar Rao, resigned over the incident, taking moral responsibility. TNM had reported that the body was handed over to the family members in total violation of the protocol for disposal of bodies of COVID-19 victims. The family members decided to hire an auto-rickshaw as there were no ambulances available for hire. Further, it came to light that none of the accompanying family members nor the municipal worker was wearing Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) kits
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Bengaluru records 2125 new COVID-19 cases, Karnataka reports 4537

Coronavirus
While Dakshina Kannada reported 509 new COVID-19 cases, a jump from 39 on Friday, the district administration said it is due to backlog
covid testing queue
Representational image/PTI
Karnataka reported 4,537 COVID-19 cases on Saturday, which included 2,125 cases in Bengaluru. The cases reported on Saturday continued to spike in Bengaluru and Karnataka, which began by the end of June.  Currently, 36,631 patients are undergoing treatment for COVID-19 in Karnataka, of which 22,449 are in Bengaluru. Notably, according to the state bulletin, Dakshina Kannada district reported 509 new cases, which is a big jump from the 39 cases reported on Friday. This is the highest number of COVID-19 cases reported in a single day in the district. However, this figure varied from the district bulletin issued by the Dakshina Kannada district administration.  According to the district administration, the spike accounts for a backlog of the cases. While the district bulletin reported 311 cases on Friday, it showed 237 cases on Saturday, which adds up to the cases reported in the state bulletin.  Nine other districts reported over 100 COVID-19 cases on Saturday: Dharwad (186), Vijayapura (176), Ballari (155), Belagavi (137), Uttara Kannada (116), Shivamogga (114), Udupi (109), Chikkaballapura (107) and Mysuru (101).  A total of 34,819 COVID-19 tests were conducted in the state on Saturday, including 24,909 RT-PCR tests.  A total of 93 deaths were reported on Saturday, taking the total number of deaths in the state to 1,240, of which 631 have been reported in Bengaluru. Forty-nine deaths of COVID-19 patients was reported in Bengaluru on Saturday.  A total of 1,018 patients infected with the virus made a complete recovery on Saturday.   Several districts in Karnataka, including Bengaluru, are currently under lockdown. The lockdown in Bengaluru is set to continue till 5 am on July 22.  The Commissioner of Bengaluru's civic body - Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) - was transferred out on Saturday, reportedly in a reaction to the handling of the pandemic in the city.
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Saturday, July 18, 2020

Watch: KC General Hospital staff reveal staff shortage to K’taka Minister Sudhakar

Coronavirus
The Medical Superintendent of KC General Hospital said that many of the staff dealing with COVID-19 patients have tested positive for the virus.
K Sudhakar is seen speaking to Medical Superintendent of KC general hospital and health care staff in PPE kits in KC general hospital in Bangalore
Karnataka Education Minister K Sudhakar, who has been tasked with overseeing the COVID-19 crisis in Bengaluru, went on a surprise visit to KC General Hospital on Friday night and discovered a huge shortage of staff at the hospital. KC General Hospital is one of the designated government hospitals for COVID-19 patients in Bengaluru. In a video shared on social media, medical staff in Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) are seen talking to the Minister at a distance, from the foot-over-bridge outside the hospital. Addressing the Minister, one nurse is heard asking, “For every 10 patients, one (nurse) should be there. We have 112 patients and two (nurses). Night duty only two sisters (for) 112 patients, how we can manage, sir? And out of five physicians, three are (coronavirus) positive and only two are working.” The staff member further told the Minister that only one Group-D employee was on duty and was shifting dead bodies of those who succumbed to COVID-19 by himself. Speaking to TNM, Dr Venkateshiah, Medical Superintendent of KC General Hospital, admitted that there is a huge shortage of staff because many of them tested positive for the virus.  “Ideally, there should be at least one nurse for every 15 patients. But as many as 22 nurses have tested positive for coronavirus. Eleven others are in quarantine as they were the primary contacts of the staff (who tested positive).” The Superintendent said that it was not just the nursing department who were affected. “Out of 84 staff, 59 are not working for various reasons. Some of the older staff have gone on leave. Staff from all departments — doctors, nurses, Group-D workers and even blood bank staff— have turned out to be positive. About 30 of the infected staff have finished 10 days of treatment and are healthy. But they will only come back to work next week. Until then, we will have a tough time,” he said. Dr Venkateshiah also noted that currently there are 25 nurses who are working. “The rest of the staff should not turn positive or the situation will get worse.”  The Medical Superintendent said that they were taking precautions to safeguard staff who are still not working. “We have had a Zoom meeting with WHO officials on how to prevent infections within hospitals. We are fumigating and spraying wards twice a day, and we have given all equipment, including N-95 masks and PPE kits, for all staff including emergency staff.” Hospital staff stretched thin When the Minister asked the hospital staff whether they were facing issues with PPE kits, the nurse is seen highlighting the stress faced by the medical staff.  “Even though we wear PPE, we are getting exposed to the high viral load — the stress we are facing. We think we are turning positive because of this,” said the nurse, requesting the Minister to depute physicians, anaesthetists and Group-D staff. The Medical Superintendent of KC General Hospital, sounding exhausted, said that he, like many of the other medical staff, is stretched thin. “I am fully tired. I have not had rest for four-and-a-half months. Too many patients are coming to the hospital and we are finding it tough to cope. There are many non-COVID patients too, who we must look after — SARI (severe acute respiratory infection) and ILI (influenza-like illness) patients are coming in and these people are also turning positive. We are very stressed about this,” he added.
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In Bengaluru, at least 42 persons have died at home due to COVID-19 over 3 weeks

Coronavirus
Officials, however, deny that these home deaths were due to lack of hospital beds.
A group of workers wearing PPE prepare to bury the body of a COVID-19 victim in Bengaluru
Image for representation/PTI
On July 1, a 16-day-old baby girl suffering from a fever, cough and breathlessness died due to COVID-19 in Bengaluru. But unlike thousands who had access to medical care at a health facility, the baby girl died of Severe Acute Respiratory Illness (SARI) at her residence in Bengaluru. Listed as patient 11884, the 16-day-old baby’s death was officially recorded in Karnataka’s COVID-19 bulletin on July 12.   The baby girl is just one of many home deaths to have been recorded recently. TNM analysed the state bulletins from July 10 to July 17 and found that 53 persons have died at their homes in Karnataka recently due to COVID-19. Out of this, at least 42 of these home deaths took place in Bengaluru between June 24 and July 15 - a period of three weeks. That’s over 10% of the 405 deaths in total that Bengaluru has recorded this past week.  An age-wise analysis of these home deaths shows that 17 persons were senior citizens above the age of 60. While 12 people between the age of 50 and 60 died at their homes in Bengaluru, six belonged to the 40-50 age bracket. Four persons between the age of 30-40 died due to COVID-19 at home, while two others were in their 20s. The 16-day-old baby girl is the youngest home death to have been recorded so far.  A majority of the COVID-19 patients were suffering from SARI, six others had Influenza-like Illness (ILI). One victim – a 62-year-old man – who had hypertension and ischemic heart disease, was asymptomatic when he died at home on June 28. The source of infection of another COVID-19 victim is yet to be traced.  Dr Ramesh Krishna K, Medical Superintendent at Victoria Hospital, said the stigma attached to COVID-19 patients plays a huge factor in testing and accessing medical care. “There is a stigma of being coronavirus positive. There is a delay in getting tested, by this time the symptoms become more. And when they get tested, there is also a delay in getting the reports. Till then, they are still at home. And finally they go to hospital after a positive test, there is an issue of getting beds immediately. All these factors add up, I think.”   He pointed out that the elderly and patients who have comorbidities such as diabetes, hypertension and cardiac disease are most vulnerable to COVID-19. “These patients deteriorate suddenly. Nowadays, even youngsters without comorbidities are dying. They are asymptomatic initially. That’s why we tell them to monitor their oxygen saturation.” He added, “If people have any symptoms, they should consult a doctor immediately and start treatment immediately rather than wait at home.”  With multiple accounts emerging in recent weeks of COVID-19 patients being turned away by hospitals in Bengaluru, the question is, could these 42 deaths have been prevented if they had received timely medical care? Were these all a case of lack of medical care?      Speaking to TNM, the then Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) Commissioner Anil Kumar, who was transferred out on Saturday, denied that the home deaths were on account of lack of medical care. “This is not a question of people struggling to get hospital beds. They might have SARI or any other comorbidity but they are counted as COVID-19 patients after their death.”  The IAS officer explained that many home deaths were included in the COVID-19 bulletins as some of the victims had tested positive after their demise. "It could be that they died and the samples returned positive. Any death which occurs is tested for coronavirus and many cases we found they have tested positive," he said. While Bengaluru has recorded 582 deaths as of July 17, nearly 70% of these fatalities were reported in the last week alone. Explaining the sharp rise in Bengaluru’s deaths, Anil Kumar said, “The number of deaths has increased along with the number of cases. It is consequent but what is found in the analysis is that most deaths are persons with comorbidities and age is a factor.” Bengaluru has reported a total of 27,496 cases of COVID-19 as of July 17. Out of this, 20,623 patients are presently under treatment.  (With inputs from Prajwal Bhat)
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30 Bengaluru pourakarmikas have tested positive for coronavirus, 5 have died

Coronavirus
The revelation comes amid protests by sanitation workers and activists in Bengaluru against the death of P Shilpa, 28, a pourakarmika in the city.
Pourakarmikas protest in Bengaluru on July 10 2020
Pourakarmikas protest in Bengaluru
As many as 30 pourakarmikas in Bengaluru have tested positive for the coronavirus and five sanitation workers have succumbed to death, outgoing Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) Commissioner BH Anil Kumar told TNM. The revelation comes amid protests by sanitation workers and activists in Bengaluru against the death of P Shilpa, 28, a pourakarmika working in Vishwanath Nagenahalli (Ward 22) in the city. Her father, MC Srinivas, said that he tried reaching out to seven hospitals after Shilpa's COVID-19 test result came positive on Wednesday, but he was refused admission.  Eventually, Shilpa was admitted to Dr BR Ambedkar Medical College but a ventilator was not available for her. She passed away in the early hours of Thursday. BH Anil Kumar told TNM that there were three pourakarmikas who tested positive for COVID-19 in Vishwanath Nagenahalli and that randomised testing of sanitation workers would be carried out in places where cases were reported.  Srinivas told TNM that a pourakarmika in Kaval Byrasandra had tested positive for COVID-19 before his daughter Shilpa's death.  Pourakarmikas protest in Bengaluru on July 10 2020 The developments come a week after pourakarmikas in the city held a protest on July 10, calling for protective equipment like gloves and masks to be given to them. Pourakarmikas are cleaning the streets of the city even in containment zones as well as in places where COVID-19 patients are isolated at home.  “Pourakarmikas are working in containment zones. As per protocol, they are provided protective equipment, including masks and gloves. We have been conducting randomised testing of pourakarmikas in the last few weeks,” Anil Kumar added.  Candlelight vigil by pourakarmikas in Bengaluru, July 17 2020 Speaking to TNM, several pourakarmikas said that they received protective equipment, but it was not updated periodically by the BBMP. The pourakarmikas also said that they were handling waste, including masks and gloves thrown away by people, particularly outside healthcare centres.  Earlier, 23 out of 80 pourakarmikas in Bengaluru's Deepanjali Nagar had tested positive for the virus. The Karnataka High Court on Thursday urged the BBMP to conduct more randomised tests for pourakarmikas. The court asked the state government to appoint G Kumar Naik, an IAS officer, to supervise the BBMP's work in following procedures within containment zones.
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On Karnataka CM Yediyurappa's one year in office, experts and seers to write report card

Politics
A look at Yediyurappa's one year in office and how troubles are never ending for the CM.
A stylized photo showing Yediyurappa pointing behind the camera and smiling. Behind him, a sketch of Bangalore's Vidhan Soudha
Karnataka Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa, who is battling to contain COVID-19 cases which breached the 50,000 mark in the state recently, will usher his one-year in office on July 26 in a quiet but unique way. The event is scheduled for July 27 or during that week, as July 26 falls on a Sunday, which is a total lockdown day in the state. With a virtual programme which is still in the planning stage, the CM has decided to refresh people's minds on his government's programmes, who otherwise have been inundated with reports on the coronavirus pandemic. While it has been a practice of former Chief Ministers to mark their tenures in office by bringing out brochures, the one to be released by Yediyurappa is being authored by 20 experts from different fields. Yediyurappa's media advisor PM Mahadev Prakash, who is the person behind this idea said, “It's common for CMs to release brochures which are brought out by the Karnataka department of Information and Public Relations, where the content will only be to pat ourselves.” “For the first time, experts and seers have been asked to contribute to the brochure with objective write-ups where some of the pitfalls of the government will also figure,” he added. The experts include Sirigere mutt pontiff Shivamurthy Shivacharya Swam, who will give his views on the success of online marketing facility for farmers, a programme started in 2016, which has been appreciated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Bhalki mutt seer Basavaraj Pattadevaru will be writing on the development of the Kalyan Karnataka (Hyderabad-Karnataka) region. AN Yellappa Reddy, an environmentalist, will write on the projects taken up for the environment, while Gururaj Karajagi, an education management professional and Niranjan Aradhya, an education expert, will write on the educational ventures taken up. Dr CN Manjunath of Sri Jayadeva Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences and Research will write about the state government’s handling of COVID-19. Two former bureaucrats -- K Jairaj and Kotlinganagoud, who was a Secretary to three Karnataka Governors; Govind Narain, Ashok Nath Banerjee and P Venkatasubbaiah, are among the others who will contribute. According to party sources, under normal circumstances, Yediyurappa, whose ambition of becoming the CM was fulfilled by dislodging the 14-month old JD(S)-Congress government, would have preferred to celebrate his one-year tenure with a bang, considering that his 78th birthday on February 27 was an event attended by political personalities of all parties. “His one year tenure had three phases --- beginning with floods in the state, when he toured the affected districts  alone as the cabinet had not been formed. Later it was the bye-elections fever and simmering discontent among BJP legislators and in the last five months, he was bogged down by the fight against coronavirus,'' sources said. ‘Mellowed down’ BSY as CM for the fourth time Senior BJP MLC Lehar Singh, who has seen Yediyurappa from close quarters said that the latter had mellowed down over the years. “It's a calm and cool Yediyurappa now, who used to lose his temper earlier. The  reasons were many then, including a threat from some senior MPs who were close to the central leadership  and nurtured ambitions of  becoming the CM. Now, there is a central leadership which is not blind to development taking place in the state,'' he added. However, BJP sources admit that infighting by some of the ministers, their one upmanship in handling the pandemic and the u-turns taken by the government in managing the pandemic has put the Yediyurappa's administration in poor light. “The rivalry between Deputy CM CN Ashwathnarayan, ministers K Sudhakar, B Sriramulu, R Ashoka, S Suresh Kumar and V Somanna in handling COVID-19 and among Ashwathnarayan, Ashoka and Sudhakar to establish their Vokkaliga  supremacy has embarrassed the government,'' a source said. Besides, the conspiracies to replace Yediyurappa have not stopped churning. The absence of a clear successor to Yediyurappa and the uneasy equations between state BJP president Nalin Kumar Kateel; who has the support of party's national organisation secretary BL Santhosh, has  the CM walking on a tightrope. Once his staunch follower, senior MLA Basannagouda Patil Yetnal, who in October 2019 had said there was a conspiracy to unseat Yediyurappa, in May this year, hit out at him alleging that his constituency works were not being done and the former was only a CM while his leaders were Narendra Modi, Amit Shah and JP Nadda. “If this pandemic was not there, the process of revolt would have accelerated. A senior Lingayat minister who  played a crucial role in Yediyurappa rejoining the BJP in 2014 is trying to position  himself  for the CM's slot,'' sources said. With odds against him, is BSY happy of having achieved his ambition? "No Chief Minister can be happy when he is under the party high command's scanner", a political  observer said. He recalled that former CM D Devaraj Urs held the post for seven and half years due to his political acumen and good equations with former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. But when he tried to flap his wings during his second term, he was sacked. “The only CMs who chose not to become subservient to  their high commands and managed to complete their tenures were BD Jatti, SM Krishna and  Siddaramaiah,'' he stated. With one crisis after another dogging Yediyurappa, sources close to him said that the problems are going to resurface when he goes in for a cabinet reshuffle or expansion, which has been pending  for long. “He has managed to stall off dissent until now with his shrewdness through lessons learnt as CM for a week in 2007, for three and half years in 2008 and for 24 hours in 2018. But efforts are on to steal the CM's post rather than earn it,'' sources maintained. Naheed Ataulla is a journalist who has covered Karnataka politics for over two decades, and is a former Political Editor of The Times of India.
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